Control: 8.9 [Legacy] Ensure that VHDs are Encrypted
Description
NOTE: This is a legacy recommendation. Managed Disks are encrypted by default and recommended for all new VM implementations.
VHD (Virtual Hard Disks) are stored in blob storage and are the old-style disks that were attached to Virtual Machines. The blob VHD was then leased to the VM. By default, storage accounts are not encrypted, and Microsoft Defender will then recommend that the OS disks should be encrypted. Storage accounts can be encrypted as a whole using PMK or CMK. This should be turned on for storage accounts containing VHDs.
While it is recommended to use Managed Disks which are encrypted by default, "legacy" VHDs may exist for a variety of reasons and may need to remain in VHD format. VHDs are not encrypted by default, so this recommendation intends to address the security of these disks. In these niche cases, VHDs should be encrypted using the procedures in this recommendation to encrypt and protect the data content.
If a virtual machine is using a VHD and can be converted to a managed disk, instructions for this procedure can be found in the resources section of this recommendation under the title "Convert VHD to Managed Disk."
Remediation
From Azure Portal
- Navigate to the
storage account
that you wish to encrypt. - Select
encryption
. - Select the
encryption type
that you wish to use.
If you wish to use a Microsoft-managed key (the default), you can save at this point and encryption will be applied to the account.
If you select Customer-managed keys
, it will ask for the location of the key (The default is an Azure Key Vault) and the key name.
Once these are captured, save the configuration and the account will be encrypted using the provided key.
From Azure CLI
Create the Key Vault
az keyvault create --name <name> --resource-group <resourceGroup> --location <location> --enabled-for-disk-encryption
Encrypt the disk and store the key in Key Vault
az vm encryption enable -g <resourceGroup> --name <name> --disk-encryption-keyvault myKV
From PowerShell
This process uses a Key Vault to store the keys Create the Key Vault
New-AzKeyvault -name <name> -ResourceGroupName <resourceGroup> -Location <location> -EnabledForDiskEncryption
Encrypt the disk and store the key in Key Vault
$KeyVault = Get-AzKeyVault -VaultName <name> -ResourceGroupName <resourceGroup>Set-AzVMDiskEncryptionExtension -ResourceGroupName <resourceGroup> -VMName <name> -DiskEncryptionKeyVaultUrl $KeyVault.VaultUri -DiskEncryptionKeyVaultId $KeyVault.ResourceId
Default Value
The default value for encryption is "NO Encryption".
Usage
Run the control in your terminal:
powerpipe control run azure_compliance.control.cis_v300_8_9
Snapshot and share results via Turbot Pipes:
powerpipe loginpowerpipe control run azure_compliance.control.cis_v300_8_9 --share
SQL
This control uses a named query:
manual_control