Control: 6.1.2.11 Ensure that an Activity Log Alert exists for Service Health
Description
Create an activity log alert for Service Health.
Monitoring for Service Health events provides insight into service issues, planned maintenance, security advisories, and other changes that may affect the Azure services and regions in use.
Remediation
Remediate from Azure Portal
- Go to
Monitor. - Click
Alerts. - Click
+ Create. - Select
Alert rulefrom the drop-down menu. - Choose a subscription.
- Click
Apply. - Select the
Conditiontab. - Click
See all signals. - Select
Service health. - Click
Apply. - Open the drop-down menu next to
Event types. - Check the box next to
Select all. - Select the
Actionstab. - Click S
elect action groupsto select an existing action group, orCreate action groupto create a new action group. - Follow the prompts to choose or create an action group.
- Select the
Detailstab. - Select a
Resource group, provide anAlert rule nameand an optionalAlert rule description. - Click
Review + create. - Click
Create. - Repeat steps 1-19 for each subscription requiring remediation.
Remediate from Azure CLI
For each subscription requiring remediation, run the following command to create a ServiceHealth alert rule for a subscription:
az monitor activity-log alert create --subscription <subscription-id> --resource-group <resource-group> --name <alert-rule> --condition category=ServiceHealth and properties.incidentType=Incident --scope /subscriptions/<subscription-id> --action-group <action-group>
Remediate from PowerShell
Create the conditions object.
$conditions = @()$conditions += New-AzActivityLogAlertAlertRuleAnyOfOrLeafConditionObject -Field category -Equal ServiceHealth$conditions += New-AzActivityLogAlertAlertRuleAnyOfOrLeafConditionObject -Field properties.incidentType -Equal Incident
Retrieve the Action Group information and store in a variable:
$actionGroup = Get-AzActionGroup -ResourceGroupName <resource-group> -Name <action-group>
Create the Actions object:
$actionObject = New-AzActivityLogAlertActionGroupObject -Id $actionGroup.Id
Create the Scope variable.
$scope = "/subscriptions/<subscription id>"
Create the activity log alert rule:
New-AzActivityLogAlert -Name <alert-rule> -ResourceGroupName <resource-group> -Condition $conditions -Scope $scope -Location global -Action $actionObject -Subscription <subscription-id> -Enabled $true
Repeat for each subscription requiring remediation.
Default Value
By default, no monitoring alerts are created.
Usage
Run the control in your terminal:
powerpipe control run azure_compliance.control.cis_v500_6_1_2_11Snapshot and share results via Turbot Pipes:
powerpipe loginpowerpipe control run azure_compliance.control.cis_v500_6_1_2_11 --shareSQL
This control uses a named query:
with alert_rule as ( select alert.id as alert_id, alert.name as alert_name, alert.enabled, alert.location, alert.subscription_id from azure_log_alert as alert, jsonb_array_elements_text(scopes) as sc where alert.location = 'global' and alert.enabled and sc = '/subscriptions/' || alert.subscription_id and ( ( alert.condition -> 'allOf' @> '[{"field":"category", "equals":"ServiceHealth"}]' ) or ( alert.condition -> 'allOf' @> '[{"field":"category", "equals":"ResourceHealth"}]' ) ))select sub.subscription_id as resource, case when count(a.subscription_id) > 0 then 'ok' else 'alarm' end as status, case when count(a.subscription_id) > 0 then 'Activity log alert exists for Service Health events.' else 'Activity log alert does not exist for Service Health events.' end as reason , sub.display_name as subscriptionfrom azure_subscription sub left join alert_rule a on sub.subscription_id = a.subscription_idgroup by sub._ctx, sub.subscription_id, sub.display_name;