Class CfnPolicy.Builder

java.lang.Object
software.amazon.awscdk.services.fms.CfnPolicy.Builder
All Implemented Interfaces:
software.amazon.jsii.Builder<CfnPolicy>
Enclosing class:
CfnPolicy

@Stability(Stable) public static final class CfnPolicy.Builder extends Object implements software.amazon.jsii.Builder<CfnPolicy>
A fluent builder for CfnPolicy.
  • Method Details

    • create

      @Stability(Stable) public static CfnPolicy.Builder create(Construct scope, String id)
      Parameters:
      scope -
      • scope in which this resource is defined.
      This parameter is required.
      id -
      • scoped id of the resource.
      This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      a new instance of CfnPolicy.Builder.
    • excludeResourceTags

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder excludeResourceTags(Boolean excludeResourceTags)
      Used only when tags are specified in the ResourceTags property.

      If this property is True , resources with the specified tags are not in scope of the policy. If it's False , only resources with the specified tags are in scope of the policy.

      Parameters:
      excludeResourceTags - Used only when tags are specified in the ResourceTags property. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • excludeResourceTags

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder excludeResourceTags(IResolvable excludeResourceTags)
      Used only when tags are specified in the ResourceTags property.

      If this property is True , resources with the specified tags are not in scope of the policy. If it's False , only resources with the specified tags are in scope of the policy.

      Parameters:
      excludeResourceTags - Used only when tags are specified in the ResourceTags property. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • policyName

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder policyName(String policyName)
      The name of the AWS Firewall Manager policy.

      Parameters:
      policyName - The name of the AWS Firewall Manager policy. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • remediationEnabled

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder remediationEnabled(Boolean remediationEnabled)
      Indicates if the policy should be automatically applied to new resources.

      Parameters:
      remediationEnabled - Indicates if the policy should be automatically applied to new resources. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • remediationEnabled

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder remediationEnabled(IResolvable remediationEnabled)
      Indicates if the policy should be automatically applied to new resources.

      Parameters:
      remediationEnabled - Indicates if the policy should be automatically applied to new resources. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • securityServicePolicyData

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder securityServicePolicyData(IResolvable securityServicePolicyData)
      Details about the security service that is being used to protect the resources.

      This contains the following settings:

      • Type - Indicates the service type that the policy uses to protect the resource. For security group policies, Firewall Manager supports one security group for each common policy and for each content audit policy. This is an adjustable limit that you can increase by contacting AWS Support .

      Valid values: DNS_FIREWALL | NETWORK_FIREWALL | SECURITY_GROUPS_COMMON | SECURITY_GROUPS_CONTENT_AUDIT | SECURITY_GROUPS_USAGE_AUDIT | SHIELD_ADVANCED | THIRD_PARTY_FIREWALL | WAFV2 | WAF

      • ManagedServiceData - Details about the service that are specific to the service type, in JSON format.
      • Example: DNS_FIREWALL

      "{\"type\":\"DNS_FIREWALL\",\"preProcessRuleGroups\":[{\"ruleGroupId\":\"rslvr-frg-1\",\"priority\":10}],\"postProcessRuleGroups\":[{\"ruleGroupId\":\"rslvr-frg-2\",\"priority\":9911}]}"

      Valid values for preProcessRuleGroups are between 1 and 99. Valid values for postProcessRuleGroups are between 9901 and 10000.

      • Example: NETWORK_FIREWALL - Centralized deployment model

      "{\"type\":\"NETWORK_FIREWALL\",\"awsNetworkFirewallConfig\":{\"networkFirewallStatelessRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateless-rulegroup/test\",\"priority\":1}],\"networkFirewallStatelessDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessFragmentDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessCustomActions\":[{\"actionName\":\"customActionName\",\"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"metricdimensionvalue\"}]}}}],\"networkFirewallStatefulRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateful-rulegroup/test\"}],\"networkFirewallLoggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"ALERT\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}},{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"FLOW\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}}],\"overrideExistingConfig\":true}},\"firewallDeploymentModel\":{\"centralizedFirewallDeploymentModel\":{\"centralizedFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"inspectionVpcIds\":[{\"resourceId\":\"vpc-1234\",\"accountId\":\"123456789011\"}],\"firewallCreationConfig\":{\"endpointLocation\":{\"availabilityZoneConfigList\":[{\"availabilityZoneId\":null,\"availabilityZoneName\":\"us-east-1a\",\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\"]}]}},\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[]}}}}"

      To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to DISTRIBUTED .

      • Example: NETWORK_FIREWALL - Distributed deployment model with automatic Availability Zone configuration

      "{\"type\":\"NETWORK_FIREWALL\",\"networkFirewallStatelessRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateless-rulegroup/test\",\"priority\":1}],\"networkFirewallStatelessDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessFragmentDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessCustomActions\":[{\"actionName\":\"customActionName\",\"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"metricdimensionvalue\"}]}}}],\"networkFirewallStatefulRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateful-rulegroup/test\"}],\"networkFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"singleFirewallEndpointPerVPC\":false,\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\",\"192.168.0.0/28\"],\"routeManagementAction\":\"OFF\"},\"networkFirewallLoggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"ALERT\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}},{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"FLOW\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}}],\"overrideExistingConfig\":true}}"

      With automatic Availbility Zone configuration, Firewall Manager chooses which Availability Zones to create the endpoints in. To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to DISTRIBUTED .

      • Example: NETWORK_FIREWALL - Distributed deployment model with automatic Availability Zone configuration and route management

      "{\"type\":\"NETWORK_FIREWALL\",\"networkFirewallStatelessRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateless-rulegroup/test\",\"priority\":1}],\"networkFirewallStatelessDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessFragmentDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessCustomActions\":[{\"actionName\":\"customActionName\",\"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"metricdimensionvalue\"}]}}}],\"networkFirewallStatefulRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateful-rulegroup/test\"}],\"networkFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"singleFirewallEndpointPerVPC\":false,\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\",\"192.168.0.0/28\"],\"routeManagementAction\":\"MONITOR\",\"routeManagementTargetTypes\":[\"InternetGateway\"]},\"networkFirewallLoggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"ALERT\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}},{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\": \"FLOW\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}}],\"overrideExistingConfig\":true}}"

      To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to DISTRIBUTED .

      • Example: NETWORK_FIREWALL - Distributed deployment model with custom Availability Zone configuration

      "{\"type\":\"NETWORK_FIREWALL\",\"networkFirewallStatelessRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateless-rulegroup/test\",\"priority\":1}],\"networkFirewallStatelessDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessFragmentDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"fragmentcustomactionname\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessCustomActions\":[{\"actionName\":\"customActionName\", \"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"metricdimensionvalue\"}]}}},{\"actionName\":\"fragmentcustomactionname\",\"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"fragmentmetricdimensionvalue\"}]}}}],\"networkFirewallStatefulRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateful-rulegroup/test\"}],\"networkFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"firewallCreationConfig\":{ \"endpointLocation\":{\"availabilityZoneConfigList\":[{\"availabilityZoneName\":\"us-east-1a\",\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\"]},{\"availabilityZoneName\":\"us-east-1b\",\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[ \"10.0.0.0/28\"]}]} },\"singleFirewallEndpointPerVPC\":false,\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":null,\"routeManagementAction\":\"OFF\",\"networkFirewallLoggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"ALERT\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}},{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"FLOW\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}}],\"overrideExistingConfig\":boolean}}"

      With custom Availability Zone configuration, you define which specific Availability Zones to create endpoints in by configuring firewallCreationConfig . To configure the Availability Zones in firewallCreationConfig , specify either the availabilityZoneName or availabilityZoneId parameter, not both parameters.

      To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to DISTRIBUTED .

      • Example: NETWORK_FIREWALL - Distributed deployment model with custom Availability Zone configuration and route management

      "{\"type\":\"NETWORK_FIREWALL\",\"networkFirewallStatelessRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateless-rulegroup/test\",\"priority\":1}],\"networkFirewallStatelessDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessFragmentDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"fragmentcustomactionname\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessCustomActions\":[{\"actionName\":\"customActionName\",\"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"metricdimensionvalue\"}]}}},{\"actionName\":\"fragmentcustomactionname\",\"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"fragmentmetricdimensionvalue\"}]}}}],\"networkFirewallStatefulRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateful-rulegroup/test\"}],\"networkFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"firewallCreationConfig\":{\"endpointLocation\":{\"availabilityZoneConfigList\":[{\"availabilityZoneName\":\"us-east-1a\",\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\"]},{\"availabilityZoneName\":\"us-east-1b\",\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\"]}]}},\"singleFirewallEndpointPerVPC\":false,\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":null,\"routeManagementAction\":\"MONITOR\",\"routeManagementTargetTypes\":[\"InternetGateway\"],\"routeManagementConfig\":{\"allowCrossAZTrafficIfNoEndpoint\":true}},\"networkFirewallLoggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"ALERT\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}},{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"FLOW\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}}],\"overrideExistingConfig\":boolean}}"

      To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to DISTRIBUTED .

      • Example: THIRD_PARTY_FIREWALL - Palo Alto Networks Cloud Next-Generation Firewall centralized deployment model

      "{ \"type\":\"THIRD_PARTY_FIREWALL\", \"thirdPartyFirewall\":\"PALO_ALTO_NETWORKS_CLOUD_NGFW\", \"thirdPartyFirewallConfig\":{ \"thirdPartyFirewallPolicyList\":[\"global-1\"] },\"firewallDeploymentModel\":{\"centralizedFirewallDeploymentModel\":{\"centralizedFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"inspectionVpcIds\":[{\"resourceId\":\"vpc-1234\",\"accountId\":\"123456789011\"}],\"firewallCreationConfig\":{\"endpointLocation\":{\"availabilityZoneConfigList\":[{\"availabilityZoneId\":null,\"availabilityZoneName\":\"us-east-1a\",\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\"]}]}},\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[]}}}}"

      To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to CENTRALIZED .

      • Example: THIRD_PARTY_FIREWALL - Palo Alto Networks Cloud Next-Generation Firewall distributed deployment model

      "{\"type\":\"THIRD_PARTY_FIREWALL\",\"thirdPartyFirewall\":\"PALO_ALTO_NETWORKS_CLOUD_NGFW\",\"thirdPartyFirewallConfig\":{\"thirdPartyFirewallPolicyList\":[\"global-1\"] },\"firewallDeploymentModel\":{ \"distributedFirewallDeploymentModel\":{ \"distributedFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"firewallCreationConfig\":{\"endpointLocation\":{ \"availabilityZoneConfigList\":[ {\"availabilityZoneName\":\"${AvailabilityZone}\" } ] } }, \"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[ ] } } } }"

      To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to DISTRIBUTED .

      • Specification for SHIELD_ADVANCED for Amazon CloudFront distributions

      "{\"type\":\"SHIELD_ADVANCED\",\"automaticResponseConfiguration\": {\"automaticResponseStatus\":\"ENABLED|IGNORED|DISABLED\", \"automaticResponseAction\":\"BLOCK|COUNT\"}, \"overrideCustomerWebaclClassic\":true|false}"

      For example: "{\"type\":\"SHIELD_ADVANCED\",\"automaticResponseConfiguration\": {\"automaticResponseStatus\":\"ENABLED\", \"automaticResponseAction\":\"COUNT\"}}"

      The default value for automaticResponseStatus is IGNORED . The value for automaticResponseAction is only required when automaticResponseStatus is set to ENABLED . The default value for overrideCustomerWebaclClassic is false .

      For other resource types that you can protect with a Shield Advanced policy, this ManagedServiceData configuration is an empty string.

      • Example: WAFV2

      "{\"type\":\"WAFV2\",\"preProcessRuleGroups\":[{\"ruleGroupArn\":null,\"overrideAction\":{\"type\":\"NONE\"},\"managedRuleGroupIdentifier\":{\"version\":null,\"vendorName\":\"AWS\",\"managedRuleGroupName\":\"AWSManagedRulesAmazonIpReputationList\"},\"ruleGroupType\":\"ManagedRuleGroup\",\"excludeRules\":[{\"name\":\"NoUserAgent_HEADER\"}]}],\"postProcessRuleGroups\":[],\"defaultAction\":{\"type\":\"ALLOW\"},\"overrideCustomerWebACLAssociation\":false,\"loggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[\"arn:aws:firehose:us-west-2:12345678912:deliverystream/aws-waf-logs-fms-admin-destination\"],\"redactedFields\":[{\"redactedFieldType\":\"SingleHeader\",\"redactedFieldValue\":\"Cookies\"},{\"redactedFieldType\":\"Method\"}]}}"

      In the loggingConfiguration , you can specify one logDestinationConfigs , you can optionally provide up to 20 redactedFields , and the RedactedFieldType must be one of URI , QUERY_STRING , HEADER , or METHOD .

      • Example: AWS WAF Classic

      "{\"type\": \"WAF\", \"ruleGroups\": [{\"id\":\"12345678-1bcd-9012-efga-0987654321ab\", \"overrideAction\" : {\"type\": \"COUNT\"}}], \"defaultAction\": {\"type\": \"BLOCK\"}}"

      • Example: WAFV2 - AWS Firewall Manager support for AWS WAF managed rule group versioning

      "{\"type\":\"WAFV2\",\"preProcessRuleGroups\":[{\"ruleGroupArn\":null,\"overrideAction\":{\"type\":\"NONE\"},\"managedRuleGroupIdentifier\":{\"versionEnabled\":true,\"version\":\"Version_2.0\",\"vendorName\":\"AWS\",\"managedRuleGroupName\":\"AWSManagedRulesCommonRuleSet\"},\"ruleGroupType\":\"ManagedRuleGroup\",\"excludeRules\":[{\"name\":\"NoUserAgent_HEADER\"}]}],\"postProcessRuleGroups\":[],\"defaultAction\":{\"type\":\"ALLOW\"},\"overrideCustomerWebACLAssociation\":false,\"loggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[\"arn:aws:firehose:us-west-2:12345678912:deliverystream/aws-waf-logs-fms-admin-destination\"],\"redactedFields\":[{\"redactedFieldType\":\"SingleHeader\",\"redactedFieldValue\":\"Cookies\"},{\"redactedFieldType\":\"Method\"}]}}"

      To use a specific version of a AWS WAF managed rule group in your Firewall Manager policy, you must set versionEnabled to true , and set version to the version you'd like to use. If you don't set versionEnabled to true , or if you omit versionEnabled , then Firewall Manager uses the default version of the AWS WAF managed rule group.

      • Example: SECURITY_GROUPS_COMMON

      "{\"type\":\"SECURITY_GROUPS_COMMON\",\"revertManualSecurityGroupChanges\":false,\"exclusiveResourceSecurityGroupManagement\":false, \"applyToAllEC2InstanceENIs\":false,\"securityGroups\":[{\"id\":\" sg-000e55995d61a06bd\"}]}"

      • Example: Shared VPCs. Apply the preceding policy to resources in shared VPCs as well as to those in VPCs that the account owns

      "{\"type\":\"SECURITY_GROUPS_COMMON\",\"revertManualSecurityGroupChanges\":false,\"exclusiveResourceSecurityGroupManagement\":false, \"applyToAllEC2InstanceENIs\":false,\"includeSharedVPC\":true,\"securityGroups\":[{\"id\":\" sg-000e55995d61a06bd\"}]}"

      • Example: SECURITY_GROUPS_CONTENT_AUDIT

      "{\"type\":\"SECURITY_GROUPS_CONTENT_AUDIT\",\"securityGroups\":[{\"id\":\"sg-000e55995d61a06bd\"}],\"securityGroupAction\":{\"type\":\"ALLOW\"}}"

      The security group action for content audit can be ALLOW or DENY . For ALLOW , all in-scope security group rules must be within the allowed range of the policy's security group rules. For DENY , all in-scope security group rules must not contain a value or a range that matches a rule value or range in the policy security group.

      • Example: SECURITY_GROUPS_USAGE_AUDIT

      "{\"type\":\"SECURITY_GROUPS_USAGE_AUDIT\",\"deleteUnusedSecurityGroups\":true,\"coalesceRedundantSecurityGroups\":true}"

      Parameters:
      securityServicePolicyData - Details about the security service that is being used to protect the resources. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • securityServicePolicyData

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder securityServicePolicyData(CfnPolicy.SecurityServicePolicyDataProperty securityServicePolicyData)
      Details about the security service that is being used to protect the resources.

      This contains the following settings:

      • Type - Indicates the service type that the policy uses to protect the resource. For security group policies, Firewall Manager supports one security group for each common policy and for each content audit policy. This is an adjustable limit that you can increase by contacting AWS Support .

      Valid values: DNS_FIREWALL | NETWORK_FIREWALL | SECURITY_GROUPS_COMMON | SECURITY_GROUPS_CONTENT_AUDIT | SECURITY_GROUPS_USAGE_AUDIT | SHIELD_ADVANCED | THIRD_PARTY_FIREWALL | WAFV2 | WAF

      • ManagedServiceData - Details about the service that are specific to the service type, in JSON format.
      • Example: DNS_FIREWALL

      "{\"type\":\"DNS_FIREWALL\",\"preProcessRuleGroups\":[{\"ruleGroupId\":\"rslvr-frg-1\",\"priority\":10}],\"postProcessRuleGroups\":[{\"ruleGroupId\":\"rslvr-frg-2\",\"priority\":9911}]}"

      Valid values for preProcessRuleGroups are between 1 and 99. Valid values for postProcessRuleGroups are between 9901 and 10000.

      • Example: NETWORK_FIREWALL - Centralized deployment model

      "{\"type\":\"NETWORK_FIREWALL\",\"awsNetworkFirewallConfig\":{\"networkFirewallStatelessRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateless-rulegroup/test\",\"priority\":1}],\"networkFirewallStatelessDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessFragmentDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessCustomActions\":[{\"actionName\":\"customActionName\",\"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"metricdimensionvalue\"}]}}}],\"networkFirewallStatefulRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateful-rulegroup/test\"}],\"networkFirewallLoggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"ALERT\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}},{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"FLOW\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}}],\"overrideExistingConfig\":true}},\"firewallDeploymentModel\":{\"centralizedFirewallDeploymentModel\":{\"centralizedFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"inspectionVpcIds\":[{\"resourceId\":\"vpc-1234\",\"accountId\":\"123456789011\"}],\"firewallCreationConfig\":{\"endpointLocation\":{\"availabilityZoneConfigList\":[{\"availabilityZoneId\":null,\"availabilityZoneName\":\"us-east-1a\",\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\"]}]}},\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[]}}}}"

      To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to DISTRIBUTED .

      • Example: NETWORK_FIREWALL - Distributed deployment model with automatic Availability Zone configuration

      "{\"type\":\"NETWORK_FIREWALL\",\"networkFirewallStatelessRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateless-rulegroup/test\",\"priority\":1}],\"networkFirewallStatelessDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessFragmentDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessCustomActions\":[{\"actionName\":\"customActionName\",\"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"metricdimensionvalue\"}]}}}],\"networkFirewallStatefulRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateful-rulegroup/test\"}],\"networkFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"singleFirewallEndpointPerVPC\":false,\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\",\"192.168.0.0/28\"],\"routeManagementAction\":\"OFF\"},\"networkFirewallLoggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"ALERT\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}},{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"FLOW\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}}],\"overrideExistingConfig\":true}}"

      With automatic Availbility Zone configuration, Firewall Manager chooses which Availability Zones to create the endpoints in. To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to DISTRIBUTED .

      • Example: NETWORK_FIREWALL - Distributed deployment model with automatic Availability Zone configuration and route management

      "{\"type\":\"NETWORK_FIREWALL\",\"networkFirewallStatelessRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateless-rulegroup/test\",\"priority\":1}],\"networkFirewallStatelessDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessFragmentDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessCustomActions\":[{\"actionName\":\"customActionName\",\"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"metricdimensionvalue\"}]}}}],\"networkFirewallStatefulRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateful-rulegroup/test\"}],\"networkFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"singleFirewallEndpointPerVPC\":false,\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\",\"192.168.0.0/28\"],\"routeManagementAction\":\"MONITOR\",\"routeManagementTargetTypes\":[\"InternetGateway\"]},\"networkFirewallLoggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"ALERT\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}},{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\": \"FLOW\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}}],\"overrideExistingConfig\":true}}"

      To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to DISTRIBUTED .

      • Example: NETWORK_FIREWALL - Distributed deployment model with custom Availability Zone configuration

      "{\"type\":\"NETWORK_FIREWALL\",\"networkFirewallStatelessRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateless-rulegroup/test\",\"priority\":1}],\"networkFirewallStatelessDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessFragmentDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"fragmentcustomactionname\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessCustomActions\":[{\"actionName\":\"customActionName\", \"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"metricdimensionvalue\"}]}}},{\"actionName\":\"fragmentcustomactionname\",\"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"fragmentmetricdimensionvalue\"}]}}}],\"networkFirewallStatefulRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateful-rulegroup/test\"}],\"networkFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"firewallCreationConfig\":{ \"endpointLocation\":{\"availabilityZoneConfigList\":[{\"availabilityZoneName\":\"us-east-1a\",\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\"]},{\"availabilityZoneName\":\"us-east-1b\",\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[ \"10.0.0.0/28\"]}]} },\"singleFirewallEndpointPerVPC\":false,\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":null,\"routeManagementAction\":\"OFF\",\"networkFirewallLoggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"ALERT\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}},{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"FLOW\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}}],\"overrideExistingConfig\":boolean}}"

      With custom Availability Zone configuration, you define which specific Availability Zones to create endpoints in by configuring firewallCreationConfig . To configure the Availability Zones in firewallCreationConfig , specify either the availabilityZoneName or availabilityZoneId parameter, not both parameters.

      To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to DISTRIBUTED .

      • Example: NETWORK_FIREWALL - Distributed deployment model with custom Availability Zone configuration and route management

      "{\"type\":\"NETWORK_FIREWALL\",\"networkFirewallStatelessRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateless-rulegroup/test\",\"priority\":1}],\"networkFirewallStatelessDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"customActionName\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessFragmentDefaultActions\":[\"aws:forward_to_sfe\",\"fragmentcustomactionname\"],\"networkFirewallStatelessCustomActions\":[{\"actionName\":\"customActionName\",\"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"metricdimensionvalue\"}]}}},{\"actionName\":\"fragmentcustomactionname\",\"actionDefinition\":{\"publishMetricAction\":{\"dimensions\":[{\"value\":\"fragmentmetricdimensionvalue\"}]}}}],\"networkFirewallStatefulRuleGroupReferences\":[{\"resourceARN\":\"arn:aws:network-firewall:us-east-1:123456789011:stateful-rulegroup/test\"}],\"networkFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"firewallCreationConfig\":{\"endpointLocation\":{\"availabilityZoneConfigList\":[{\"availabilityZoneName\":\"us-east-1a\",\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\"]},{\"availabilityZoneName\":\"us-east-1b\",\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\"]}]}},\"singleFirewallEndpointPerVPC\":false,\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":null,\"routeManagementAction\":\"MONITOR\",\"routeManagementTargetTypes\":[\"InternetGateway\"],\"routeManagementConfig\":{\"allowCrossAZTrafficIfNoEndpoint\":true}},\"networkFirewallLoggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"ALERT\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}},{\"logDestinationType\":\"S3\",\"logType\":\"FLOW\",\"logDestination\":{\"bucketName\":\"s3-bucket-name\"}}],\"overrideExistingConfig\":boolean}}"

      To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to DISTRIBUTED .

      • Example: THIRD_PARTY_FIREWALL - Palo Alto Networks Cloud Next-Generation Firewall centralized deployment model

      "{ \"type\":\"THIRD_PARTY_FIREWALL\", \"thirdPartyFirewall\":\"PALO_ALTO_NETWORKS_CLOUD_NGFW\", \"thirdPartyFirewallConfig\":{ \"thirdPartyFirewallPolicyList\":[\"global-1\"] },\"firewallDeploymentModel\":{\"centralizedFirewallDeploymentModel\":{\"centralizedFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"inspectionVpcIds\":[{\"resourceId\":\"vpc-1234\",\"accountId\":\"123456789011\"}],\"firewallCreationConfig\":{\"endpointLocation\":{\"availabilityZoneConfigList\":[{\"availabilityZoneId\":null,\"availabilityZoneName\":\"us-east-1a\",\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[\"10.0.0.0/28\"]}]}},\"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[]}}}}"

      To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to CENTRALIZED .

      • Example: THIRD_PARTY_FIREWALL - Palo Alto Networks Cloud Next-Generation Firewall distributed deployment model

      "{\"type\":\"THIRD_PARTY_FIREWALL\",\"thirdPartyFirewall\":\"PALO_ALTO_NETWORKS_CLOUD_NGFW\",\"thirdPartyFirewallConfig\":{\"thirdPartyFirewallPolicyList\":[\"global-1\"] },\"firewallDeploymentModel\":{ \"distributedFirewallDeploymentModel\":{ \"distributedFirewallOrchestrationConfig\":{\"firewallCreationConfig\":{\"endpointLocation\":{ \"availabilityZoneConfigList\":[ {\"availabilityZoneName\":\"${AvailabilityZone}\" } ] } }, \"allowedIPV4CidrList\":[ ] } } } }"

      To use the distributed deployment model, you must set FirewallDeploymentModel to DISTRIBUTED .

      • Specification for SHIELD_ADVANCED for Amazon CloudFront distributions

      "{\"type\":\"SHIELD_ADVANCED\",\"automaticResponseConfiguration\": {\"automaticResponseStatus\":\"ENABLED|IGNORED|DISABLED\", \"automaticResponseAction\":\"BLOCK|COUNT\"}, \"overrideCustomerWebaclClassic\":true|false}"

      For example: "{\"type\":\"SHIELD_ADVANCED\",\"automaticResponseConfiguration\": {\"automaticResponseStatus\":\"ENABLED\", \"automaticResponseAction\":\"COUNT\"}}"

      The default value for automaticResponseStatus is IGNORED . The value for automaticResponseAction is only required when automaticResponseStatus is set to ENABLED . The default value for overrideCustomerWebaclClassic is false .

      For other resource types that you can protect with a Shield Advanced policy, this ManagedServiceData configuration is an empty string.

      • Example: WAFV2

      "{\"type\":\"WAFV2\",\"preProcessRuleGroups\":[{\"ruleGroupArn\":null,\"overrideAction\":{\"type\":\"NONE\"},\"managedRuleGroupIdentifier\":{\"version\":null,\"vendorName\":\"AWS\",\"managedRuleGroupName\":\"AWSManagedRulesAmazonIpReputationList\"},\"ruleGroupType\":\"ManagedRuleGroup\",\"excludeRules\":[{\"name\":\"NoUserAgent_HEADER\"}]}],\"postProcessRuleGroups\":[],\"defaultAction\":{\"type\":\"ALLOW\"},\"overrideCustomerWebACLAssociation\":false,\"loggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[\"arn:aws:firehose:us-west-2:12345678912:deliverystream/aws-waf-logs-fms-admin-destination\"],\"redactedFields\":[{\"redactedFieldType\":\"SingleHeader\",\"redactedFieldValue\":\"Cookies\"},{\"redactedFieldType\":\"Method\"}]}}"

      In the loggingConfiguration , you can specify one logDestinationConfigs , you can optionally provide up to 20 redactedFields , and the RedactedFieldType must be one of URI , QUERY_STRING , HEADER , or METHOD .

      • Example: AWS WAF Classic

      "{\"type\": \"WAF\", \"ruleGroups\": [{\"id\":\"12345678-1bcd-9012-efga-0987654321ab\", \"overrideAction\" : {\"type\": \"COUNT\"}}], \"defaultAction\": {\"type\": \"BLOCK\"}}"

      • Example: WAFV2 - AWS Firewall Manager support for AWS WAF managed rule group versioning

      "{\"type\":\"WAFV2\",\"preProcessRuleGroups\":[{\"ruleGroupArn\":null,\"overrideAction\":{\"type\":\"NONE\"},\"managedRuleGroupIdentifier\":{\"versionEnabled\":true,\"version\":\"Version_2.0\",\"vendorName\":\"AWS\",\"managedRuleGroupName\":\"AWSManagedRulesCommonRuleSet\"},\"ruleGroupType\":\"ManagedRuleGroup\",\"excludeRules\":[{\"name\":\"NoUserAgent_HEADER\"}]}],\"postProcessRuleGroups\":[],\"defaultAction\":{\"type\":\"ALLOW\"},\"overrideCustomerWebACLAssociation\":false,\"loggingConfiguration\":{\"logDestinationConfigs\":[\"arn:aws:firehose:us-west-2:12345678912:deliverystream/aws-waf-logs-fms-admin-destination\"],\"redactedFields\":[{\"redactedFieldType\":\"SingleHeader\",\"redactedFieldValue\":\"Cookies\"},{\"redactedFieldType\":\"Method\"}]}}"

      To use a specific version of a AWS WAF managed rule group in your Firewall Manager policy, you must set versionEnabled to true , and set version to the version you'd like to use. If you don't set versionEnabled to true , or if you omit versionEnabled , then Firewall Manager uses the default version of the AWS WAF managed rule group.

      • Example: SECURITY_GROUPS_COMMON

      "{\"type\":\"SECURITY_GROUPS_COMMON\",\"revertManualSecurityGroupChanges\":false,\"exclusiveResourceSecurityGroupManagement\":false, \"applyToAllEC2InstanceENIs\":false,\"securityGroups\":[{\"id\":\" sg-000e55995d61a06bd\"}]}"

      • Example: Shared VPCs. Apply the preceding policy to resources in shared VPCs as well as to those in VPCs that the account owns

      "{\"type\":\"SECURITY_GROUPS_COMMON\",\"revertManualSecurityGroupChanges\":false,\"exclusiveResourceSecurityGroupManagement\":false, \"applyToAllEC2InstanceENIs\":false,\"includeSharedVPC\":true,\"securityGroups\":[{\"id\":\" sg-000e55995d61a06bd\"}]}"

      • Example: SECURITY_GROUPS_CONTENT_AUDIT

      "{\"type\":\"SECURITY_GROUPS_CONTENT_AUDIT\",\"securityGroups\":[{\"id\":\"sg-000e55995d61a06bd\"}],\"securityGroupAction\":{\"type\":\"ALLOW\"}}"

      The security group action for content audit can be ALLOW or DENY . For ALLOW , all in-scope security group rules must be within the allowed range of the policy's security group rules. For DENY , all in-scope security group rules must not contain a value or a range that matches a rule value or range in the policy security group.

      • Example: SECURITY_GROUPS_USAGE_AUDIT

      "{\"type\":\"SECURITY_GROUPS_USAGE_AUDIT\",\"deleteUnusedSecurityGroups\":true,\"coalesceRedundantSecurityGroups\":true}"

      Parameters:
      securityServicePolicyData - Details about the security service that is being used to protect the resources. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • deleteAllPolicyResources

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder deleteAllPolicyResources(Boolean deleteAllPolicyResources)
      Used when deleting a policy. If true , Firewall Manager performs cleanup according to the policy type.

      For AWS WAF and Shield Advanced policies, Firewall Manager does the following:

      • Deletes rule groups created by Firewall Manager
      • Removes web ACLs from in-scope resources
      • Deletes web ACLs that contain no rules or rule groups

      For security group policies, Firewall Manager does the following for each security group in the policy:

      • Disassociates the security group from in-scope resources
      • Deletes the security group if it was created through Firewall Manager and if it's no longer associated with any resources through another policy

      After the cleanup, in-scope resources are no longer protected by web ACLs in this policy. Protection of out-of-scope resources remains unchanged. Scope is determined by tags that you create and accounts that you associate with the policy. When creating the policy, if you specify that only resources in specific accounts or with specific tags are in scope of the policy, those accounts and resources are handled by the policy. All others are out of scope. If you don't specify tags or accounts, all resources are in scope.

      Parameters:
      deleteAllPolicyResources - Used when deleting a policy. If true , Firewall Manager performs cleanup according to the policy type. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • deleteAllPolicyResources

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder deleteAllPolicyResources(IResolvable deleteAllPolicyResources)
      Used when deleting a policy. If true , Firewall Manager performs cleanup according to the policy type.

      For AWS WAF and Shield Advanced policies, Firewall Manager does the following:

      • Deletes rule groups created by Firewall Manager
      • Removes web ACLs from in-scope resources
      • Deletes web ACLs that contain no rules or rule groups

      For security group policies, Firewall Manager does the following for each security group in the policy:

      • Disassociates the security group from in-scope resources
      • Deletes the security group if it was created through Firewall Manager and if it's no longer associated with any resources through another policy

      After the cleanup, in-scope resources are no longer protected by web ACLs in this policy. Protection of out-of-scope resources remains unchanged. Scope is determined by tags that you create and accounts that you associate with the policy. When creating the policy, if you specify that only resources in specific accounts or with specific tags are in scope of the policy, those accounts and resources are handled by the policy. All others are out of scope. If you don't specify tags or accounts, all resources are in scope.

      Parameters:
      deleteAllPolicyResources - Used when deleting a policy. If true , Firewall Manager performs cleanup according to the policy type. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • excludeMap

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder excludeMap(IResolvable excludeMap)
      Specifies the AWS account IDs and AWS Organizations organizational units (OUs) to exclude from the policy.

      Specifying an OU is the equivalent of specifying all accounts in the OU and in any of its child OUs, including any child OUs and accounts that are added at a later time.

      You can specify inclusions or exclusions, but not both. If you specify an IncludeMap , AWS Firewall Manager applies the policy to all accounts specified by the IncludeMap , and does not evaluate any ExcludeMap specifications. If you do not specify an IncludeMap , then Firewall Manager applies the policy to all accounts except for those specified by the ExcludeMap .

      You can specify account IDs, OUs, or a combination:

      • Specify account IDs by setting the key to ACCOUNT . For example, the following is a valid map: {“ACCOUNT” : [“accountID1”, “accountID2”]} .
      • Specify OUs by setting the key to ORGUNIT . For example, the following is a valid map: {“ORGUNIT” : [“ouid111”, “ouid112”]} .
      • Specify accounts and OUs together in a single map, separated with a comma. For example, the following is a valid map: {“ACCOUNT” : [“accountID1”, “accountID2”], “ORGUNIT” : [“ouid111”, “ouid112”]} .

      Parameters:
      excludeMap - Specifies the AWS account IDs and AWS Organizations organizational units (OUs) to exclude from the policy. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • excludeMap

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder excludeMap(CfnPolicy.IEMapProperty excludeMap)
      Specifies the AWS account IDs and AWS Organizations organizational units (OUs) to exclude from the policy.

      Specifying an OU is the equivalent of specifying all accounts in the OU and in any of its child OUs, including any child OUs and accounts that are added at a later time.

      You can specify inclusions or exclusions, but not both. If you specify an IncludeMap , AWS Firewall Manager applies the policy to all accounts specified by the IncludeMap , and does not evaluate any ExcludeMap specifications. If you do not specify an IncludeMap , then Firewall Manager applies the policy to all accounts except for those specified by the ExcludeMap .

      You can specify account IDs, OUs, or a combination:

      • Specify account IDs by setting the key to ACCOUNT . For example, the following is a valid map: {“ACCOUNT” : [“accountID1”, “accountID2”]} .
      • Specify OUs by setting the key to ORGUNIT . For example, the following is a valid map: {“ORGUNIT” : [“ouid111”, “ouid112”]} .
      • Specify accounts and OUs together in a single map, separated with a comma. For example, the following is a valid map: {“ACCOUNT” : [“accountID1”, “accountID2”], “ORGUNIT” : [“ouid111”, “ouid112”]} .

      Parameters:
      excludeMap - Specifies the AWS account IDs and AWS Organizations organizational units (OUs) to exclude from the policy. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • includeMap

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder includeMap(IResolvable includeMap)
      Specifies the AWS account IDs and AWS Organizations organizational units (OUs) to include in the policy.

      Specifying an OU is the equivalent of specifying all accounts in the OU and in any of its child OUs, including any child OUs and accounts that are added at a later time.

      You can specify inclusions or exclusions, but not both. If you specify an IncludeMap , AWS Firewall Manager applies the policy to all accounts specified by the IncludeMap , and does not evaluate any ExcludeMap specifications. If you do not specify an IncludeMap , then Firewall Manager applies the policy to all accounts except for those specified by the ExcludeMap .

      You can specify account IDs, OUs, or a combination:

      • Specify account IDs by setting the key to ACCOUNT . For example, the following is a valid map: {“ACCOUNT” : [“accountID1”, “accountID2”]} .
      • Specify OUs by setting the key to ORGUNIT . For example, the following is a valid map: {“ORGUNIT” : [“ouid111”, “ouid112”]} .
      • Specify accounts and OUs together in a single map, separated with a comma. For example, the following is a valid map: {“ACCOUNT” : [“accountID1”, “accountID2”], “ORGUNIT” : [“ouid111”, “ouid112”]} .

      Parameters:
      includeMap - Specifies the AWS account IDs and AWS Organizations organizational units (OUs) to include in the policy. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • includeMap

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder includeMap(CfnPolicy.IEMapProperty includeMap)
      Specifies the AWS account IDs and AWS Organizations organizational units (OUs) to include in the policy.

      Specifying an OU is the equivalent of specifying all accounts in the OU and in any of its child OUs, including any child OUs and accounts that are added at a later time.

      You can specify inclusions or exclusions, but not both. If you specify an IncludeMap , AWS Firewall Manager applies the policy to all accounts specified by the IncludeMap , and does not evaluate any ExcludeMap specifications. If you do not specify an IncludeMap , then Firewall Manager applies the policy to all accounts except for those specified by the ExcludeMap .

      You can specify account IDs, OUs, or a combination:

      • Specify account IDs by setting the key to ACCOUNT . For example, the following is a valid map: {“ACCOUNT” : [“accountID1”, “accountID2”]} .
      • Specify OUs by setting the key to ORGUNIT . For example, the following is a valid map: {“ORGUNIT” : [“ouid111”, “ouid112”]} .
      • Specify accounts and OUs together in a single map, separated with a comma. For example, the following is a valid map: {“ACCOUNT” : [“accountID1”, “accountID2”], “ORGUNIT” : [“ouid111”, “ouid112”]} .

      Parameters:
      includeMap - Specifies the AWS account IDs and AWS Organizations organizational units (OUs) to include in the policy. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • policyDescription

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder policyDescription(String policyDescription)
      The definition of the AWS Network Firewall firewall policy.

      Parameters:
      policyDescription - The definition of the AWS Network Firewall firewall policy. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • resourcesCleanUp

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder resourcesCleanUp(Boolean resourcesCleanUp)
      Indicates whether AWS Firewall Manager should automatically remove protections from resources that leave the policy scope and clean up resources that Firewall Manager is managing for accounts when those accounts leave policy scope.

      For example, Firewall Manager will disassociate a Firewall Manager managed web ACL from a protected customer resource when the customer resource leaves policy scope.

      By default, Firewall Manager doesn't remove protections or delete Firewall Manager managed resources.

      This option is not available for Shield Advanced or AWS WAF Classic policies.

      Parameters:
      resourcesCleanUp - Indicates whether AWS Firewall Manager should automatically remove protections from resources that leave the policy scope and clean up resources that Firewall Manager is managing for accounts when those accounts leave policy scope. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • resourcesCleanUp

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder resourcesCleanUp(IResolvable resourcesCleanUp)
      Indicates whether AWS Firewall Manager should automatically remove protections from resources that leave the policy scope and clean up resources that Firewall Manager is managing for accounts when those accounts leave policy scope.

      For example, Firewall Manager will disassociate a Firewall Manager managed web ACL from a protected customer resource when the customer resource leaves policy scope.

      By default, Firewall Manager doesn't remove protections or delete Firewall Manager managed resources.

      This option is not available for Shield Advanced or AWS WAF Classic policies.

      Parameters:
      resourcesCleanUp - Indicates whether AWS Firewall Manager should automatically remove protections from resources that leave the policy scope and clean up resources that Firewall Manager is managing for accounts when those accounts leave policy scope. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • resourceSetIds

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder resourceSetIds(List<String> resourceSetIds)
      The unique identifiers of the resource sets used by the policy.

      Parameters:
      resourceSetIds - The unique identifiers of the resource sets used by the policy. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • resourceTags

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder resourceTags(IResolvable resourceTags)
      An array of ResourceTag objects, used to explicitly include resources in the policy scope or explicitly exclude them.

      If this isn't set, then tags aren't used to modify policy scope. See also ExcludeResourceTags .

      Parameters:
      resourceTags - An array of ResourceTag objects, used to explicitly include resources in the policy scope or explicitly exclude them. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • resourceTags

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder resourceTags(List<? extends Object> resourceTags)
      An array of ResourceTag objects, used to explicitly include resources in the policy scope or explicitly exclude them.

      If this isn't set, then tags aren't used to modify policy scope. See also ExcludeResourceTags .

      Parameters:
      resourceTags - An array of ResourceTag objects, used to explicitly include resources in the policy scope or explicitly exclude them. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • resourceType

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder resourceType(String resourceType)
      The type of resource protected by or in scope of the policy.

      This is in the format shown in the AWS Resource Types Reference . To apply this policy to multiple resource types, specify a resource type of ResourceTypeList and then specify the resource types in a ResourceTypeList .

      For AWS WAF and Shield Advanced, example resource types include AWS::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::LoadBalancer and AWS::CloudFront::Distribution . For a security group common policy, valid values are AWS::EC2::NetworkInterface and AWS::EC2::Instance . For a security group content audit policy, valid values are AWS::EC2::SecurityGroup , AWS::EC2::NetworkInterface , and AWS::EC2::Instance . For a security group usage audit policy, the value is AWS::EC2::SecurityGroup . For an AWS Network Firewall policy or DNS Firewall policy, the value is AWS::EC2::VPC .

      Parameters:
      resourceType - The type of resource protected by or in scope of the policy. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • resourceTypeList

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder resourceTypeList(List<String> resourceTypeList)
      An array of ResourceType objects.

      Use this only to specify multiple resource types. To specify a single resource type, use ResourceType .

      Parameters:
      resourceTypeList - An array of ResourceType objects. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • tags

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy.Builder tags(List<? extends CfnPolicy.PolicyTagProperty> tags)
      A collection of key:value pairs 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.

      Parameters:
      tags - A collection of key:value pairs associated with an AWS resource. This parameter is required.
      Returns:
      this
    • build

      @Stability(Stable) public CfnPolicy build()
      Specified by:
      build in interface software.amazon.jsii.Builder<CfnPolicy>
      Returns:
      a newly built instance of CfnPolicy.