Example migration of VPC networks into separate perimeters

This example shows how you can migrate VPC networks of an existing host project, which is already in a service perimeter, into separate perimeters.

In this example, the host project consists of two VPC networks. Two service projects host their Cloud Storage resources.

The following diagram shows the perimeter configuration of an example host project before the migration:

Host project before migration

The architecture diagram shows the following components:

  • Host project. The host project contains two VPC networks VPC1 and VPC2.
  • Service projects. The service projects service-project-1 and service-project-2 contain Cloud Storage buckets and are protected by the service perimeter.
  • Perimeter. The service perimeter perimeter-1 protects the entire host project and service projects. The VM VM1 in VPC network VPC1 and the VM VM2 in VPC network VPC2 can access resources in both service-project-1 and service-project-2.

The following diagram shows the perimeter configuration of the host project after the migration.

Host project after migration

The architecture diagram shows the following components:

  • Perimeter-1. This perimeter protects the VPC network VPC1 and the service project service-project-1. The VM VM1 can access the Cloud Storage bucket in service-project-1 but cannot access the Cloud Storage bucket in service-project-2.
  • Perimeter-2. This perimeter protects the VPC network VPC2 and the service project service-project-2. The VM VM2 can access the Cloud Storage bucket in service-project-2 but cannot access the Cloud Storage bucket in service-project-1.

In this migration example, the configuration changes are made in dry-run mode and then verified before enforcing the dry-run configuration. This process ensures that the VPC networks and resources are protected and the production traffic from VPC1 to service-project-1 and from VPC2 to service-project-2 is not disrupted during the migration.

The migration process consists of the following steps:

  • Get the VPC networks and perimeter details
  • Set up a dry-run perimeter configuration
  • Verify the dry-run setup
  • Enforce the dry-run configuration

Get the VPC networks and perimeter details

In this example, before you start the migration, you must the get the list of VPC networks and perimeter details.

List the VPC networks in the host project

The following command lists the VPC networks in the network-host-project:

    gcloud compute networks list --project=network-host-project
  

This example produces the following output:

    NAME  SUBNET_MODE  BGP_ROUTING_MODE  IPV4_RANGE  GATEWAY_IPV4
    vpc1  AUTO         REGIONAL
    vpc2  AUTO         REGIONAL
  

Get the perimeter details

The following command gets the details of the perimeter:

    gcloud access-context-manager perimeters describe perimeter-1
  

This example produces the following output:

name: accessPolicies/<access policy number>/servicePerimeters/perimeter-1
status:
…
  resources:
  - projects/<network-host-project number>
  - projects/<service-project-1 number>
  - projects/<service-project-2 number>

The <access policy number> is used in the example dry-run mode commands. You can also set up a default access policy with the following command:

    gcloud alpha config set access_context_manager/policy<access policy number>
  

Set up a dry-run configuration

In this example, you use the dry-run command to update the perimeter perimeter-1 to remove network-host-project, service-project-2, and add VPC1. Then, you run the dry-run command to create a new perimeter perimeter-2 and add service-project-2 and VPC2.

Update the dry-run configuration

The following command updates the perimeter perimeter-1 to remove network-host-project, service-project-2, and adds VPC1:

    gcloud access-context-manager perimeters dry-run update perimeter-1
     --remove-resources="projects/<network-host-project number>,projects/<service-project-2 number>"
     --add-resources="//compute.googleapis.com/projects/network-host-project/global/networks/vpc1"
     --policy=<access policy number>
  

Create a new perimeter in dry-run mode

The following command creates the perimeter perimeter-2 and adds service-project-2, and VPC1:

    gcloud access-context-manager perimeters dry-run create perimeter-2
    --title=perimeter-2 --type="regular"
    --resources="projects/<service-project-2 number>,//compute.googleapis.com/projects/network-host-project/global/networks/vpc2"
    --restricted-services="storage.googleapis.com"
    --policy=<access policy number>
  

Verify the dry-run configuration

In this example, run the following commands to ensure that there are no dry-run errors from VPC1 to service-project-1, and from VPC2 to service-project-2:

To list the Cloud Storage buckets in service-project-1, log in to VM1, which is in VPC1 and run the following command:

    gsutil ls -p service-project-1
  

To list the Cloud Storage buckets in service-project-2, run the following command:

    gsutil ls -p service-project-2
  

The commands run successfully because the dry-run configuration doesn't affect production traffic. However, the following dry-run error appears in the audit logs for network-host-project for accessing service-project-2 from VM1:

    egressViolations: [
    0: {
    servicePerimeter: "accessPolicies/<access policy number>/servicePerimeters/perimeter-1"
    source: "//compute.googleapis.com/projects/network-host-project/global/networks/VPC1"
    sourceType: "Network"
    targetResource: "projects/<service-project-2 number>"
    }
    ]
  

Similarly, Cloud Storage requests from VM2 to service-project-2 don't have dry-run errors, and requests from VM2 to service-project-1 have the following dry-run error in the audit logs for the network-host-project:

    egressViolations: [
    0: {
    servicePerimeter: "accessPolicies/<access policy number>/servicePerimeters/perimeter-2"
    source: "//compute.googleapis.com/projects/network-host-project/global/networks/VPC2"
    sourceType: "Network"
    targetResource: "projects/<service-project-1 number>"
    }
    ]
  

Enforce the dry-run configuration

You must enforce all dry-run configurations at once in one atomic transaction.

To enforce the dry-run configurations, run the following command:

    gcloud access-context-manager perimeters dry-run enforce-all --policy=<access policy number>
  

After you enforce the dry-run configurations, run the following command to describe perimeter-1:

    gcloud access-context-manager perimeters describe perimeter-1 --policy=<access policy number>
  

This example produces the following output in which network-host-project and service-project-2 are removed, and VPC1 is added to perimeter-1.

    name: accessPolicies/<access policy number>/servicePerimeters/perimeter-1
    status:
    …
    resources:
    - projects/<service-project-1 number>
    - //compute.googleapis.com/projects/<network-host-project>/global/networks/VPC1
  

Run the following command to describe perimeter-2:

    gcloud access-context-manager perimeters describe perimeter-2 --policy=<access policy number>
  

This example produces the following output in which service-project-2 and VPC2 are added to perimeter-2.

    name: accessPolicies/<access policy number>/servicePerimeters/perimeter-2
    status:
    …
    resources:
    - projects/<service-project-2 number>
    - //compute.googleapis.com/projects/<network-host-project>/global/networks/VPC2
    title: perimeter-2