Cloudquery – Transforms Your Cloud Infrastructure Into SQL Database For Easy Monitoring, Governance And Security
CloudQuery transforms your cloud infrastructure into queryable SQL for easy monitoring, governance and security.
What is CloudQuery and why use it?
CloudQuery pulls, normalize, expose and monitor your cloud infrastructure and SaaS apps as SQL database. This abstracts various scattered APIs enabling you to define security, governance, cost and compliance policies with SQL.
CloudQuery can be easily extended to more resources and SaaS providers (open an Issue).
CloudQuery comes with built-in policy packs such as: AWS CIS (more is coming!).
Think about CloudQuery as a compliance-as-code tool inspired by tools like osquery and terraform, cool right?
Links
- Homepage: https://cloudquery.io
- Releases: https://github.com/cloudquery/cloudquery/releases
- Documentation: https://docs.cloudquery.io
- Hub (Provider and schema docs): https://hub.cloudquery.io/
Supported providers (Actively expanding)
Checkout https://hub.cloudquery.io
If you want us to add a new provider or resource please open an Issue.
See docs for developing new provider.
Download & install
You can download the precompiled binary from releases, or using CLI:
export OS=Darwin # Possible values: Linux,Windows,Darwin
curl -L https://github.com/cloudquery/cloudquery/releases/latest/download/cloudquery_${OS}_x86_64 -o cloudquery
chmod a+x cloudquery
./cloudquery --help
# if you want to download a specific version and not latest use the following endpoint
export VERSION= # specifiy a version
curl -L https://github.com/cloudquery/cloudquery/releases/download/${VERSION}/cloudquery_${OS}_x86_64 -o cloudquery
Homebrew
brew install cloudquery/tap/cloudquery
# After initial install you can upgrade the version via:
brew upgrade cloudquery
Quick Start
Running
First generate a config.hcl
file that will describe which resources you want cloudquery to pull, normalize and transform resources to the specified SQL database by running the following command:
cloudquery init aws # choose one or more from: [aws azure gcp okta]
# cloudquery init gcp azure # This will generate a config containing gcp and azure providers
# cloudquery init --help # Show all possible auto generated configs and flags
Once your config.hcl
is generated run the following command to fetch the resources:
# you can spawn a local postgresql with docker
# docker run -p 5432:5432 -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=pass -d postgres
cloudquery fetch --dsn "postgres://postgres:pass@localhost:5432/postgres"
# cloudquery fetch --help # Show all possible fetch flags
Using psql -h localhost -p 5432 -U postgres -d postgres
postgres=# dt
List of relations
Schema | Name | Type | Owner
--------+-------------------------------------------------------------+-------+----------
public | aws_autoscaling_launch_configuration_block_device_mapping | table | postgres
public | aws_autoscaling_launch_configurations | table | postgres
Run the following example queries from psql
shell
List ec2_images
SELECT * FROM aws_ec2_images;
Find all public facing AWS load balancers
SELECT * FROM aws_elbv2_load_balancers WHERE scheme = 'internet-facing';
Running policy packs
cloudquery comes with some ready compliance policy pack which you can use as is or modify to fit your use-case.
Currently, cloudquery support AWS CIS policy pack (it is under active development, so it doesn’t cover the whole spec yet).
To run AWS CIS pack enter the following commands (make sure you fetched all the resources beforehand by the fetch
command):
./cloudquery policy --path=<PATH_TO_POLICY_FILE> --output=<PATH_TO_OUTPUT_POLICY_RESULT> --dsn "postgres://postgres:pass@localhost:5432/postgres"
You can also create your own policy file. E.g.:
views:
- name: "my_custom_view"
query: >
CREATE VIEW my_custom_view AS ...
queries:
- name: "Find thing that violates policy"
query: >
SELECT account_id, arn FROM ...
The policy
command uses the policy file path ./policy.yml
by default, but this can be overridden via the --path
flag, or the CQ_POLICY_PATH
environment variable.
Full Documentation, resources and SQL schema definitions are available here.
Providers Authentication
See additional documentation for each provider at https://hub.cloudquery.io.
Compile and run
go build .
./cloudquery # --help to see all options
Running on AWS (Lambda, Terraform)
Checkout cloudquery/terraform-aws-cloudquery
License
By contributing to cloudquery you agree that your contributions will be licensed as defined on the LICENSE file.
Hiring
If you are into Go, Backend, Cloud, GCP, AWS – ping us at jobs [at] our domain
Contribution
Feel free to open Pull-Request for small fixes and changes. For bigger changes and new providers please open an issue first to prevent double work and discuss relevant stuff.
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