[ aws . network-firewall ]

describe-firewall-policy

Description

Returns the data objects for the specified firewall policy.

See also: AWS API Documentation

See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.

Synopsis

  describe-firewall-policy
[--firewall-policy-name <value>]
[--firewall-policy-arn <value>]
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]

Options

--firewall-policy-name (string)

The descriptive name of the firewall policy. You can’t change the name of a firewall policy after you create it.

You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.

--firewall-policy-arn (string)

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall policy.

You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.

--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml (string) Reads arguments from the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by --generate-cli-skeleton. If other arguments are provided on the command line, those values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally. This may not be specified along with --cli-input-yaml.

--generate-cli-skeleton (string) Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the value input, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for --cli-input-json. Similarly, if provided yaml-input it will print a sample input YAML that can be used with --cli-input-yaml. If provided with the value output, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command.

See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.

Output

UpdateToken -> (string)

A token used for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall policy. The token marks the state of the policy resource at the time of the request.

To make changes to the policy, you provide the token in your request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the policy hasn’t changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall policy again to get a current copy of it with current token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.

FirewallPolicyResponse -> (structure)

The high-level properties of a firewall policy. This, along with the FirewallPolicy , define the policy. You can retrieve all objects for a firewall policy by calling DescribeFirewallPolicy .

FirewallPolicyName -> (string)

The descriptive name of the firewall policy. You can’t change the name of a firewall policy after you create it.

FirewallPolicyArn -> (string)

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall policy.

Note

If this response is for a create request that had DryRun set to TRUE , then this ARN is a placeholder that isn’t attached to a valid resource.

FirewallPolicyId -> (string)

The unique identifier for the firewall policy.

Description -> (string)

A description of the firewall policy.

FirewallPolicyStatus -> (string)

The current status of the firewall policy. You can retrieve this for a firewall policy by calling DescribeFirewallPolicy and providing the firewall policy’s name or ARN.

Tags -> (list)

The key:value pairs to associate with the resource.

(structure)

A key:value pair associated with an AWS resource. The key:value pair can be anything you define. Typically, the tag key represents a category (such as “environment”) and the tag value represents a specific value within that category (such as “test,” “development,” or “production”). You can add up to 50 tags to each AWS resource.

Key -> (string)

The part of the key:value pair that defines a tag. You can use a tag key to describe a category of information, such as “customer.” Tag keys are case-sensitive.

Value -> (string)

The part of the key:value pair that defines a tag. You can use a tag value to describe a specific value within a category, such as “companyA” or “companyB.” Tag values are case-sensitive.

ConsumedStatelessRuleCapacity -> (integer)

The number of capacity units currently consumed by the policy’s stateless rules.

ConsumedStatefulRuleCapacity -> (integer)

The number of capacity units currently consumed by the policy’s stateful rules.

NumberOfAssociations -> (integer)

The number of firewalls that are associated with this firewall policy.

FirewallPolicy -> (structure)

The policy for the specified firewall policy.

StatelessRuleGroupReferences -> (list)

References to the stateless rule groups that are used in the policy. These define the matching criteria in stateless rules.

(structure)

Identifier for a single stateless rule group, used in a firewall policy to refer to the rule group.

ResourceArn -> (string)

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the stateless rule group.

Priority -> (integer)

An integer setting that indicates the order in which to run the stateless rule groups in a single FirewallPolicy . Network Firewall applies each stateless rule group to a packet starting with the group that has the lowest priority setting. You must ensure that the priority settings are unique within each policy.

StatelessDefaultActions -> (list)

The actions to take on a packet if it doesn’t match any of the stateless rules in the policy. If you want non-matching packets to be forwarded for stateful inspection, specify aws:forward_to_sfe .

You must specify one of the standard actions: aws:pass , aws:drop , or aws:forward_to_sfe . In addition, you can specify custom actions that are compatible with your standard section choice.

For example, you could specify ["aws:pass"] or you could specify ["aws:pass", “customActionName”] . For information about compatibility, see the custom action descriptions under CustomAction .

(string)

StatelessFragmentDefaultActions -> (list)

The actions to take on a fragmented UDP packet if it doesn’t match any of the stateless rules in the policy. Network Firewall only manages UDP packet fragments and silently drops packet fragments for other protocols. If you want non-matching fragmented UDP packets to be forwarded for stateful inspection, specify aws:forward_to_sfe .

You must specify one of the standard actions: aws:pass , aws:drop , or aws:forward_to_sfe . In addition, you can specify custom actions that are compatible with your standard section choice.

For example, you could specify ["aws:pass"] or you could specify ["aws:pass", “customActionName”] . For information about compatibility, see the custom action descriptions under CustomAction .

(string)

StatelessCustomActions -> (list)

The custom action definitions that are available for use in the firewall policy’s StatelessDefaultActions setting. You name each custom action that you define, and then you can use it by name in your default actions specifications.

(structure)

An optional, non-standard action to use for stateless packet handling. You can define this in addition to the standard action that you must specify.

You define and name the custom actions that you want to be able to use, and then you reference them by name in your actions settings.

You can use custom actions in the following places:

  • In a rule group’s StatelessRulesAndCustomActions specification. The custom actions are available for use by name inside the StatelessRulesAndCustomActions where you define them. You can use them for your stateless rule actions to specify what to do with a packet that matches the rule’s match attributes.

  • In a FirewallPolicy specification, in StatelessCustomActions . The custom actions are available for use inside the policy where you define them. You can use them for the policy’s default stateless actions settings to specify what to do with packets that don’t match any of the policy’s stateless rules.

ActionName -> (string)

The descriptive name of the custom action. You can’t change the name of a custom action after you create it.

ActionDefinition -> (structure)

The custom action associated with the action name.

PublishMetricAction -> (structure)

Stateless inspection criteria that publishes the specified metrics to Amazon CloudWatch for the matching packet. This setting defines a CloudWatch dimension value to be published.

You can pair this custom action with any of the standard stateless rule actions. For example, you could pair this in a rule action with the standard action that forwards the packet for stateful inspection. Then, when a packet matches the rule, Network Firewall publishes metrics for the packet and forwards it.

Dimensions -> (list)

(structure)

The value to use in an Amazon CloudWatch custom metric dimension. This is used in the PublishMetrics CustomAction . A CloudWatch custom metric dimension is a name/value pair that’s part of the identity of a metric.

AWS Network Firewall sets the dimension name to CustomAction and you provide the dimension value.

For more information about CloudWatch custom metric dimensions, see Publishing Custom Metrics in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide .

Value -> (string)

The value to use in the custom metric dimension.

StatefulRuleGroupReferences -> (list)

References to the stateful rule groups that are used in the policy. These define the inspection criteria in stateful rules.

(structure)

Identifier for a single stateful rule group, used in a firewall policy to refer to a rule group.

ResourceArn -> (string)

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the stateful rule group.

Priority -> (integer)

An integer setting that indicates the order in which to run the stateful rule groups in a single FirewallPolicy . This setting only applies to firewall policies that specify the STRICT_ORDER rule order in the stateful engine options settings.

Network Firewall evalutes each stateful rule group against a packet starting with the group that has the lowest priority setting. You must ensure that the priority settings are unique within each policy.

You can change the priority settings of your rule groups at any time. To make it easier to insert rule groups later, number them so there’s a wide range in between, for example use 100, 200, and so on.

StatefulDefaultActions -> (list)

The default actions to take on a packet that doesn’t match any stateful rules.

(string)

StatefulEngineOptions -> (structure)

Additional options governing how Network Firewall handles stateful rules. The stateful rule groups that you use in your policy must have stateful rule options settings that are compatible with these settings.

RuleOrder -> (string)

Indicates how to manage the order of stateful rule evaluation for the policy. By default, Network Firewall leaves the rule evaluation order up to the Suricata rule processing engine. If you set this to STRICT_ORDER , your rules are evaluated in the exact order that you provide them in the policy. With strict ordering, the rule groups are evaluated by order of priority, starting from the lowest number, and the rules in each rule group are processed in the order that they’re defined.