Control: 4.7 Ensure VM disks for critical VMs are encrypted with Customer-Supplied Encryption Keys (CSEK)
Description
Customer-Supplied Encryption Keys (CSEK) are a feature in Google Cloud Storage and Google Compute Engine. If you supply your own encryption keys, Google uses your key to protect the Google-generated keys used to encrypt and decrypt your data. By default, Google Compute Engine encrypts all data at rest. Compute Engine handles and manages this encryption for you without any additional actions on your part. However, if you wanted to control and manage this encryption yourself, you can provide your own encryption keys.
If you provide your own encryption keys, Compute Engine uses your key to protect the Google-generated keys used to encrypt and decrypt your data. Only users who can provide the correct key can use resources protected by a customer-supplied encryption key.
Google does not store your keys on its servers and cannot access your protected data unless you provide the key. This also means that if you forget or lose your key, there is no way for Google to recover the key or to recover any data encrypted with the lost key.
At least business critical VMs should have VM disks encrypted with CSEK.
Remediation
Currently there is no way to update the encryption of an existing disk. Therefore you should create a new disk with Encryption
set to Customer supplied
.
From Console
- Go to Compute Engine
Disks
by visiting: https://console.cloud.google.com/compute/disks. - Click
CREATE DISK
. - Set
Encryption type
toCustomer supplied
- Provide the
Key
in the box. - Select
Wrapped key
. - Click
Create
.
From Command Line
In the gcloud compute tool, encrypt a disk using the --csek-key-file flag during instance creation. If you are using an RSA-wrapped key, use the gcloud beta component:
gcloud compute instances create <INSTANCE_NAME> --csek-key-file <example-file.json>
To encrypt a standalone persistent disk:
gcloud compute disks create <DISK_NAME> --csek-key-file <example-file.json>
Default Value
By default, VM disks are encrypted with Google-managed keys. They are not encrypted with Customer-Supplied Encryption Keys.
Usage
Run the control in your terminal:
powerpipe control run gcp_compliance.control.cis_v200_4_7
Snapshot and share results via Turbot Pipes:
powerpipe loginpowerpipe control run gcp_compliance.control.cis_v200_4_7 --share
SQL
This control uses a named query:
compute_disk_encrypted_with_csk