Table of Contents
A low-level client representing AWS Network Firewall
This is the API Reference for AWS Network Firewall. This guide is for developers who need detailed information about the Network Firewall API actions, data types, and errors.
Network Firewall is a stateful, managed, network firewall and intrusion detection and prevention service for Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC). With Network Firewall, you can filter traffic at the perimeter of your VPC. This includes filtering traffic going to and coming from an internet gateway, NAT gateway, or over VPN or AWS Direct Connect. Network Firewall uses rules that are compatible with Suricata, a free, open source intrusion detection system (IDS) engine. AWS Network Firewall supports Suricata version 5.0.2. For information about Suricata, see the Suricata website .
You can use Network Firewall to monitor and protect your VPC traffic in a number of ways. The following are just a few examples:
To enable Network Firewall for your VPCs, you perform steps in both Amazon VPC and in Network Firewall. For information about using Amazon VPC, see Amazon VPC User Guide .
To start using Network Firewall, do the following:
import boto3
client = boto3.client('network-firewall')
These are the available methods:
Associates a FirewallPolicy to a Firewall .
A firewall policy defines how to monitor and manage your VPC network traffic, using a collection of inspection rule groups and other settings. Each firewall requires one firewall policy association, and you can use the same firewall policy for multiple firewalls.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.associate_firewall_policy(
UpdateToken='string',
FirewallArn='string',
FirewallName='string',
FirewallPolicyArn='string'
)
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall policy.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'FirewallArn': 'string',
'FirewallName': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyArn': 'string',
'UpdateToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
FirewallPolicyArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall policy.
UpdateToken (string) --
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
Exceptions
Associates the specified subnets in the Amazon VPC to the firewall. You can specify one subnet for each of the Availability Zones that the VPC spans.
This request creates an AWS Network Firewall firewall endpoint in each of the subnets. To enable the firewall's protections, you must also modify the VPC's route tables for each subnet's Availability Zone, to redirect the traffic that's coming into and going out of the zone through the firewall endpoint.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.associate_subnets(
UpdateToken='string',
FirewallArn='string',
FirewallName='string',
SubnetMappings=[
{
'SubnetId': 'string'
},
]
)
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
[REQUIRED]
The IDs of the subnets that you want to associate with the firewall.
The ID for a subnet that you want to associate with the firewall. This is used with CreateFirewall and AssociateSubnets . AWS Network Firewall creates an instance of the associated firewall in each subnet that you specify, to filter traffic in the subnet's Availability Zone.
The unique identifier for the subnet.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'FirewallArn': 'string',
'FirewallName': 'string',
'SubnetMappings': [
{
'SubnetId': 'string'
},
],
'UpdateToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
SubnetMappings (list) --
The IDs of the subnets that are associated with the firewall.
(dict) --
The ID for a subnet that you want to associate with the firewall. This is used with CreateFirewall and AssociateSubnets . AWS Network Firewall creates an instance of the associated firewall in each subnet that you specify, to filter traffic in the subnet's Availability Zone.
SubnetId (string) --
The unique identifier for the subnet.
UpdateToken (string) --
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
Exceptions
Check if an operation can be paginated.
Creates an AWS Network Firewall Firewall and accompanying FirewallStatus for a VPC.
The firewall defines the configuration settings for an AWS Network Firewall firewall. The settings that you can define at creation include the firewall policy, the subnets in your VPC to use for the firewall endpoints, and any tags that are attached to the firewall AWS resource.
After you create a firewall, you can provide additional settings, like the logging configuration.
To update the settings for a firewall, you use the operations that apply to the settings themselves, for example UpdateLoggingConfiguration , AssociateSubnets , and UpdateFirewallDeleteProtection .
To manage a firewall's tags, use the standard AWS resource tagging operations, ListTagsForResource , TagResource , and UntagResource .
To retrieve information about firewalls, use ListFirewalls and DescribeFirewall .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.create_firewall(
FirewallName='string',
FirewallPolicyArn='string',
VpcId='string',
SubnetMappings=[
{
'SubnetId': 'string'
},
],
DeleteProtection=True|False,
SubnetChangeProtection=True|False,
FirewallPolicyChangeProtection=True|False,
Description='string',
Tags=[
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
]
)
[REQUIRED]
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the FirewallPolicy that you want to use for the firewall.
[REQUIRED]
The unique identifier of the VPC where Network Firewall should create the firewall.
You can't change this setting after you create the firewall.
[REQUIRED]
The public subnets to use for your Network Firewall firewalls. Each subnet must belong to a different Availability Zone in the VPC. Network Firewall creates a firewall endpoint in each subnet.
The ID for a subnet that you want to associate with the firewall. This is used with CreateFirewall and AssociateSubnets . AWS Network Firewall creates an instance of the associated firewall in each subnet that you specify, to filter traffic in the subnet's Availability Zone.
The unique identifier for the subnet.
The key:value pairs to associate with the resource.
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.
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.
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.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'Firewall': {
'FirewallName': 'string',
'FirewallArn': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyArn': 'string',
'VpcId': 'string',
'SubnetMappings': [
{
'SubnetId': 'string'
},
],
'DeleteProtection': True|False,
'SubnetChangeProtection': True|False,
'FirewallPolicyChangeProtection': True|False,
'Description': 'string',
'FirewallId': 'string',
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
]
},
'FirewallStatus': {
'Status': 'PROVISIONING'|'DELETING'|'READY',
'ConfigurationSyncStateSummary': 'PENDING'|'IN_SYNC',
'SyncStates': {
'string': {
'Attachment': {
'SubnetId': 'string',
'EndpointId': 'string',
'Status': 'CREATING'|'DELETING'|'SCALING'|'READY'
},
'Config': {
'string': {
'SyncStatus': 'PENDING'|'IN_SYNC',
'UpdateToken': 'string'
}
}
}
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
Firewall (dict) --
The configuration settings for the firewall. These settings include the firewall policy and the subnets in your VPC to use for the firewall endpoints.
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
FirewallPolicyArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall policy.
The relationship of firewall to firewall policy is many to one. Each firewall requires one firewall policy association, and you can use the same firewall policy for multiple firewalls.
VpcId (string) --
The unique identifier of the VPC where the firewall is in use.
SubnetMappings (list) --
The public subnets that Network Firewall is using for the firewall. Each subnet must belong to a different Availability Zone.
(dict) --
The ID for a subnet that you want to associate with the firewall. This is used with CreateFirewall and AssociateSubnets . AWS Network Firewall creates an instance of the associated firewall in each subnet that you specify, to filter traffic in the subnet's Availability Zone.
SubnetId (string) --
The unique identifier for the subnet.
DeleteProtection (boolean) --
A flag indicating whether it is possible to delete the firewall. A setting of TRUE indicates that the firewall is protected against deletion. Use this setting to protect against accidentally deleting a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this flag to TRUE .
SubnetChangeProtection (boolean) --
A setting indicating whether the firewall is protected against changes to the subnet associations. Use this setting to protect against accidentally modifying the subnet associations for a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this setting to TRUE .
FirewallPolicyChangeProtection (boolean) --
A setting indicating whether the firewall is protected against a change to the firewall policy association. Use this setting to protect against accidentally modifying the firewall policy for a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this setting to TRUE .
Description (string) --
A description of the firewall.
FirewallId (string) --
The unique identifier for the firewall.
Tags (list) --
(dict) --
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.
FirewallStatus (dict) --
Detailed information about the current status of a Firewall . You can retrieve this for a firewall by calling DescribeFirewall and providing the firewall name and ARN.
Status (string) --
The readiness of the configured firewall to handle network traffic across all of the Availability Zones where you've configured it. This setting is READY only when the ConfigurationSyncStateSummary value is IN_SYNC and the Attachment Status values for all of the configured subnets are READY .
ConfigurationSyncStateSummary (string) --
The configuration sync state for the firewall. This summarizes the sync states reported in the Config settings for all of the Availability Zones where you have configured the firewall.
When you create a firewall or update its configuration, for example by adding a rule group to its firewall policy, Network Firewall distributes the configuration changes to all zones where the firewall is in use. This summary indicates whether the configuration changes have been applied everywhere.
This status must be IN_SYNC for the firewall to be ready for use, but it doesn't indicate that the firewall is ready. The Status setting indicates firewall readiness.
SyncStates (dict) --
The subnets that you've configured for use by the Network Firewall firewall. This contains one array element per Availability Zone where you've configured a subnet. These objects provide details of the information that is summarized in the ConfigurationSyncStateSummary and Status , broken down by zone and configuration object.
(string) --
(dict) --
The status of the firewall endpoint and firewall policy configuration for a single VPC subnet.
For each VPC subnet that you associate with a firewall, AWS Network Firewall does the following:
When you update a firewall, for example to add a subnet association or change a rule group in the firewall policy, the affected sync states reflect out-of-sync or not ready status until the changes are complete.
Attachment (dict) --
The attachment status of the firewall's association with a single VPC subnet. For each configured subnet, Network Firewall creates the attachment by instantiating the firewall endpoint in the subnet so that it's ready to take traffic. This is part of the FirewallStatus .
SubnetId (string) --
The unique identifier of the subnet that you've specified to be used for a firewall endpoint.
EndpointId (string) --
The identifier of the firewall endpoint that Network Firewall has instantiated in the subnet. You use this to identify the firewall endpoint in the VPC route tables, when you redirect the VPC traffic through the endpoint.
Status (string) --
The current status of the firewall endpoint in the subnet. This value reflects both the instantiation of the endpoint in the VPC subnet and the sync states that are reported in the Config settings. When this value is READY , the endpoint is available and configured properly to handle network traffic. When the endpoint isn't available for traffic, this value will reflect its state, for example CREATING , DELETING , or FAILED .
Config (dict) --
The configuration status of the firewall endpoint in a single VPC subnet. Network Firewall provides each endpoint with the rules that are configured in the firewall policy. Each time you add a subnet or modify the associated firewall policy, Network Firewall synchronizes the rules in the endpoint, so it can properly filter network traffic. This is part of the FirewallStatus .
(string) --
(dict) --
Provides configuration status for a single policy or rule group that is used for a firewall endpoint. Network Firewall provides each endpoint with the rules that are configured in the firewall policy. Each time you add a subnet or modify the associated firewall policy, Network Firewall synchronizes the rules in the endpoint, so it can properly filter network traffic. This is part of a SyncState for a firewall.
SyncStatus (string) --
Indicates whether this object is in sync with the version indicated in the update token.
UpdateToken (string) --
The current version of the object that is either in sync or pending synchronization.
Exceptions
Creates the firewall policy for the firewall according to the specifications.
An AWS Network Firewall firewall policy defines the behavior of a firewall, in a collection of stateless and stateful rule groups and other settings. You can use one firewall policy for multiple firewalls.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.create_firewall_policy(
FirewallPolicyName='string',
FirewallPolicy={
'StatelessRuleGroupReferences': [
{
'ResourceArn': 'string',
'Priority': 123
},
],
'StatelessDefaultActions': [
'string',
],
'StatelessFragmentDefaultActions': [
'string',
],
'StatelessCustomActions': [
{
'ActionName': 'string',
'ActionDefinition': {
'PublishMetricAction': {
'Dimensions': [
{
'Value': 'string'
},
]
}
}
},
],
'StatefulRuleGroupReferences': [
{
'ResourceArn': 'string',
'Priority': 123,
'Override': {
'Action': 'DROP_TO_ALERT'
}
},
],
'StatefulDefaultActions': [
'string',
],
'StatefulEngineOptions': {
'RuleOrder': 'DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER'|'STRICT_ORDER'
}
},
Description='string',
Tags=[
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
],
DryRun=True|False
)
[REQUIRED]
The descriptive name of the firewall policy. You can't change the name of a firewall policy after you create it.
[REQUIRED]
The rule groups and policy actions to use in the firewall policy.
References to the stateless rule groups that are used in the policy. These define the matching criteria in stateless rules.
Identifier for a single stateless rule group, used in a firewall policy to refer to the rule group.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the stateless rule group.
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.
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 .
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 .
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.
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:
The descriptive name of the custom action. You can't change the name of a custom action after you create it.
The custom action associated with the action name.
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.
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 .
The value to use in the custom metric dimension.
References to the stateful rule groups that are used in the policy. These define the inspection criteria in stateful rules.
Identifier for a single stateful rule group, used in a firewall policy to refer to a rule group.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the stateful rule group.
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.
The action that allows the policy owner to override the behavior of the rule group within a policy.
The action that changes the rule group from DROP to ALERT . This only applies to managed rule groups.
The default actions to take on a packet that doesn't match any stateful rules. The stateful default action is optional, and is only valid when using the strict rule order.
Valid values of the stateful default action:
For more information, see Strict evaluation order in the AWS Network Firewall Developer Guide .
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.
Indicates how to manage the order of stateful rule evaluation for the policy. DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER is the default behavior. Stateful rules are provided to the rule engine as Suricata compatible strings, and Suricata evaluates them based on certain settings. For more information, see Evaluation order for stateful rules in the AWS Network Firewall Developer Guide .
The key:value pairs to associate with the resource.
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.
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.
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.
Indicates whether you want Network Firewall to just check the validity of the request, rather than run the request.
If set to TRUE , Network Firewall checks whether the request can run successfully, but doesn't actually make the requested changes. The call returns the value that the request would return if you ran it with dry run set to FALSE , but doesn't make additions or changes to your resources. This option allows you to make sure that you have the required permissions to run the request and that your request parameters are valid.
If set to FALSE , Network Firewall makes the requested changes to your resources.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'UpdateToken': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyResponse': {
'FirewallPolicyName': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyArn': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyId': 'string',
'Description': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyStatus': 'ACTIVE'|'DELETING',
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
],
'ConsumedStatelessRuleCapacity': 123,
'ConsumedStatefulRuleCapacity': 123,
'NumberOfAssociations': 123
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
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 (dict) --
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.
(dict) --
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.
Exceptions
Creates the specified stateless or stateful rule group, which includes the rules for network traffic inspection, a capacity setting, and tags.
You provide your rule group specification in your request using either RuleGroup or Rules .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.create_rule_group(
RuleGroupName='string',
RuleGroup={
'RuleVariables': {
'IPSets': {
'string': {
'Definition': [
'string',
]
}
},
'PortSets': {
'string': {
'Definition': [
'string',
]
}
}
},
'RulesSource': {
'RulesString': 'string',
'RulesSourceList': {
'Targets': [
'string',
],
'TargetTypes': [
'TLS_SNI'|'HTTP_HOST',
],
'GeneratedRulesType': 'ALLOWLIST'|'DENYLIST'
},
'StatefulRules': [
{
'Action': 'PASS'|'DROP'|'ALERT',
'Header': {
'Protocol': 'IP'|'TCP'|'UDP'|'ICMP'|'HTTP'|'FTP'|'TLS'|'SMB'|'DNS'|'DCERPC'|'SSH'|'SMTP'|'IMAP'|'MSN'|'KRB5'|'IKEV2'|'TFTP'|'NTP'|'DHCP',
'Source': 'string',
'SourcePort': 'string',
'Direction': 'FORWARD'|'ANY',
'Destination': 'string',
'DestinationPort': 'string'
},
'RuleOptions': [
{
'Keyword': 'string',
'Settings': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
],
'StatelessRulesAndCustomActions': {
'StatelessRules': [
{
'RuleDefinition': {
'MatchAttributes': {
'Sources': [
{
'AddressDefinition': 'string'
},
],
'Destinations': [
{
'AddressDefinition': 'string'
},
],
'SourcePorts': [
{
'FromPort': 123,
'ToPort': 123
},
],
'DestinationPorts': [
{
'FromPort': 123,
'ToPort': 123
},
],
'Protocols': [
123,
],
'TCPFlags': [
{
'Flags': [
'FIN'|'SYN'|'RST'|'PSH'|'ACK'|'URG'|'ECE'|'CWR',
],
'Masks': [
'FIN'|'SYN'|'RST'|'PSH'|'ACK'|'URG'|'ECE'|'CWR',
]
},
]
},
'Actions': [
'string',
]
},
'Priority': 123
},
],
'CustomActions': [
{
'ActionName': 'string',
'ActionDefinition': {
'PublishMetricAction': {
'Dimensions': [
{
'Value': 'string'
},
]
}
}
},
]
}
},
'StatefulRuleOptions': {
'RuleOrder': 'DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER'|'STRICT_ORDER'
}
},
Rules='string',
Type='STATELESS'|'STATEFUL',
Description='string',
Capacity=123,
Tags=[
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
],
DryRun=True|False
)
[REQUIRED]
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
An object that defines the rule group rules.
Note
You must provide either this rule group setting or a Rules setting, but not both.
Settings that are available for use in the rules in the rule group. You can only use these for stateful rule groups.
A list of IP addresses and address ranges, in CIDR notation.
A list of IP addresses and address ranges, in CIDR notation. This is part of a RuleVariables .
The list of IP addresses and address ranges, in CIDR notation.
A list of port ranges.
A set of port ranges for use in the rules in a rule group.
The set of port ranges.
The stateful rules or stateless rules for the rule group.
Stateful inspection criteria, provided in Suricata compatible intrusion prevention system (IPS) rules. Suricata is an open-source network IPS that includes a standard rule-based language for network traffic inspection.
These rules contain the inspection criteria and the action to take for traffic that matches the criteria, so this type of rule group doesn't have a separate action setting.
Stateful inspection criteria for a domain list rule group.
The domains that you want to inspect for in your traffic flows. Valid domain specifications are the following:
The protocols you want to inspect. Specify TLS_SNI for HTTPS . Specify HTTP_HOST for HTTP . You can specify either or both.
Whether you want to allow or deny access to the domains in your target list.
An array of individual stateful rules inspection criteria to be used together in a stateful rule group. Use this option to specify simple Suricata rules with protocol, source and destination, ports, direction, and rule options. For information about the Suricata Rules format, see Rules Format .
A single Suricata rules specification, for use in a stateful rule group. Use this option to specify a simple Suricata rule with protocol, source and destination, ports, direction, and rule options. For information about the Suricata Rules format, see Rules Format .
Defines what Network Firewall should do with the packets in a traffic flow when the flow matches the stateful rule criteria. For all actions, Network Firewall performs the specified action and discontinues stateful inspection of the traffic flow.
The actions for a stateful rule are defined as follows:
The stateful inspection criteria for this rule, used to inspect traffic flows.
The protocol to inspect for. To specify all, you can use IP , because all traffic on AWS and on the internet is IP.
The source IP address or address range to inspect for, in CIDR notation. To match with any address, specify ANY .
Specify an IP address or a block of IP addresses in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. Network Firewall supports all address ranges for IPv4.
Examples:
For more information about CIDR notation, see the Wikipedia entry Classless Inter-Domain Routing .
The source port to inspect for. You can specify an individual port, for example 1994 and you can specify a port range, for example 1990:1994 . To match with any port, specify ANY .
The direction of traffic flow to inspect. If set to ANY , the inspection matches bidirectional traffic, both from the source to the destination and from the destination to the source. If set to FORWARD , the inspection only matches traffic going from the source to the destination.
The destination IP address or address range to inspect for, in CIDR notation. To match with any address, specify ANY .
Specify an IP address or a block of IP addresses in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. Network Firewall supports all address ranges for IPv4.
Examples:
For more information about CIDR notation, see the Wikipedia entry Classless Inter-Domain Routing .
The destination port to inspect for. You can specify an individual port, for example 1994 and you can specify a port range, for example 1990:1994 . To match with any port, specify ANY .
Additional options for the rule. These are the Suricata RuleOptions settings.
Additional settings for a stateful rule. This is part of the StatefulRule configuration.
Stateless inspection criteria to be used in a stateless rule group.
Defines the set of stateless rules for use in a stateless rule group.
A single stateless rule. This is used in StatelessRulesAndCustomActions .
Defines the stateless 5-tuple packet inspection criteria and the action to take on a packet that matches the criteria.
Criteria for Network Firewall to use to inspect an individual packet in stateless rule inspection. Each match attributes set can include one or more items such as IP address, CIDR range, port number, protocol, and TCP flags.
The source IP addresses and address ranges to inspect for, in CIDR notation. If not specified, this matches with any source address.
A single IP address specification. This is used in the MatchAttributes source and destination specifications.
Specify an IP address or a block of IP addresses in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. Network Firewall supports all address ranges for IPv4.
Examples:
For more information about CIDR notation, see the Wikipedia entry Classless Inter-Domain Routing .
The destination IP addresses and address ranges to inspect for, in CIDR notation. If not specified, this matches with any destination address.
A single IP address specification. This is used in the MatchAttributes source and destination specifications.
Specify an IP address or a block of IP addresses in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. Network Firewall supports all address ranges for IPv4.
Examples:
For more information about CIDR notation, see the Wikipedia entry Classless Inter-Domain Routing .
The source ports to inspect for. If not specified, this matches with any source port. This setting is only used for protocols 6 (TCP) and 17 (UDP).
You can specify individual ports, for example 1994 and you can specify port ranges, for example 1990:1994 .
A single port range specification. This is used for source and destination port ranges in the stateless rule MatchAttributes , SourcePorts , and DestinationPorts settings.
The lower limit of the port range. This must be less than or equal to the ToPort specification.
The upper limit of the port range. This must be greater than or equal to the FromPort specification.
The destination ports to inspect for. If not specified, this matches with any destination port. This setting is only used for protocols 6 (TCP) and 17 (UDP).
You can specify individual ports, for example 1994 and you can specify port ranges, for example 1990:1994 .
A single port range specification. This is used for source and destination port ranges in the stateless rule MatchAttributes , SourcePorts , and DestinationPorts settings.
The lower limit of the port range. This must be less than or equal to the ToPort specification.
The upper limit of the port range. This must be greater than or equal to the FromPort specification.
The protocols to inspect for, specified using each protocol's assigned internet protocol number (IANA). If not specified, this matches with any protocol.
The TCP flags and masks to inspect for. If not specified, this matches with any settings. This setting is only used for protocol 6 (TCP).
TCP flags and masks to inspect packets for, used in stateless rules MatchAttributes settings.
Used in conjunction with the Masks setting to define the flags that must be set and flags that must not be set in order for the packet to match. This setting can only specify values that are also specified in the Masks setting.
For the flags that are specified in the masks setting, the following must be true for the packet to match:
The set of flags to consider in the inspection. To inspect all flags in the valid values list, leave this with no setting.
The actions to take on a packet that matches one of the stateless rule definition's match attributes. You must specify a standard action and you can add custom actions.
Note
Network Firewall only forwards a packet for stateful rule inspection if you specify aws:forward_to_sfe for a rule that the packet matches, or if the packet doesn't match any stateless rule and you specify aws:forward_to_sfe for the StatelessDefaultActions setting for the FirewallPolicy .
For every rule, you must specify exactly one of the following standard actions.
Additionally, you can specify a custom action. To do this, you define a custom action by name and type, then provide the name you've assigned to the action in this Actions setting. For information about the options, see CustomAction .
To provide more than one action in this setting, separate the settings with a comma. For example, if you have a custom PublishMetrics action that you've named MyMetricsAction , then you could specify the standard action aws:pass and the custom action with [“aws:pass”, “MyMetricsAction”] .
Indicates the order in which to run this rule relative to all of the rules that are defined for a stateless rule group. Network Firewall evaluates the rules in a rule group starting with the lowest priority setting. You must ensure that the priority settings are unique for the rule group.
Each stateless rule group uses exactly one StatelessRulesAndCustomActions object, and each StatelessRulesAndCustomActions contains exactly one StatelessRules object. To ensure unique priority settings for your rule groups, set unique priorities for the stateless rules that you define inside any single StatelessRules object.
You can change the priority settings of your rules at any time. To make it easier to insert rules later, number them so there's a wide range in between, for example use 100, 200, and so on.
Defines an array of individual custom action definitions that are available for use by the stateless rules in this StatelessRulesAndCustomActions specification. You name each custom action that you define, and then you can use it by name in your StatelessRule RuleDefinition Actions specification.
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:
The descriptive name of the custom action. You can't change the name of a custom action after you create it.
The custom action associated with the action name.
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.
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 .
The value to use in the custom metric dimension.
Additional options governing how Network Firewall handles stateful rules. The policies where you use your stateful rule group must have stateful rule options settings that are compatible with these settings.
Indicates how to manage the order of the rule evaluation for the rule group. DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER is the default behavior. Stateful rules are provided to the rule engine as Suricata compatible strings, and Suricata evaluates them based on certain settings. For more information, see Evaluation order for stateful rules in the AWS Network Firewall Developer Guide .
A string containing stateful rule group rules specifications in Suricata flat format, with one rule per line. Use this to import your existing Suricata compatible rule groups.
Note
You must provide either this rules setting or a populated RuleGroup setting, but not both.
You can provide your rule group specification in Suricata flat format through this setting when you create or update your rule group. The call response returns a RuleGroup object that Network Firewall has populated from your string.
[REQUIRED]
Indicates whether the rule group is stateless or stateful. If the rule group is stateless, it contains stateless rules. If it is stateful, it contains stateful rules.
[REQUIRED]
The maximum operating resources that this rule group can use. Rule group capacity is fixed at creation. When you update a rule group, you are limited to this capacity. When you reference a rule group from a firewall policy, Network Firewall reserves this capacity for the rule group.
You can retrieve the capacity that would be required for a rule group before you create the rule group by calling CreateRuleGroup with DryRun set to TRUE .
Note
You can't change or exceed this capacity when you update the rule group, so leave room for your rule group to grow.
Capacity for a stateless rule group
For a stateless rule group, the capacity required is the sum of the capacity requirements of the individual rules that you expect to have in the rule group.
To calculate the capacity requirement of a single rule, multiply the capacity requirement values of each of the rule's match settings:
A rule with no criteria specified in any of its match settings has a capacity requirement of 1. A rule with protocol setting ["UDP","TCP"], source setting ["10.0.0.0/24","10.0.0.1/24","10.0.0.2/24"], and a single specification or no specification for each of the other match settings has a capacity requirement of 6.
Capacity for a stateful rule group
For a stateful rule group, the minimum capacity required is the number of individual rules that you expect to have in the rule group.
The key:value pairs to associate with the resource.
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.
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.
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.
Indicates whether you want Network Firewall to just check the validity of the request, rather than run the request.
If set to TRUE , Network Firewall checks whether the request can run successfully, but doesn't actually make the requested changes. The call returns the value that the request would return if you ran it with dry run set to FALSE , but doesn't make additions or changes to your resources. This option allows you to make sure that you have the required permissions to run the request and that your request parameters are valid.
If set to FALSE , Network Firewall makes the requested changes to your resources.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'UpdateToken': 'string',
'RuleGroupResponse': {
'RuleGroupArn': 'string',
'RuleGroupName': 'string',
'RuleGroupId': 'string',
'Description': 'string',
'Type': 'STATELESS'|'STATEFUL',
'Capacity': 123,
'RuleGroupStatus': 'ACTIVE'|'DELETING',
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
],
'ConsumedCapacity': 123,
'NumberOfAssociations': 123
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
UpdateToken (string) --
A token used for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the rule group. The token marks the state of the rule group resource at the time of the request.
To make changes to the rule group, you provide the token in your request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the rule group hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the rule group again to get a current copy of it with a current token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
RuleGroupResponse (dict) --
The high-level properties of a rule group. This, along with the RuleGroup , define the rule group. You can retrieve all objects for a rule group by calling DescribeRuleGroup .
RuleGroupArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the rule group.
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.
RuleGroupName (string) --
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
RuleGroupId (string) --
The unique identifier for the rule group.
Description (string) --
A description of the rule group.
Type (string) --
Indicates whether the rule group is stateless or stateful. If the rule group is stateless, it contains stateless rules. If it is stateful, it contains stateful rules.
Capacity (integer) --
The maximum operating resources that this rule group can use. Rule group capacity is fixed at creation. When you update a rule group, you are limited to this capacity. When you reference a rule group from a firewall policy, Network Firewall reserves this capacity for the rule group.
You can retrieve the capacity that would be required for a rule group before you create the rule group by calling CreateRuleGroup with DryRun set to TRUE .
RuleGroupStatus (string) --
Detailed information about the current status of a rule group.
Tags (list) --
The key:value pairs to associate with the resource.
(dict) --
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.
ConsumedCapacity (integer) --
The number of capacity units currently consumed by the rule group rules.
NumberOfAssociations (integer) --
The number of firewall policies that use this rule group.
Exceptions
Deletes the specified Firewall and its FirewallStatus . This operation requires the firewall's DeleteProtection flag to be FALSE . You can't revert this operation.
You can check whether a firewall is in use by reviewing the route tables for the Availability Zones where you have firewall subnet mappings. Retrieve the subnet mappings by calling DescribeFirewall . You define and update the route tables through Amazon VPC. As needed, update the route tables for the zones to remove the firewall endpoints. When the route tables no longer use the firewall endpoints, you can remove the firewall safely.
To delete a firewall, remove the delete protection if you need to using UpdateFirewallDeleteProtection , then delete the firewall by calling DeleteFirewall .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.delete_firewall(
FirewallName='string',
FirewallArn='string'
)
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'Firewall': {
'FirewallName': 'string',
'FirewallArn': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyArn': 'string',
'VpcId': 'string',
'SubnetMappings': [
{
'SubnetId': 'string'
},
],
'DeleteProtection': True|False,
'SubnetChangeProtection': True|False,
'FirewallPolicyChangeProtection': True|False,
'Description': 'string',
'FirewallId': 'string',
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
]
},
'FirewallStatus': {
'Status': 'PROVISIONING'|'DELETING'|'READY',
'ConfigurationSyncStateSummary': 'PENDING'|'IN_SYNC',
'SyncStates': {
'string': {
'Attachment': {
'SubnetId': 'string',
'EndpointId': 'string',
'Status': 'CREATING'|'DELETING'|'SCALING'|'READY'
},
'Config': {
'string': {
'SyncStatus': 'PENDING'|'IN_SYNC',
'UpdateToken': 'string'
}
}
}
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
Firewall (dict) --
The firewall defines the configuration settings for an AWS Network Firewall firewall. These settings include the firewall policy, the subnets in your VPC to use for the firewall endpoints, and any tags that are attached to the firewall AWS resource.
The status of the firewall, for example whether it's ready to filter network traffic, is provided in the corresponding FirewallStatus . You can retrieve both objects by calling DescribeFirewall .
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
FirewallPolicyArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall policy.
The relationship of firewall to firewall policy is many to one. Each firewall requires one firewall policy association, and you can use the same firewall policy for multiple firewalls.
VpcId (string) --
The unique identifier of the VPC where the firewall is in use.
SubnetMappings (list) --
The public subnets that Network Firewall is using for the firewall. Each subnet must belong to a different Availability Zone.
(dict) --
The ID for a subnet that you want to associate with the firewall. This is used with CreateFirewall and AssociateSubnets . AWS Network Firewall creates an instance of the associated firewall in each subnet that you specify, to filter traffic in the subnet's Availability Zone.
SubnetId (string) --
The unique identifier for the subnet.
DeleteProtection (boolean) --
A flag indicating whether it is possible to delete the firewall. A setting of TRUE indicates that the firewall is protected against deletion. Use this setting to protect against accidentally deleting a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this flag to TRUE .
SubnetChangeProtection (boolean) --
A setting indicating whether the firewall is protected against changes to the subnet associations. Use this setting to protect against accidentally modifying the subnet associations for a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this setting to TRUE .
FirewallPolicyChangeProtection (boolean) --
A setting indicating whether the firewall is protected against a change to the firewall policy association. Use this setting to protect against accidentally modifying the firewall policy for a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this setting to TRUE .
Description (string) --
A description of the firewall.
FirewallId (string) --
The unique identifier for the firewall.
Tags (list) --
(dict) --
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.
FirewallStatus (dict) --
Detailed information about the current status of a Firewall . You can retrieve this for a firewall by calling DescribeFirewall and providing the firewall name and ARN.
Status (string) --
The readiness of the configured firewall to handle network traffic across all of the Availability Zones where you've configured it. This setting is READY only when the ConfigurationSyncStateSummary value is IN_SYNC and the Attachment Status values for all of the configured subnets are READY .
ConfigurationSyncStateSummary (string) --
The configuration sync state for the firewall. This summarizes the sync states reported in the Config settings for all of the Availability Zones where you have configured the firewall.
When you create a firewall or update its configuration, for example by adding a rule group to its firewall policy, Network Firewall distributes the configuration changes to all zones where the firewall is in use. This summary indicates whether the configuration changes have been applied everywhere.
This status must be IN_SYNC for the firewall to be ready for use, but it doesn't indicate that the firewall is ready. The Status setting indicates firewall readiness.
SyncStates (dict) --
The subnets that you've configured for use by the Network Firewall firewall. This contains one array element per Availability Zone where you've configured a subnet. These objects provide details of the information that is summarized in the ConfigurationSyncStateSummary and Status , broken down by zone and configuration object.
(string) --
(dict) --
The status of the firewall endpoint and firewall policy configuration for a single VPC subnet.
For each VPC subnet that you associate with a firewall, AWS Network Firewall does the following:
When you update a firewall, for example to add a subnet association or change a rule group in the firewall policy, the affected sync states reflect out-of-sync or not ready status until the changes are complete.
Attachment (dict) --
The attachment status of the firewall's association with a single VPC subnet. For each configured subnet, Network Firewall creates the attachment by instantiating the firewall endpoint in the subnet so that it's ready to take traffic. This is part of the FirewallStatus .
SubnetId (string) --
The unique identifier of the subnet that you've specified to be used for a firewall endpoint.
EndpointId (string) --
The identifier of the firewall endpoint that Network Firewall has instantiated in the subnet. You use this to identify the firewall endpoint in the VPC route tables, when you redirect the VPC traffic through the endpoint.
Status (string) --
The current status of the firewall endpoint in the subnet. This value reflects both the instantiation of the endpoint in the VPC subnet and the sync states that are reported in the Config settings. When this value is READY , the endpoint is available and configured properly to handle network traffic. When the endpoint isn't available for traffic, this value will reflect its state, for example CREATING , DELETING , or FAILED .
Config (dict) --
The configuration status of the firewall endpoint in a single VPC subnet. Network Firewall provides each endpoint with the rules that are configured in the firewall policy. Each time you add a subnet or modify the associated firewall policy, Network Firewall synchronizes the rules in the endpoint, so it can properly filter network traffic. This is part of the FirewallStatus .
(string) --
(dict) --
Provides configuration status for a single policy or rule group that is used for a firewall endpoint. Network Firewall provides each endpoint with the rules that are configured in the firewall policy. Each time you add a subnet or modify the associated firewall policy, Network Firewall synchronizes the rules in the endpoint, so it can properly filter network traffic. This is part of a SyncState for a firewall.
SyncStatus (string) --
Indicates whether this object is in sync with the version indicated in the update token.
UpdateToken (string) --
The current version of the object that is either in sync or pending synchronization.
Exceptions
Deletes the specified FirewallPolicy .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.delete_firewall_policy(
FirewallPolicyName='string',
FirewallPolicyArn='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.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall policy.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'FirewallPolicyResponse': {
'FirewallPolicyName': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyArn': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyId': 'string',
'Description': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyStatus': 'ACTIVE'|'DELETING',
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
],
'ConsumedStatelessRuleCapacity': 123,
'ConsumedStatefulRuleCapacity': 123,
'NumberOfAssociations': 123
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
FirewallPolicyResponse (dict) --
The object containing the definition of the FirewallPolicyResponse that you asked to delete.
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.
(dict) --
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.
Exceptions
Deletes a resource policy that you created in a PutResourcePolicy request.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.delete_resource_policy(
ResourceArn='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the rule group or firewall policy whose resource policy you want to delete.
{}
Response Structure
Exceptions
Deletes the specified RuleGroup .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.delete_rule_group(
RuleGroupName='string',
RuleGroupArn='string',
Type='STATELESS'|'STATEFUL'
)
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the rule group.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
Indicates whether the rule group is stateless or stateful. If the rule group is stateless, it contains stateless rules. If it is stateful, it contains stateful rules.
Note
This setting is required for requests that do not include the RuleGroupARN .
dict
Response Syntax
{
'RuleGroupResponse': {
'RuleGroupArn': 'string',
'RuleGroupName': 'string',
'RuleGroupId': 'string',
'Description': 'string',
'Type': 'STATELESS'|'STATEFUL',
'Capacity': 123,
'RuleGroupStatus': 'ACTIVE'|'DELETING',
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
],
'ConsumedCapacity': 123,
'NumberOfAssociations': 123
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
RuleGroupResponse (dict) --
The high-level properties of a rule group. This, along with the RuleGroup , define the rule group. You can retrieve all objects for a rule group by calling DescribeRuleGroup .
RuleGroupArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the rule group.
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.
RuleGroupName (string) --
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
RuleGroupId (string) --
The unique identifier for the rule group.
Description (string) --
A description of the rule group.
Type (string) --
Indicates whether the rule group is stateless or stateful. If the rule group is stateless, it contains stateless rules. If it is stateful, it contains stateful rules.
Capacity (integer) --
The maximum operating resources that this rule group can use. Rule group capacity is fixed at creation. When you update a rule group, you are limited to this capacity. When you reference a rule group from a firewall policy, Network Firewall reserves this capacity for the rule group.
You can retrieve the capacity that would be required for a rule group before you create the rule group by calling CreateRuleGroup with DryRun set to TRUE .
RuleGroupStatus (string) --
Detailed information about the current status of a rule group.
Tags (list) --
The key:value pairs to associate with the resource.
(dict) --
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.
ConsumedCapacity (integer) --
The number of capacity units currently consumed by the rule group rules.
NumberOfAssociations (integer) --
The number of firewall policies that use this rule group.
Exceptions
Returns the data objects for the specified firewall.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_firewall(
FirewallName='string',
FirewallArn='string'
)
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'UpdateToken': 'string',
'Firewall': {
'FirewallName': 'string',
'FirewallArn': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyArn': 'string',
'VpcId': 'string',
'SubnetMappings': [
{
'SubnetId': 'string'
},
],
'DeleteProtection': True|False,
'SubnetChangeProtection': True|False,
'FirewallPolicyChangeProtection': True|False,
'Description': 'string',
'FirewallId': 'string',
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
]
},
'FirewallStatus': {
'Status': 'PROVISIONING'|'DELETING'|'READY',
'ConfigurationSyncStateSummary': 'PENDING'|'IN_SYNC',
'SyncStates': {
'string': {
'Attachment': {
'SubnetId': 'string',
'EndpointId': 'string',
'Status': 'CREATING'|'DELETING'|'SCALING'|'READY'
},
'Config': {
'string': {
'SyncStatus': 'PENDING'|'IN_SYNC',
'UpdateToken': 'string'
}
}
}
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
UpdateToken (string) --
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
Firewall (dict) --
The configuration settings for the firewall. These settings include the firewall policy and the subnets in your VPC to use for the firewall endpoints.
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
FirewallPolicyArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall policy.
The relationship of firewall to firewall policy is many to one. Each firewall requires one firewall policy association, and you can use the same firewall policy for multiple firewalls.
VpcId (string) --
The unique identifier of the VPC where the firewall is in use.
SubnetMappings (list) --
The public subnets that Network Firewall is using for the firewall. Each subnet must belong to a different Availability Zone.
(dict) --
The ID for a subnet that you want to associate with the firewall. This is used with CreateFirewall and AssociateSubnets . AWS Network Firewall creates an instance of the associated firewall in each subnet that you specify, to filter traffic in the subnet's Availability Zone.
SubnetId (string) --
The unique identifier for the subnet.
DeleteProtection (boolean) --
A flag indicating whether it is possible to delete the firewall. A setting of TRUE indicates that the firewall is protected against deletion. Use this setting to protect against accidentally deleting a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this flag to TRUE .
SubnetChangeProtection (boolean) --
A setting indicating whether the firewall is protected against changes to the subnet associations. Use this setting to protect against accidentally modifying the subnet associations for a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this setting to TRUE .
FirewallPolicyChangeProtection (boolean) --
A setting indicating whether the firewall is protected against a change to the firewall policy association. Use this setting to protect against accidentally modifying the firewall policy for a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this setting to TRUE .
Description (string) --
A description of the firewall.
FirewallId (string) --
The unique identifier for the firewall.
Tags (list) --
(dict) --
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.
FirewallStatus (dict) --
Detailed information about the current status of a Firewall . You can retrieve this for a firewall by calling DescribeFirewall and providing the firewall name and ARN.
Status (string) --
The readiness of the configured firewall to handle network traffic across all of the Availability Zones where you've configured it. This setting is READY only when the ConfigurationSyncStateSummary value is IN_SYNC and the Attachment Status values for all of the configured subnets are READY .
ConfigurationSyncStateSummary (string) --
The configuration sync state for the firewall. This summarizes the sync states reported in the Config settings for all of the Availability Zones where you have configured the firewall.
When you create a firewall or update its configuration, for example by adding a rule group to its firewall policy, Network Firewall distributes the configuration changes to all zones where the firewall is in use. This summary indicates whether the configuration changes have been applied everywhere.
This status must be IN_SYNC for the firewall to be ready for use, but it doesn't indicate that the firewall is ready. The Status setting indicates firewall readiness.
SyncStates (dict) --
The subnets that you've configured for use by the Network Firewall firewall. This contains one array element per Availability Zone where you've configured a subnet. These objects provide details of the information that is summarized in the ConfigurationSyncStateSummary and Status , broken down by zone and configuration object.
(string) --
(dict) --
The status of the firewall endpoint and firewall policy configuration for a single VPC subnet.
For each VPC subnet that you associate with a firewall, AWS Network Firewall does the following:
When you update a firewall, for example to add a subnet association or change a rule group in the firewall policy, the affected sync states reflect out-of-sync or not ready status until the changes are complete.
Attachment (dict) --
The attachment status of the firewall's association with a single VPC subnet. For each configured subnet, Network Firewall creates the attachment by instantiating the firewall endpoint in the subnet so that it's ready to take traffic. This is part of the FirewallStatus .
SubnetId (string) --
The unique identifier of the subnet that you've specified to be used for a firewall endpoint.
EndpointId (string) --
The identifier of the firewall endpoint that Network Firewall has instantiated in the subnet. You use this to identify the firewall endpoint in the VPC route tables, when you redirect the VPC traffic through the endpoint.
Status (string) --
The current status of the firewall endpoint in the subnet. This value reflects both the instantiation of the endpoint in the VPC subnet and the sync states that are reported in the Config settings. When this value is READY , the endpoint is available and configured properly to handle network traffic. When the endpoint isn't available for traffic, this value will reflect its state, for example CREATING , DELETING , or FAILED .
Config (dict) --
The configuration status of the firewall endpoint in a single VPC subnet. Network Firewall provides each endpoint with the rules that are configured in the firewall policy. Each time you add a subnet or modify the associated firewall policy, Network Firewall synchronizes the rules in the endpoint, so it can properly filter network traffic. This is part of the FirewallStatus .
(string) --
(dict) --
Provides configuration status for a single policy or rule group that is used for a firewall endpoint. Network Firewall provides each endpoint with the rules that are configured in the firewall policy. Each time you add a subnet or modify the associated firewall policy, Network Firewall synchronizes the rules in the endpoint, so it can properly filter network traffic. This is part of a SyncState for a firewall.
SyncStatus (string) --
Indicates whether this object is in sync with the version indicated in the update token.
UpdateToken (string) --
The current version of the object that is either in sync or pending synchronization.
Exceptions
Returns the data objects for the specified firewall policy.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_firewall_policy(
FirewallPolicyName='string',
FirewallPolicyArn='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.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall policy.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'UpdateToken': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyResponse': {
'FirewallPolicyName': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyArn': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyId': 'string',
'Description': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyStatus': 'ACTIVE'|'DELETING',
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
],
'ConsumedStatelessRuleCapacity': 123,
'ConsumedStatefulRuleCapacity': 123,
'NumberOfAssociations': 123
},
'FirewallPolicy': {
'StatelessRuleGroupReferences': [
{
'ResourceArn': 'string',
'Priority': 123
},
],
'StatelessDefaultActions': [
'string',
],
'StatelessFragmentDefaultActions': [
'string',
],
'StatelessCustomActions': [
{
'ActionName': 'string',
'ActionDefinition': {
'PublishMetricAction': {
'Dimensions': [
{
'Value': 'string'
},
]
}
}
},
],
'StatefulRuleGroupReferences': [
{
'ResourceArn': 'string',
'Priority': 123,
'Override': {
'Action': 'DROP_TO_ALERT'
}
},
],
'StatefulDefaultActions': [
'string',
],
'StatefulEngineOptions': {
'RuleOrder': 'DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER'|'STRICT_ORDER'
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
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 (dict) --
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.
(dict) --
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 (dict) --
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.
(dict) --
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 .
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 .
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.
(dict) --
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:
ActionName (string) --
The descriptive name of the custom action. You can't change the name of a custom action after you create it.
ActionDefinition (dict) --
The custom action associated with the action name.
PublishMetricAction (dict) --
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) --
(dict) --
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.
(dict) --
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.
Override (dict) --
The action that allows the policy owner to override the behavior of the rule group within a policy.
Action (string) --
The action that changes the rule group from DROP to ALERT . This only applies to managed rule groups.
StatefulDefaultActions (list) --
The default actions to take on a packet that doesn't match any stateful rules. The stateful default action is optional, and is only valid when using the strict rule order.
Valid values of the stateful default action:
For more information, see Strict evaluation order in the AWS Network Firewall Developer Guide .
StatefulEngineOptions (dict) --
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. DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER is the default behavior. Stateful rules are provided to the rule engine as Suricata compatible strings, and Suricata evaluates them based on certain settings. For more information, see Evaluation order for stateful rules in the AWS Network Firewall Developer Guide .
Exceptions
Returns the logging configuration for the specified firewall.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_logging_configuration(
FirewallArn='string',
FirewallName='string'
)
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'FirewallArn': 'string',
'LoggingConfiguration': {
'LogDestinationConfigs': [
{
'LogType': 'ALERT'|'FLOW',
'LogDestinationType': 'S3'|'CloudWatchLogs'|'KinesisDataFirehose',
'LogDestination': {
'string': 'string'
}
},
]
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
LoggingConfiguration (dict) --
Defines how AWS Network Firewall performs logging for a Firewall .
LogDestinationConfigs (list) --
Defines the logging destinations for the logs for a firewall. Network Firewall generates logs for stateful rule groups.
(dict) --
Defines where AWS Network Firewall sends logs for the firewall for one log type. This is used in LoggingConfiguration . You can send each type of log to an Amazon S3 bucket, a CloudWatch log group, or a Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream.
Network Firewall generates logs for stateful rule groups. You can save alert and flow log types. The stateful rules engine records flow logs for all network traffic that it receives. It records alert logs for traffic that matches stateful rules that have the rule action set to DROP or ALERT .
LogType (string) --
The type of log to send. Alert logs report traffic that matches a StatefulRule with an action setting that sends an alert log message. Flow logs are standard network traffic flow logs.
LogDestinationType (string) --
The type of storage destination to send these logs to. You can send logs to an Amazon S3 bucket, a CloudWatch log group, or a Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream.
LogDestination (dict) --
The named location for the logs, provided in a key:value mapping that is specific to the chosen destination type.
Exceptions
Retrieves a resource policy that you created in a PutResourcePolicy request.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_resource_policy(
ResourceArn='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the rule group or firewall policy whose resource policy you want to retrieve.
{
'Policy': 'string'
}
Response Structure
The AWS Identity and Access Management policy for the resource.
Exceptions
Returns the data objects for the specified rule group.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_rule_group(
RuleGroupName='string',
RuleGroupArn='string',
Type='STATELESS'|'STATEFUL'
)
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the rule group.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
Indicates whether the rule group is stateless or stateful. If the rule group is stateless, it contains stateless rules. If it is stateful, it contains stateful rules.
Note
This setting is required for requests that do not include the RuleGroupARN .
dict
Response Syntax
{
'UpdateToken': 'string',
'RuleGroup': {
'RuleVariables': {
'IPSets': {
'string': {
'Definition': [
'string',
]
}
},
'PortSets': {
'string': {
'Definition': [
'string',
]
}
}
},
'RulesSource': {
'RulesString': 'string',
'RulesSourceList': {
'Targets': [
'string',
],
'TargetTypes': [
'TLS_SNI'|'HTTP_HOST',
],
'GeneratedRulesType': 'ALLOWLIST'|'DENYLIST'
},
'StatefulRules': [
{
'Action': 'PASS'|'DROP'|'ALERT',
'Header': {
'Protocol': 'IP'|'TCP'|'UDP'|'ICMP'|'HTTP'|'FTP'|'TLS'|'SMB'|'DNS'|'DCERPC'|'SSH'|'SMTP'|'IMAP'|'MSN'|'KRB5'|'IKEV2'|'TFTP'|'NTP'|'DHCP',
'Source': 'string',
'SourcePort': 'string',
'Direction': 'FORWARD'|'ANY',
'Destination': 'string',
'DestinationPort': 'string'
},
'RuleOptions': [
{
'Keyword': 'string',
'Settings': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
],
'StatelessRulesAndCustomActions': {
'StatelessRules': [
{
'RuleDefinition': {
'MatchAttributes': {
'Sources': [
{
'AddressDefinition': 'string'
},
],
'Destinations': [
{
'AddressDefinition': 'string'
},
],
'SourcePorts': [
{
'FromPort': 123,
'ToPort': 123
},
],
'DestinationPorts': [
{
'FromPort': 123,
'ToPort': 123
},
],
'Protocols': [
123,
],
'TCPFlags': [
{
'Flags': [
'FIN'|'SYN'|'RST'|'PSH'|'ACK'|'URG'|'ECE'|'CWR',
],
'Masks': [
'FIN'|'SYN'|'RST'|'PSH'|'ACK'|'URG'|'ECE'|'CWR',
]
},
]
},
'Actions': [
'string',
]
},
'Priority': 123
},
],
'CustomActions': [
{
'ActionName': 'string',
'ActionDefinition': {
'PublishMetricAction': {
'Dimensions': [
{
'Value': 'string'
},
]
}
}
},
]
}
},
'StatefulRuleOptions': {
'RuleOrder': 'DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER'|'STRICT_ORDER'
}
},
'RuleGroupResponse': {
'RuleGroupArn': 'string',
'RuleGroupName': 'string',
'RuleGroupId': 'string',
'Description': 'string',
'Type': 'STATELESS'|'STATEFUL',
'Capacity': 123,
'RuleGroupStatus': 'ACTIVE'|'DELETING',
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
],
'ConsumedCapacity': 123,
'NumberOfAssociations': 123
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
UpdateToken (string) --
A token used for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the rule group. The token marks the state of the rule group resource at the time of the request.
To make changes to the rule group, you provide the token in your request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the rule group hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the rule group again to get a current copy of it with a current token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
RuleGroup (dict) --
The object that defines the rules in a rule group. This, along with RuleGroupResponse , define the rule group. You can retrieve all objects for a rule group by calling DescribeRuleGroup .
AWS Network Firewall uses a rule group to inspect and control network traffic. You define stateless rule groups to inspect individual packets and you define stateful rule groups to inspect packets in the context of their traffic flow.
To use a rule group, you include it by reference in an Network Firewall firewall policy, then you use the policy in a firewall. You can reference a rule group from more than one firewall policy, and you can use a firewall policy in more than one firewall.
RuleVariables (dict) --
Settings that are available for use in the rules in the rule group. You can only use these for stateful rule groups.
IPSets (dict) --
A list of IP addresses and address ranges, in CIDR notation.
(string) --
(dict) --
A list of IP addresses and address ranges, in CIDR notation. This is part of a RuleVariables .
Definition (list) --
The list of IP addresses and address ranges, in CIDR notation.
PortSets (dict) --
A list of port ranges.
(string) --
(dict) --
A set of port ranges for use in the rules in a rule group.
Definition (list) --
The set of port ranges.
RulesSource (dict) --
The stateful rules or stateless rules for the rule group.
RulesString (string) --
Stateful inspection criteria, provided in Suricata compatible intrusion prevention system (IPS) rules. Suricata is an open-source network IPS that includes a standard rule-based language for network traffic inspection.
These rules contain the inspection criteria and the action to take for traffic that matches the criteria, so this type of rule group doesn't have a separate action setting.
RulesSourceList (dict) --
Stateful inspection criteria for a domain list rule group.
Targets (list) --
The domains that you want to inspect for in your traffic flows. Valid domain specifications are the following:
TargetTypes (list) --
The protocols you want to inspect. Specify TLS_SNI for HTTPS . Specify HTTP_HOST for HTTP . You can specify either or both.
GeneratedRulesType (string) --
Whether you want to allow or deny access to the domains in your target list.
StatefulRules (list) --
An array of individual stateful rules inspection criteria to be used together in a stateful rule group. Use this option to specify simple Suricata rules with protocol, source and destination, ports, direction, and rule options. For information about the Suricata Rules format, see Rules Format .
(dict) --
A single Suricata rules specification, for use in a stateful rule group. Use this option to specify a simple Suricata rule with protocol, source and destination, ports, direction, and rule options. For information about the Suricata Rules format, see Rules Format .
Action (string) --
Defines what Network Firewall should do with the packets in a traffic flow when the flow matches the stateful rule criteria. For all actions, Network Firewall performs the specified action and discontinues stateful inspection of the traffic flow.
The actions for a stateful rule are defined as follows:
Header (dict) --
The stateful inspection criteria for this rule, used to inspect traffic flows.
Protocol (string) --
The protocol to inspect for. To specify all, you can use IP , because all traffic on AWS and on the internet is IP.
Source (string) --
The source IP address or address range to inspect for, in CIDR notation. To match with any address, specify ANY .
Specify an IP address or a block of IP addresses in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. Network Firewall supports all address ranges for IPv4.
Examples:
For more information about CIDR notation, see the Wikipedia entry Classless Inter-Domain Routing .
SourcePort (string) --
The source port to inspect for. You can specify an individual port, for example 1994 and you can specify a port range, for example 1990:1994 . To match with any port, specify ANY .
Direction (string) --
The direction of traffic flow to inspect. If set to ANY , the inspection matches bidirectional traffic, both from the source to the destination and from the destination to the source. If set to FORWARD , the inspection only matches traffic going from the source to the destination.
Destination (string) --
The destination IP address or address range to inspect for, in CIDR notation. To match with any address, specify ANY .
Specify an IP address or a block of IP addresses in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. Network Firewall supports all address ranges for IPv4.
Examples:
For more information about CIDR notation, see the Wikipedia entry Classless Inter-Domain Routing .
DestinationPort (string) --
The destination port to inspect for. You can specify an individual port, for example 1994 and you can specify a port range, for example 1990:1994 . To match with any port, specify ANY .
RuleOptions (list) --
Additional options for the rule. These are the Suricata RuleOptions settings.
(dict) --
Additional settings for a stateful rule. This is part of the StatefulRule configuration.
StatelessRulesAndCustomActions (dict) --
Stateless inspection criteria to be used in a stateless rule group.
StatelessRules (list) --
Defines the set of stateless rules for use in a stateless rule group.
(dict) --
A single stateless rule. This is used in StatelessRulesAndCustomActions .
RuleDefinition (dict) --
Defines the stateless 5-tuple packet inspection criteria and the action to take on a packet that matches the criteria.
MatchAttributes (dict) --
Criteria for Network Firewall to use to inspect an individual packet in stateless rule inspection. Each match attributes set can include one or more items such as IP address, CIDR range, port number, protocol, and TCP flags.
Sources (list) --
The source IP addresses and address ranges to inspect for, in CIDR notation. If not specified, this matches with any source address.
(dict) --
A single IP address specification. This is used in the MatchAttributes source and destination specifications.
AddressDefinition (string) --
Specify an IP address or a block of IP addresses in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. Network Firewall supports all address ranges for IPv4.
Examples:
For more information about CIDR notation, see the Wikipedia entry Classless Inter-Domain Routing .
Destinations (list) --
The destination IP addresses and address ranges to inspect for, in CIDR notation. If not specified, this matches with any destination address.
(dict) --
A single IP address specification. This is used in the MatchAttributes source and destination specifications.
AddressDefinition (string) --
Specify an IP address or a block of IP addresses in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. Network Firewall supports all address ranges for IPv4.
Examples:
For more information about CIDR notation, see the Wikipedia entry Classless Inter-Domain Routing .
SourcePorts (list) --
The source ports to inspect for. If not specified, this matches with any source port. This setting is only used for protocols 6 (TCP) and 17 (UDP).
You can specify individual ports, for example 1994 and you can specify port ranges, for example 1990:1994 .
(dict) --
A single port range specification. This is used for source and destination port ranges in the stateless rule MatchAttributes , SourcePorts , and DestinationPorts settings.
FromPort (integer) --
The lower limit of the port range. This must be less than or equal to the ToPort specification.
ToPort (integer) --
The upper limit of the port range. This must be greater than or equal to the FromPort specification.
DestinationPorts (list) --
The destination ports to inspect for. If not specified, this matches with any destination port. This setting is only used for protocols 6 (TCP) and 17 (UDP).
You can specify individual ports, for example 1994 and you can specify port ranges, for example 1990:1994 .
(dict) --
A single port range specification. This is used for source and destination port ranges in the stateless rule MatchAttributes , SourcePorts , and DestinationPorts settings.
FromPort (integer) --
The lower limit of the port range. This must be less than or equal to the ToPort specification.
ToPort (integer) --
The upper limit of the port range. This must be greater than or equal to the FromPort specification.
Protocols (list) --
The protocols to inspect for, specified using each protocol's assigned internet protocol number (IANA). If not specified, this matches with any protocol.
TCPFlags (list) --
The TCP flags and masks to inspect for. If not specified, this matches with any settings. This setting is only used for protocol 6 (TCP).
(dict) --
TCP flags and masks to inspect packets for, used in stateless rules MatchAttributes settings.
Flags (list) --
Used in conjunction with the Masks setting to define the flags that must be set and flags that must not be set in order for the packet to match. This setting can only specify values that are also specified in the Masks setting.
For the flags that are specified in the masks setting, the following must be true for the packet to match:
Masks (list) --
The set of flags to consider in the inspection. To inspect all flags in the valid values list, leave this with no setting.
Actions (list) --
The actions to take on a packet that matches one of the stateless rule definition's match attributes. You must specify a standard action and you can add custom actions.
Note
Network Firewall only forwards a packet for stateful rule inspection if you specify aws:forward_to_sfe for a rule that the packet matches, or if the packet doesn't match any stateless rule and you specify aws:forward_to_sfe for the StatelessDefaultActions setting for the FirewallPolicy .
For every rule, you must specify exactly one of the following standard actions.
Additionally, you can specify a custom action. To do this, you define a custom action by name and type, then provide the name you've assigned to the action in this Actions setting. For information about the options, see CustomAction .
To provide more than one action in this setting, separate the settings with a comma. For example, if you have a custom PublishMetrics action that you've named MyMetricsAction , then you could specify the standard action aws:pass and the custom action with [“aws:pass”, “MyMetricsAction”] .
Priority (integer) --
Indicates the order in which to run this rule relative to all of the rules that are defined for a stateless rule group. Network Firewall evaluates the rules in a rule group starting with the lowest priority setting. You must ensure that the priority settings are unique for the rule group.
Each stateless rule group uses exactly one StatelessRulesAndCustomActions object, and each StatelessRulesAndCustomActions contains exactly one StatelessRules object. To ensure unique priority settings for your rule groups, set unique priorities for the stateless rules that you define inside any single StatelessRules object.
You can change the priority settings of your rules at any time. To make it easier to insert rules later, number them so there's a wide range in between, for example use 100, 200, and so on.
CustomActions (list) --
Defines an array of individual custom action definitions that are available for use by the stateless rules in this StatelessRulesAndCustomActions specification. You name each custom action that you define, and then you can use it by name in your StatelessRule RuleDefinition Actions specification.
(dict) --
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:
ActionName (string) --
The descriptive name of the custom action. You can't change the name of a custom action after you create it.
ActionDefinition (dict) --
The custom action associated with the action name.
PublishMetricAction (dict) --
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) --
(dict) --
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.
StatefulRuleOptions (dict) --
Additional options governing how Network Firewall handles stateful rules. The policies where you use your stateful rule group must have stateful rule options settings that are compatible with these settings.
RuleOrder (string) --
Indicates how to manage the order of the rule evaluation for the rule group. DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER is the default behavior. Stateful rules are provided to the rule engine as Suricata compatible strings, and Suricata evaluates them based on certain settings. For more information, see Evaluation order for stateful rules in the AWS Network Firewall Developer Guide .
RuleGroupResponse (dict) --
The high-level properties of a rule group. This, along with the RuleGroup , define the rule group. You can retrieve all objects for a rule group by calling DescribeRuleGroup .
RuleGroupArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the rule group.
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.
RuleGroupName (string) --
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
RuleGroupId (string) --
The unique identifier for the rule group.
Description (string) --
A description of the rule group.
Type (string) --
Indicates whether the rule group is stateless or stateful. If the rule group is stateless, it contains stateless rules. If it is stateful, it contains stateful rules.
Capacity (integer) --
The maximum operating resources that this rule group can use. Rule group capacity is fixed at creation. When you update a rule group, you are limited to this capacity. When you reference a rule group from a firewall policy, Network Firewall reserves this capacity for the rule group.
You can retrieve the capacity that would be required for a rule group before you create the rule group by calling CreateRuleGroup with DryRun set to TRUE .
RuleGroupStatus (string) --
Detailed information about the current status of a rule group.
Tags (list) --
The key:value pairs to associate with the resource.
(dict) --
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.
ConsumedCapacity (integer) --
The number of capacity units currently consumed by the rule group rules.
NumberOfAssociations (integer) --
The number of firewall policies that use this rule group.
Exceptions
High-level information about a rule group, returned by operations like create and describe. You can use the information provided in the metadata to retrieve and manage a rule group. You can retrieve all objects for a rule group by calling DescribeRuleGroup .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_rule_group_metadata(
RuleGroupName='string',
RuleGroupArn='string',
Type='STATELESS'|'STATEFUL'
)
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
Indicates whether the rule group is stateless or stateful. If the rule group is stateless, it contains stateless rules. If it is stateful, it contains stateful rules.
Note
This setting is required for requests that do not include the RuleGroupARN .
dict
Response Syntax
{
'RuleGroupArn': 'string',
'RuleGroupName': 'string',
'Description': 'string',
'Type': 'STATELESS'|'STATEFUL',
'Capacity': 123,
'StatefulRuleOptions': {
'RuleOrder': 'DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER'|'STRICT_ORDER'
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
RuleGroupArn (string) --
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
RuleGroupName (string) --
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
Description (string) --
Returns the metadata objects for the specified rule group.
Type (string) --
Indicates whether the rule group is stateless or stateful. If the rule group is stateless, it contains stateless rules. If it is stateful, it contains stateful rules.
Note
This setting is required for requests that do not include the RuleGroupARN .
Capacity (integer) --
The maximum operating resources that this rule group can use. Rule group capacity is fixed at creation. When you update a rule group, you are limited to this capacity. When you reference a rule group from a firewall policy, Network Firewall reserves this capacity for the rule group.
You can retrieve the capacity that would be required for a rule group before you create the rule group by calling CreateRuleGroup with DryRun set to TRUE .
StatefulRuleOptions (dict) --
Additional options governing how Network Firewall handles the rule group. You can only use these for stateful rule groups.
RuleOrder (string) --
Indicates how to manage the order of the rule evaluation for the rule group. DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER is the default behavior. Stateful rules are provided to the rule engine as Suricata compatible strings, and Suricata evaluates them based on certain settings. For more information, see Evaluation order for stateful rules in the AWS Network Firewall Developer Guide .
Exceptions
Removes the specified subnet associations from the firewall. This removes the firewall endpoints from the subnets and removes any network filtering protections that the endpoints were providing.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.disassociate_subnets(
UpdateToken='string',
FirewallArn='string',
FirewallName='string',
SubnetIds=[
'string',
]
)
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
[REQUIRED]
The unique identifiers for the subnets that you want to disassociate.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'FirewallArn': 'string',
'FirewallName': 'string',
'SubnetMappings': [
{
'SubnetId': 'string'
},
],
'UpdateToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
SubnetMappings (list) --
The IDs of the subnets that are associated with the firewall.
(dict) --
The ID for a subnet that you want to associate with the firewall. This is used with CreateFirewall and AssociateSubnets . AWS Network Firewall creates an instance of the associated firewall in each subnet that you specify, to filter traffic in the subnet's Availability Zone.
SubnetId (string) --
The unique identifier for the subnet.
UpdateToken (string) --
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
Exceptions
Create a paginator for an operation.
Returns an object that can wait for some condition.
Retrieves the metadata for the firewall policies that you have defined. Depending on your setting for max results and the number of firewall policies, a single call might not return the full list.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.list_firewall_policies(
NextToken='string',
MaxResults=123
)
dict
Response Syntax
{
'NextToken': 'string',
'FirewallPolicies': [
{
'Name': 'string',
'Arn': 'string'
},
]
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
NextToken (string) --
When you request a list of objects with a MaxResults setting, if the number of objects that are still available for retrieval exceeds the maximum you requested, Network Firewall returns a NextToken value in the response. To retrieve the next batch of objects, use the token returned from the prior request in your next request.
FirewallPolicies (list) --
The metadata for the firewall policies. Depending on your setting for max results and the number of firewall policies that you have, this might not be the full list.
(dict) --
High-level information about a firewall policy, returned by operations like create and describe. You can use the information provided in the metadata to retrieve and manage a firewall policy. You can retrieve all objects for a firewall policy by calling DescribeFirewallPolicy .
Name (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall policy. You can't change the name of a firewall policy after you create it.
Arn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall policy.
Exceptions
Retrieves the metadata for the firewalls that you have defined. If you provide VPC identifiers in your request, this returns only the firewalls for those VPCs.
Depending on your setting for max results and the number of firewalls, a single call might not return the full list.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.list_firewalls(
NextToken='string',
VpcIds=[
'string',
],
MaxResults=123
)
The unique identifiers of the VPCs that you want Network Firewall to retrieve the firewalls for. Leave this blank to retrieve all firewalls that you have defined.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'NextToken': 'string',
'Firewalls': [
{
'FirewallName': 'string',
'FirewallArn': 'string'
},
]
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
NextToken (string) --
When you request a list of objects with a MaxResults setting, if the number of objects that are still available for retrieval exceeds the maximum you requested, Network Firewall returns a NextToken value in the response. To retrieve the next batch of objects, use the token returned from the prior request in your next request.
Firewalls (list) --
The firewall metadata objects for the VPCs that you specified. Depending on your setting for max results and the number of firewalls you have, a single call might not be the full list.
(dict) --
High-level information about a firewall, returned by operations like create and describe. You can use the information provided in the metadata to retrieve and manage a firewall.
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
Exceptions
Retrieves the metadata for the rule groups that you have defined. Depending on your setting for max results and the number of rule groups, a single call might not return the full list.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.list_rule_groups(
NextToken='string',
MaxResults=123,
Scope='MANAGED'|'ACCOUNT'
)
dict
Response Syntax
{
'NextToken': 'string',
'RuleGroups': [
{
'Name': 'string',
'Arn': 'string'
},
]
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
NextToken (string) --
When you request a list of objects with a MaxResults setting, if the number of objects that are still available for retrieval exceeds the maximum you requested, Network Firewall returns a NextToken value in the response. To retrieve the next batch of objects, use the token returned from the prior request in your next request.
RuleGroups (list) --
The rule group metadata objects that you've defined. Depending on your setting for max results and the number of rule groups, this might not be the full list.
(dict) --
High-level information about a rule group, returned by ListRuleGroups . You can use the information provided in the metadata to retrieve and manage a rule group.
Name (string) --
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
Arn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the rule group.
Exceptions
Retrieves the tags associated with the specified resource. Tags are key:value pairs that you can use to categorize and manage your resources, for purposes like billing. For example, you might set the tag key to "customer" and the value to the customer name or ID. You can specify one or more tags to add to each AWS resource, up to 50 tags for a resource.
You can tag the AWS resources that you manage through AWS Network Firewall: firewalls, firewall policies, and rule groups.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.list_tags_for_resource(
NextToken='string',
MaxResults=123,
ResourceArn='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'NextToken': 'string',
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
]
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
NextToken (string) --
When you request a list of objects with a MaxResults setting, if the number of objects that are still available for retrieval exceeds the maximum you requested, Network Firewall returns a NextToken value in the response. To retrieve the next batch of objects, use the token returned from the prior request in your next request.
Tags (list) --
The tags that are associated with the resource.
(dict) --
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.
Exceptions
Creates or updates an AWS Identity and Access Management policy for your rule group or firewall policy. Use this to share rule groups and firewall policies between accounts. This operation works in conjunction with the AWS Resource Access Manager (RAM) service to manage resource sharing for Network Firewall.
Use this operation to create or update a resource policy for your rule group or firewall policy. In the policy, you specify the accounts that you want to share the resource with and the operations that you want the accounts to be able to perform.
When you add an account in the resource policy, you then run the following Resource Access Manager (RAM) operations to access and accept the shared rule group or firewall policy.
For additional information about resource sharing using RAM, see AWS Resource Access Manager User Guide .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.put_resource_policy(
ResourceArn='string',
Policy='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the account that you want to share rule groups and firewall policies with.
[REQUIRED]
The AWS Identity and Access Management policy statement that lists the accounts that you want to share your rule group or firewall policy with and the operations that you want the accounts to be able to perform.
For a rule group resource, you can specify the following operations in the Actions section of the statement:
For a firewall policy resource, you can specify the following operations in the Actions section of the statement:
In the Resource section of the statement, you specify the ARNs for the rule groups and firewall policies that you want to share with the account that you specified in Arn .
dict
Response Syntax
{}
Response Structure
Exceptions
Adds the specified tags to the specified resource. Tags are key:value pairs that you can use to categorize and manage your resources, for purposes like billing. For example, you might set the tag key to "customer" and the value to the customer name or ID. You can specify one or more tags to add to each AWS resource, up to 50 tags for a resource.
You can tag the AWS resources that you manage through AWS Network Firewall: firewalls, firewall policies, and rule groups.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.tag_resource(
ResourceArn='string',
Tags=[
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
]
)
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource.
[REQUIRED]
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.
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.
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.
dict
Response Syntax
{}
Response Structure
Exceptions
Removes the tags with the specified keys from the specified resource. Tags are key:value pairs that you can use to categorize and manage your resources, for purposes like billing. For example, you might set the tag key to "customer" and the value to the customer name or ID. You can specify one or more tags to add to each AWS resource, up to 50 tags for a resource.
You can manage tags for the AWS resources that you manage through AWS Network Firewall: firewalls, firewall policies, and rule groups.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.untag_resource(
ResourceArn='string',
TagKeys=[
'string',
]
)
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource.
[REQUIRED]
dict
Response Syntax
{}
Response Structure
Exceptions
Modifies the flag, DeleteProtection , which indicates whether it is possible to delete the firewall. If the flag is set to TRUE , the firewall is protected against deletion. This setting helps protect against accidentally deleting a firewall that's in use.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_firewall_delete_protection(
UpdateToken='string',
FirewallArn='string',
FirewallName='string',
DeleteProtection=True|False
)
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
[REQUIRED]
A flag indicating whether it is possible to delete the firewall. A setting of TRUE indicates that the firewall is protected against deletion. Use this setting to protect against accidentally deleting a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this flag to TRUE .
dict
Response Syntax
{
'FirewallArn': 'string',
'FirewallName': 'string',
'DeleteProtection': True|False,
'UpdateToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
DeleteProtection (boolean) --
A flag indicating whether it is possible to delete the firewall. A setting of TRUE indicates that the firewall is protected against deletion. Use this setting to protect against accidentally deleting a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this flag to TRUE .
UpdateToken (string) --
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
Exceptions
Modifies the description for the specified firewall. Use the description to help you identify the firewall when you're working with it.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_firewall_description(
UpdateToken='string',
FirewallArn='string',
FirewallName='string',
Description='string'
)
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'FirewallArn': 'string',
'FirewallName': 'string',
'Description': 'string',
'UpdateToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
Description (string) --
A description of the firewall.
UpdateToken (string) --
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
Exceptions
Updates the properties of the specified firewall policy.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_firewall_policy(
UpdateToken='string',
FirewallPolicyArn='string',
FirewallPolicyName='string',
FirewallPolicy={
'StatelessRuleGroupReferences': [
{
'ResourceArn': 'string',
'Priority': 123
},
],
'StatelessDefaultActions': [
'string',
],
'StatelessFragmentDefaultActions': [
'string',
],
'StatelessCustomActions': [
{
'ActionName': 'string',
'ActionDefinition': {
'PublishMetricAction': {
'Dimensions': [
{
'Value': 'string'
},
]
}
}
},
],
'StatefulRuleGroupReferences': [
{
'ResourceArn': 'string',
'Priority': 123,
'Override': {
'Action': 'DROP_TO_ALERT'
}
},
],
'StatefulDefaultActions': [
'string',
],
'StatefulEngineOptions': {
'RuleOrder': 'DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER'|'STRICT_ORDER'
}
},
Description='string',
DryRun=True|False
)
[REQUIRED]
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.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall policy.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
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.
[REQUIRED]
The updated firewall policy to use for the firewall.
References to the stateless rule groups that are used in the policy. These define the matching criteria in stateless rules.
Identifier for a single stateless rule group, used in a firewall policy to refer to the rule group.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the stateless rule group.
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.
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 .
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 .
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.
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:
The descriptive name of the custom action. You can't change the name of a custom action after you create it.
The custom action associated with the action name.
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.
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 .
The value to use in the custom metric dimension.
References to the stateful rule groups that are used in the policy. These define the inspection criteria in stateful rules.
Identifier for a single stateful rule group, used in a firewall policy to refer to a rule group.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the stateful rule group.
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.
The action that allows the policy owner to override the behavior of the rule group within a policy.
The action that changes the rule group from DROP to ALERT . This only applies to managed rule groups.
The default actions to take on a packet that doesn't match any stateful rules. The stateful default action is optional, and is only valid when using the strict rule order.
Valid values of the stateful default action:
For more information, see Strict evaluation order in the AWS Network Firewall Developer Guide .
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.
Indicates how to manage the order of stateful rule evaluation for the policy. DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER is the default behavior. Stateful rules are provided to the rule engine as Suricata compatible strings, and Suricata evaluates them based on certain settings. For more information, see Evaluation order for stateful rules in the AWS Network Firewall Developer Guide .
Indicates whether you want Network Firewall to just check the validity of the request, rather than run the request.
If set to TRUE , Network Firewall checks whether the request can run successfully, but doesn't actually make the requested changes. The call returns the value that the request would return if you ran it with dry run set to FALSE , but doesn't make additions or changes to your resources. This option allows you to make sure that you have the required permissions to run the request and that your request parameters are valid.
If set to FALSE , Network Firewall makes the requested changes to your resources.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'UpdateToken': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyResponse': {
'FirewallPolicyName': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyArn': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyId': 'string',
'Description': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyStatus': 'ACTIVE'|'DELETING',
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
],
'ConsumedStatelessRuleCapacity': 123,
'ConsumedStatefulRuleCapacity': 123,
'NumberOfAssociations': 123
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
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 (dict) --
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.
(dict) --
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.
Exceptions
Modifies the flag, ChangeProtection , which indicates whether it is possible to change the firewall. If the flag is set to TRUE , the firewall is protected from changes. This setting helps protect against accidentally changing a firewall that's in use.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_firewall_policy_change_protection(
UpdateToken='string',
FirewallArn='string',
FirewallName='string',
FirewallPolicyChangeProtection=True|False
)
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
[REQUIRED]
A setting indicating whether the firewall is protected against a change to the firewall policy association. Use this setting to protect against accidentally modifying the firewall policy for a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this setting to TRUE .
dict
Response Syntax
{
'UpdateToken': 'string',
'FirewallArn': 'string',
'FirewallName': 'string',
'FirewallPolicyChangeProtection': True|False
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
UpdateToken (string) --
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
FirewallPolicyChangeProtection (boolean) --
A setting indicating whether the firewall is protected against a change to the firewall policy association. Use this setting to protect against accidentally modifying the firewall policy for a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this setting to TRUE .
Exceptions
Sets the logging configuration for the specified firewall.
To change the logging configuration, retrieve the LoggingConfiguration by calling DescribeLoggingConfiguration , then change it and provide the modified object to this update call. You must change the logging configuration one LogDestinationConfig at a time inside the retrieved LoggingConfiguration object.
You can perform only one of the following actions in any call to UpdateLoggingConfiguration :
You can't change the LogDestinationType or LogType in a LogDestinationConfig . To change these settings, delete the existing LogDestinationConfig object and create a new one, using two separate calls to this update operation.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_logging_configuration(
FirewallArn='string',
FirewallName='string',
LoggingConfiguration={
'LogDestinationConfigs': [
{
'LogType': 'ALERT'|'FLOW',
'LogDestinationType': 'S3'|'CloudWatchLogs'|'KinesisDataFirehose',
'LogDestination': {
'string': 'string'
}
},
]
}
)
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
Defines how Network Firewall performs logging for a firewall. If you omit this setting, Network Firewall disables logging for the firewall.
Defines the logging destinations for the logs for a firewall. Network Firewall generates logs for stateful rule groups.
Defines where AWS Network Firewall sends logs for the firewall for one log type. This is used in LoggingConfiguration . You can send each type of log to an Amazon S3 bucket, a CloudWatch log group, or a Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream.
Network Firewall generates logs for stateful rule groups. You can save alert and flow log types. The stateful rules engine records flow logs for all network traffic that it receives. It records alert logs for traffic that matches stateful rules that have the rule action set to DROP or ALERT .
The type of log to send. Alert logs report traffic that matches a StatefulRule with an action setting that sends an alert log message. Flow logs are standard network traffic flow logs.
The type of storage destination to send these logs to. You can send logs to an Amazon S3 bucket, a CloudWatch log group, or a Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream.
The named location for the logs, provided in a key:value mapping that is specific to the chosen destination type.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'FirewallArn': 'string',
'FirewallName': 'string',
'LoggingConfiguration': {
'LogDestinationConfigs': [
{
'LogType': 'ALERT'|'FLOW',
'LogDestinationType': 'S3'|'CloudWatchLogs'|'KinesisDataFirehose',
'LogDestination': {
'string': 'string'
}
},
]
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
LoggingConfiguration (dict) --
Defines how AWS Network Firewall performs logging for a Firewall .
LogDestinationConfigs (list) --
Defines the logging destinations for the logs for a firewall. Network Firewall generates logs for stateful rule groups.
(dict) --
Defines where AWS Network Firewall sends logs for the firewall for one log type. This is used in LoggingConfiguration . You can send each type of log to an Amazon S3 bucket, a CloudWatch log group, or a Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream.
Network Firewall generates logs for stateful rule groups. You can save alert and flow log types. The stateful rules engine records flow logs for all network traffic that it receives. It records alert logs for traffic that matches stateful rules that have the rule action set to DROP or ALERT .
LogType (string) --
The type of log to send. Alert logs report traffic that matches a StatefulRule with an action setting that sends an alert log message. Flow logs are standard network traffic flow logs.
LogDestinationType (string) --
The type of storage destination to send these logs to. You can send logs to an Amazon S3 bucket, a CloudWatch log group, or a Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream.
LogDestination (dict) --
The named location for the logs, provided in a key:value mapping that is specific to the chosen destination type.
Exceptions
Updates the rule settings for the specified rule group. You use a rule group by reference in one or more firewall policies. When you modify a rule group, you modify all firewall policies that use the rule group.
To update a rule group, first call DescribeRuleGroup to retrieve the current RuleGroup object, update the object as needed, and then provide the updated object to this call.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_rule_group(
UpdateToken='string',
RuleGroupArn='string',
RuleGroupName='string',
RuleGroup={
'RuleVariables': {
'IPSets': {
'string': {
'Definition': [
'string',
]
}
},
'PortSets': {
'string': {
'Definition': [
'string',
]
}
}
},
'RulesSource': {
'RulesString': 'string',
'RulesSourceList': {
'Targets': [
'string',
],
'TargetTypes': [
'TLS_SNI'|'HTTP_HOST',
],
'GeneratedRulesType': 'ALLOWLIST'|'DENYLIST'
},
'StatefulRules': [
{
'Action': 'PASS'|'DROP'|'ALERT',
'Header': {
'Protocol': 'IP'|'TCP'|'UDP'|'ICMP'|'HTTP'|'FTP'|'TLS'|'SMB'|'DNS'|'DCERPC'|'SSH'|'SMTP'|'IMAP'|'MSN'|'KRB5'|'IKEV2'|'TFTP'|'NTP'|'DHCP',
'Source': 'string',
'SourcePort': 'string',
'Direction': 'FORWARD'|'ANY',
'Destination': 'string',
'DestinationPort': 'string'
},
'RuleOptions': [
{
'Keyword': 'string',
'Settings': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
],
'StatelessRulesAndCustomActions': {
'StatelessRules': [
{
'RuleDefinition': {
'MatchAttributes': {
'Sources': [
{
'AddressDefinition': 'string'
},
],
'Destinations': [
{
'AddressDefinition': 'string'
},
],
'SourcePorts': [
{
'FromPort': 123,
'ToPort': 123
},
],
'DestinationPorts': [
{
'FromPort': 123,
'ToPort': 123
},
],
'Protocols': [
123,
],
'TCPFlags': [
{
'Flags': [
'FIN'|'SYN'|'RST'|'PSH'|'ACK'|'URG'|'ECE'|'CWR',
],
'Masks': [
'FIN'|'SYN'|'RST'|'PSH'|'ACK'|'URG'|'ECE'|'CWR',
]
},
]
},
'Actions': [
'string',
]
},
'Priority': 123
},
],
'CustomActions': [
{
'ActionName': 'string',
'ActionDefinition': {
'PublishMetricAction': {
'Dimensions': [
{
'Value': 'string'
},
]
}
}
},
]
}
},
'StatefulRuleOptions': {
'RuleOrder': 'DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER'|'STRICT_ORDER'
}
},
Rules='string',
Type='STATELESS'|'STATEFUL',
Description='string',
DryRun=True|False
)
[REQUIRED]
A token used for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the rule group. The token marks the state of the rule group resource at the time of the request.
To make changes to the rule group, you provide the token in your request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the rule group hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the rule group again to get a current copy of it with a current token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the rule group.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
An object that defines the rule group rules.
Note
You must provide either this rule group setting or a Rules setting, but not both.
Settings that are available for use in the rules in the rule group. You can only use these for stateful rule groups.
A list of IP addresses and address ranges, in CIDR notation.
A list of IP addresses and address ranges, in CIDR notation. This is part of a RuleVariables .
The list of IP addresses and address ranges, in CIDR notation.
A list of port ranges.
A set of port ranges for use in the rules in a rule group.
The set of port ranges.
The stateful rules or stateless rules for the rule group.
Stateful inspection criteria, provided in Suricata compatible intrusion prevention system (IPS) rules. Suricata is an open-source network IPS that includes a standard rule-based language for network traffic inspection.
These rules contain the inspection criteria and the action to take for traffic that matches the criteria, so this type of rule group doesn't have a separate action setting.
Stateful inspection criteria for a domain list rule group.
The domains that you want to inspect for in your traffic flows. Valid domain specifications are the following:
The protocols you want to inspect. Specify TLS_SNI for HTTPS . Specify HTTP_HOST for HTTP . You can specify either or both.
Whether you want to allow or deny access to the domains in your target list.
An array of individual stateful rules inspection criteria to be used together in a stateful rule group. Use this option to specify simple Suricata rules with protocol, source and destination, ports, direction, and rule options. For information about the Suricata Rules format, see Rules Format .
A single Suricata rules specification, for use in a stateful rule group. Use this option to specify a simple Suricata rule with protocol, source and destination, ports, direction, and rule options. For information about the Suricata Rules format, see Rules Format .
Defines what Network Firewall should do with the packets in a traffic flow when the flow matches the stateful rule criteria. For all actions, Network Firewall performs the specified action and discontinues stateful inspection of the traffic flow.
The actions for a stateful rule are defined as follows:
The stateful inspection criteria for this rule, used to inspect traffic flows.
The protocol to inspect for. To specify all, you can use IP , because all traffic on AWS and on the internet is IP.
The source IP address or address range to inspect for, in CIDR notation. To match with any address, specify ANY .
Specify an IP address or a block of IP addresses in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. Network Firewall supports all address ranges for IPv4.
Examples:
For more information about CIDR notation, see the Wikipedia entry Classless Inter-Domain Routing .
The source port to inspect for. You can specify an individual port, for example 1994 and you can specify a port range, for example 1990:1994 . To match with any port, specify ANY .
The direction of traffic flow to inspect. If set to ANY , the inspection matches bidirectional traffic, both from the source to the destination and from the destination to the source. If set to FORWARD , the inspection only matches traffic going from the source to the destination.
The destination IP address or address range to inspect for, in CIDR notation. To match with any address, specify ANY .
Specify an IP address or a block of IP addresses in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. Network Firewall supports all address ranges for IPv4.
Examples:
For more information about CIDR notation, see the Wikipedia entry Classless Inter-Domain Routing .
The destination port to inspect for. You can specify an individual port, for example 1994 and you can specify a port range, for example 1990:1994 . To match with any port, specify ANY .
Additional options for the rule. These are the Suricata RuleOptions settings.
Additional settings for a stateful rule. This is part of the StatefulRule configuration.
Stateless inspection criteria to be used in a stateless rule group.
Defines the set of stateless rules for use in a stateless rule group.
A single stateless rule. This is used in StatelessRulesAndCustomActions .
Defines the stateless 5-tuple packet inspection criteria and the action to take on a packet that matches the criteria.
Criteria for Network Firewall to use to inspect an individual packet in stateless rule inspection. Each match attributes set can include one or more items such as IP address, CIDR range, port number, protocol, and TCP flags.
The source IP addresses and address ranges to inspect for, in CIDR notation. If not specified, this matches with any source address.
A single IP address specification. This is used in the MatchAttributes source and destination specifications.
Specify an IP address or a block of IP addresses in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. Network Firewall supports all address ranges for IPv4.
Examples:
For more information about CIDR notation, see the Wikipedia entry Classless Inter-Domain Routing .
The destination IP addresses and address ranges to inspect for, in CIDR notation. If not specified, this matches with any destination address.
A single IP address specification. This is used in the MatchAttributes source and destination specifications.
Specify an IP address or a block of IP addresses in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. Network Firewall supports all address ranges for IPv4.
Examples:
For more information about CIDR notation, see the Wikipedia entry Classless Inter-Domain Routing .
The source ports to inspect for. If not specified, this matches with any source port. This setting is only used for protocols 6 (TCP) and 17 (UDP).
You can specify individual ports, for example 1994 and you can specify port ranges, for example 1990:1994 .
A single port range specification. This is used for source and destination port ranges in the stateless rule MatchAttributes , SourcePorts , and DestinationPorts settings.
The lower limit of the port range. This must be less than or equal to the ToPort specification.
The upper limit of the port range. This must be greater than or equal to the FromPort specification.
The destination ports to inspect for. If not specified, this matches with any destination port. This setting is only used for protocols 6 (TCP) and 17 (UDP).
You can specify individual ports, for example 1994 and you can specify port ranges, for example 1990:1994 .
A single port range specification. This is used for source and destination port ranges in the stateless rule MatchAttributes , SourcePorts , and DestinationPorts settings.
The lower limit of the port range. This must be less than or equal to the ToPort specification.
The upper limit of the port range. This must be greater than or equal to the FromPort specification.
The protocols to inspect for, specified using each protocol's assigned internet protocol number (IANA). If not specified, this matches with any protocol.
The TCP flags and masks to inspect for. If not specified, this matches with any settings. This setting is only used for protocol 6 (TCP).
TCP flags and masks to inspect packets for, used in stateless rules MatchAttributes settings.
Used in conjunction with the Masks setting to define the flags that must be set and flags that must not be set in order for the packet to match. This setting can only specify values that are also specified in the Masks setting.
For the flags that are specified in the masks setting, the following must be true for the packet to match:
The set of flags to consider in the inspection. To inspect all flags in the valid values list, leave this with no setting.
The actions to take on a packet that matches one of the stateless rule definition's match attributes. You must specify a standard action and you can add custom actions.
Note
Network Firewall only forwards a packet for stateful rule inspection if you specify aws:forward_to_sfe for a rule that the packet matches, or if the packet doesn't match any stateless rule and you specify aws:forward_to_sfe for the StatelessDefaultActions setting for the FirewallPolicy .
For every rule, you must specify exactly one of the following standard actions.
Additionally, you can specify a custom action. To do this, you define a custom action by name and type, then provide the name you've assigned to the action in this Actions setting. For information about the options, see CustomAction .
To provide more than one action in this setting, separate the settings with a comma. For example, if you have a custom PublishMetrics action that you've named MyMetricsAction , then you could specify the standard action aws:pass and the custom action with [“aws:pass”, “MyMetricsAction”] .
Indicates the order in which to run this rule relative to all of the rules that are defined for a stateless rule group. Network Firewall evaluates the rules in a rule group starting with the lowest priority setting. You must ensure that the priority settings are unique for the rule group.
Each stateless rule group uses exactly one StatelessRulesAndCustomActions object, and each StatelessRulesAndCustomActions contains exactly one StatelessRules object. To ensure unique priority settings for your rule groups, set unique priorities for the stateless rules that you define inside any single StatelessRules object.
You can change the priority settings of your rules at any time. To make it easier to insert rules later, number them so there's a wide range in between, for example use 100, 200, and so on.
Defines an array of individual custom action definitions that are available for use by the stateless rules in this StatelessRulesAndCustomActions specification. You name each custom action that you define, and then you can use it by name in your StatelessRule RuleDefinition Actions specification.
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:
The descriptive name of the custom action. You can't change the name of a custom action after you create it.
The custom action associated with the action name.
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.
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 .
The value to use in the custom metric dimension.
Additional options governing how Network Firewall handles stateful rules. The policies where you use your stateful rule group must have stateful rule options settings that are compatible with these settings.
Indicates how to manage the order of the rule evaluation for the rule group. DEFAULT_ACTION_ORDER is the default behavior. Stateful rules are provided to the rule engine as Suricata compatible strings, and Suricata evaluates them based on certain settings. For more information, see Evaluation order for stateful rules in the AWS Network Firewall Developer Guide .
A string containing stateful rule group rules specifications in Suricata flat format, with one rule per line. Use this to import your existing Suricata compatible rule groups.
Note
You must provide either this rules setting or a populated RuleGroup setting, but not both.
You can provide your rule group specification in Suricata flat format through this setting when you create or update your rule group. The call response returns a RuleGroup object that Network Firewall has populated from your string.
Indicates whether the rule group is stateless or stateful. If the rule group is stateless, it contains stateless rules. If it is stateful, it contains stateful rules.
Note
This setting is required for requests that do not include the RuleGroupARN .
Indicates whether you want Network Firewall to just check the validity of the request, rather than run the request.
If set to TRUE , Network Firewall checks whether the request can run successfully, but doesn't actually make the requested changes. The call returns the value that the request would return if you ran it with dry run set to FALSE , but doesn't make additions or changes to your resources. This option allows you to make sure that you have the required permissions to run the request and that your request parameters are valid.
If set to FALSE , Network Firewall makes the requested changes to your resources.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'UpdateToken': 'string',
'RuleGroupResponse': {
'RuleGroupArn': 'string',
'RuleGroupName': 'string',
'RuleGroupId': 'string',
'Description': 'string',
'Type': 'STATELESS'|'STATEFUL',
'Capacity': 123,
'RuleGroupStatus': 'ACTIVE'|'DELETING',
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
],
'ConsumedCapacity': 123,
'NumberOfAssociations': 123
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
UpdateToken (string) --
A token used for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the rule group. The token marks the state of the rule group resource at the time of the request.
To make changes to the rule group, you provide the token in your request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the rule group hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the rule group again to get a current copy of it with a current token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
RuleGroupResponse (dict) --
The high-level properties of a rule group. This, along with the RuleGroup , define the rule group. You can retrieve all objects for a rule group by calling DescribeRuleGroup .
RuleGroupArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the rule group.
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.
RuleGroupName (string) --
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
RuleGroupId (string) --
The unique identifier for the rule group.
Description (string) --
A description of the rule group.
Type (string) --
Indicates whether the rule group is stateless or stateful. If the rule group is stateless, it contains stateless rules. If it is stateful, it contains stateful rules.
Capacity (integer) --
The maximum operating resources that this rule group can use. Rule group capacity is fixed at creation. When you update a rule group, you are limited to this capacity. When you reference a rule group from a firewall policy, Network Firewall reserves this capacity for the rule group.
You can retrieve the capacity that would be required for a rule group before you create the rule group by calling CreateRuleGroup with DryRun set to TRUE .
RuleGroupStatus (string) --
Detailed information about the current status of a rule group.
Tags (list) --
The key:value pairs to associate with the resource.
(dict) --
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.
ConsumedCapacity (integer) --
The number of capacity units currently consumed by the rule group rules.
NumberOfAssociations (integer) --
The number of firewall policies that use this rule group.
Exceptions
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_subnet_change_protection(
UpdateToken='string',
FirewallArn='string',
FirewallName='string',
SubnetChangeProtection=True|False
)
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
You must specify the ARN or the name, and you can specify both.
[REQUIRED]
A setting indicating whether the firewall is protected against changes to the subnet associations. Use this setting to protect against accidentally modifying the subnet associations for a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this setting to TRUE .
dict
Response Syntax
{
'UpdateToken': 'string',
'FirewallArn': 'string',
'FirewallName': 'string',
'SubnetChangeProtection': True|False
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
UpdateToken (string) --
An optional token that you can use for optimistic locking. Network Firewall returns a token to your requests that access the firewall. The token marks the state of the firewall resource at the time of the request.
To make an unconditional change to the firewall, omit the token in your update request. Without the token, Network Firewall performs your updates regardless of whether the firewall has changed since you last retrieved it.
To make a conditional change to the firewall, provide the token in your update request. Network Firewall uses the token to ensure that the firewall hasn't changed since you last retrieved it. If it has changed, the operation fails with an InvalidTokenException . If this happens, retrieve the firewall again to get a current copy of it with a new token. Reapply your changes as needed, then try the operation again using the new token.
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
SubnetChangeProtection (boolean) --
A setting indicating whether the firewall is protected against changes to the subnet associations. Use this setting to protect against accidentally modifying the subnet associations for a firewall that is in use. When you create a firewall, the operation initializes this setting to TRUE .
Exceptions
The available paginators are:
paginator = client.get_paginator('list_firewall_policies')
Creates an iterator that will paginate through responses from NetworkFirewall.Client.list_firewall_policies().
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response_iterator = paginator.paginate(
PaginationConfig={
'MaxItems': 123,
'PageSize': 123,
'StartingToken': 'string'
}
)
A dictionary that provides parameters to control pagination.
The total number of items to return. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified in max-items then a NextToken will be provided in the output that you can use to resume pagination.
The size of each page.
A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken from a previous response.
{
'FirewallPolicies': [
{
'Name': 'string',
'Arn': 'string'
},
]
}
Response Structure
The metadata for the firewall policies. Depending on your setting for max results and the number of firewall policies that you have, this might not be the full list.
High-level information about a firewall policy, returned by operations like create and describe. You can use the information provided in the metadata to retrieve and manage a firewall policy. You can retrieve all objects for a firewall policy by calling DescribeFirewallPolicy .
The descriptive name of the firewall policy. You can't change the name of a firewall policy after you create it.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall policy.
paginator = client.get_paginator('list_firewalls')
Creates an iterator that will paginate through responses from NetworkFirewall.Client.list_firewalls().
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response_iterator = paginator.paginate(
VpcIds=[
'string',
],
PaginationConfig={
'MaxItems': 123,
'PageSize': 123,
'StartingToken': 'string'
}
)
The unique identifiers of the VPCs that you want Network Firewall to retrieve the firewalls for. Leave this blank to retrieve all firewalls that you have defined.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control pagination.
The total number of items to return. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified in max-items then a NextToken will be provided in the output that you can use to resume pagination.
The size of each page.
A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken from a previous response.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'Firewalls': [
{
'FirewallName': 'string',
'FirewallArn': 'string'
},
]
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
Firewalls (list) --
The firewall metadata objects for the VPCs that you specified. Depending on your setting for max results and the number of firewalls you have, a single call might not be the full list.
(dict) --
High-level information about a firewall, returned by operations like create and describe. You can use the information provided in the metadata to retrieve and manage a firewall.
FirewallName (string) --
The descriptive name of the firewall. You can't change the name of a firewall after you create it.
FirewallArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the firewall.
paginator = client.get_paginator('list_rule_groups')
Creates an iterator that will paginate through responses from NetworkFirewall.Client.list_rule_groups().
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response_iterator = paginator.paginate(
Scope='MANAGED'|'ACCOUNT',
PaginationConfig={
'MaxItems': 123,
'PageSize': 123,
'StartingToken': 'string'
}
)
A dictionary that provides parameters to control pagination.
The total number of items to return. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified in max-items then a NextToken will be provided in the output that you can use to resume pagination.
The size of each page.
A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken from a previous response.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'RuleGroups': [
{
'Name': 'string',
'Arn': 'string'
},
]
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
RuleGroups (list) --
The rule group metadata objects that you've defined. Depending on your setting for max results and the number of rule groups, this might not be the full list.
(dict) --
High-level information about a rule group, returned by ListRuleGroups . You can use the information provided in the metadata to retrieve and manage a rule group.
Name (string) --
The descriptive name of the rule group. You can't change the name of a rule group after you create it.
Arn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the rule group.
paginator = client.get_paginator('list_tags_for_resource')
Creates an iterator that will paginate through responses from NetworkFirewall.Client.list_tags_for_resource().
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response_iterator = paginator.paginate(
ResourceArn='string',
PaginationConfig={
'MaxItems': 123,
'PageSize': 123,
'StartingToken': 'string'
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control pagination.
The total number of items to return. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified in max-items then a NextToken will be provided in the output that you can use to resume pagination.
The size of each page.
A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken from a previous response.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'Tags': [
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
]
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
Tags (list) --
The tags that are associated with the resource.
(dict) --
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.