cloud-foundation-fabric/fast/stages/2-networking-c-nva/README.md

45 KiB

Networking with Network Virtual Appliance

This stage sets up the shared network infrastructure for the whole organization.

It is designed for those who would like to leverage Network Virtual Appliances (NVAs) between landing and dmz areas of the network, for example for Intrusion Prevention System (IPS) purposes.

It adopts the common “hub and spoke” reference design, which is well suited for multiple scenarios, and it offers several advantages versus other designs:

  • the "landing hub" VPC centralizes the external connectivity towards landing network resources (e.g. on-prem, other cloud environments and the spokes), and it is ready to host cross-environment services like CI/CD, code repositories, and monitoring probes
  • the "spoke" VPCs allow partitioning workloads (e.g. by environment like in this setup), while still retaining controlled access to central connectivity and services
  • Shared VPCs -both in hub and spokes- split the management of the network resources into specific (host) projects, while still allowing them to be consumed from the workload (service) projects
  • the design facilitates DNS centralization

Connectivity between the hub and the spokes is established via VPC network peerings, which offer uncapped bandwidth, lower latencies, at no additional costs and with a very low management overhead. Different ways of implementing connectivity, and related some pros and cons, are discussed below.

The diagram shows the high-level design and it should be used as a reference throughout the following sections.

The final number of subnets, and their IP addressing will depend on the user-specific requirements. It can be easily changed via variables or external data files, without any need to edit the code.

Networking diagram

Table of contents

Design overview and choices

Multi-regional deployment

The stage deploys the the infrastructure in two regions. By default, europe-west1 and europe-west4. Regional resources include NVAs (templates, MIGs, LBs) and test VMs. This provides enough redundancy to be resilient to regional failures.

VPC design

The "landing zone" is divided into two VPC networks:

  • the landing VPC: the connectivity hub towards other landing networks
  • the dmz VPC: the connectivity hub towards any other dmz network

The VPCs are connected with two sets of sample NVA machines, grouped in regional (multi-zone) Managed Instance Groups (MIGs). The appliances are plain Linux machines, performing simple routing/natting, leveraging some standard Linux features, such as ip route or iptables. The appliances are suited for demo purposes only and they should be replaced with enterprise-grade solutions before moving to production. The traffic destined to the VMs in each MIG is mediated through regional internal load balancers, both in the landing and in the dmz networks.

By default, the design assumes the following:

  • on-premise networks (and related resources) are considered landing. As such, the VPNs connecting with on-premises are terminated in GCP, in the landing VPC
  • the public Internet is considered dmz. As such Cloud NAT is deployed in the dmz landing VPC only
  • cross-environment traffic and traffic from any dmz network to any landing network (and vice versa) pass through the NVAs. For demo purposes, the current NVA performs simple routing/natting only
  • any traffic from a landing network to an dmz network (e.g. Internet) is natted by the NVAs. Users can configure further exclusions

The landing landing VPC acts as a hub: it bridges internal resources with the outside world and it hosts the shared services consumed by the spoke VPCs, connected to the hub through VPC network peerings. Spokes are used to partition the environments. By default:

  • one spoke VPC hosts the development environment resources
  • one spoke VPC hosts the production environment resources

Each virtual network is a shared VPC: shared VPCs are managed in dedicated host projects and shared with other service projects that consume the network resources. Shared VPC lets organization administrators delegate administrative responsibilities, such as creating and managing instances, to Service Project Admins while maintaining centralized control over network resources like subnets, routes, and firewalls.

Users can easily extend the design to host additional environments, or adopt different logical mappings for the spokes (for example, in order to create a new spoke for each company entity). Adding spokes is trivial and it does not increase the design complexity. The steps to add more spokes are provided in the following sections.

In multi-organization scenarios, where production and non-production resources use different Cloud Identity and GCP organizations, the hub/landing VPC is usually part of the production organization. It establishes connections with the production spokes within the same organization, and with non-production spokes in a different organization.

External connectivity

External connectivity to on-prem is implemented leveraging Cloud HA VPN (two tunnels per region). This is what users normally deploy as a final solution, or to validate routing and to transfer data, while waiting for interconnects to be provisioned.

Connectivity to additional on-prem sites or to other cloud providers should be implemented in a similar fashion, via VPN tunnels or interconnects, in the landing VPC (either landing or dmz, depending by the nature of the peers), sharing the same regional routers.

Internal connectivity

Internal connectivity (e.g. between the landing landing VPC and the spokes) is realized with VPC network peerings. As mentioned, there are other ways to implement connectivity. These can be easily retrofitted with minimal code changes, although they introduce additional considerations on service interoperability, quotas and management.

This is an options summary:

  • VPC Peering (used here to connect the landing landing VPC with the spokes, also used by 02-networking-vpn)
    • Pros: no additional costs, full bandwidth with no configurations, no extra latency
    • Cons: no transitivity (e.g. to GKE masters, Cloud SQL, etc.), no selective exchange of routes, several quotas and limits shared between VPCs in a peering group
  • Multi-NIC appliances (used here to connect the landing landing and dmz VPCs) and multi-NIC appliances with NCC/BGP support implemented here
    • Pros: provides additional security features (e.g. IPS), potentially better integration with on-prem systems by using the same vendor
    • Cons: complex HA/failover setup, limited by VM bandwidth and scale, additional costs for VMs and licenses, out of band management of a critical cloud component
  • HA VPN
    • Pros: simple compatibility with GCP services that leverage peering internally, better control on routes, avoids peering groups shared quotas and limits
    • Cons: additional costs, marginal increase in latency, requires multiple tunnels for full bandwidth

IP ranges, subnetting, routing

Minimizing the number of routes (and subnets) in the cloud environment is important, as it simplifies management and it avoids hitting Cloud Router and VPC quotas and limits. For this reason, we recommend to carefully plan the IP space used in your cloud environment. This allows the use of larger IP CIDR blocks in routes, whenever possible.

This stage uses a dedicated /11 block (10.64.0.0/11), which should be sized to the own needs. The subnets created in each VPC derive from this range.

The /11 block is evenly split in eight, smaller /16 blocks, assigned to different areas of the GCP network: landing dmz europe-west1, landing dmz europe-west4, landing landing europe-west1, landing dmz europe-west4, development europe-west1, development europe-west4, production europe-west1, production europe-west4.

The first /24 range in every area is allocated for a default subnet, which can be removed or modified as needed. The last three /24 ranges can be used for PSA (Private Service Access)via the psa_ranges variable, or for Internal Application Load Balancers (L7 LBs) subnets via the factory.

This is a summary of the subnets allocated by default in this setup:

name description CIDR
landing-default-ew1 landing landing subnet - europe-west1 10.128.64.0/24
landing-default-ew4 landing landing subnet - europe-west4 10.128.96.0/24
dmz-default-ew1 dmz landing subnet - europe-west1 10.128.0.0/24
dmz-default-ew4 dmz landing subnet - europe-west4 10.128.32.0/24
dev-default-ew1 Dev spoke subnet - europe-west1 10.68.0.0/24
dev-default-ew1 Free (PSA) - europe-west1 10.68.253.0/24
dev-default-ew1 Free (PSA) - europe-west1 10.68.254.0/24
dev-default-ew1 Free (L7 ILB) - europe-west1 10.68.255.0/24
dev-default-ew4 Dev spoke subnet - europe-west4 10.84.0.0/24
dev-default-ew4 Free (PSA) - europe-west4 10.84.253.0/24
dev-default-ew4 Free (PSA) - europe-west4 10.84.254.0/24
dev-default-ew4 Free (L7 ILB) - europe-west4 10.84.255.0/24
prod-default-ew1 Prod spoke subnet - europe-west1 10.72.0.0/24
prod-default-ew1 Free (PSA) - europe-west1 10.72.253.0/24
prod-default-ew1 Free (PSA) - europe-west1 10.72.254.0/24
prod-default-ew1 Free (L7 ILB) - europe-west1 10.72.255.0/24
prod-default-ew4 Prod spoke subnet - europe-west4 10.88.0.0/24
prod-default-ew4 Free (PSA) - europe-west4 10.88.253.0/24
prod-default-ew4 Free (PSA) - europe-west4 10.88.254.0/24
prod-default-ew4 Free (L7 ILB) - europe-west4 10.88.255.0/24

These subnets can be advertised to on-premises as an aggregate /11 range (10.64.0.0/11). Refer to the var.vpn_onprem_primary_config.router_config and var.vpn_onprem_secondary_config.router_config variables to configure it.

Routes in GCP are either automatically created (for example, when a subnet is added to a VPC), manually created via static routes, dynamically exchanged through VPC peerings, or dynamically programmed by Cloud Routers when a BGP session is established. BGP sessions can be configured to advertise VPC ranges, and/or custom ranges via custom advertisements.

In this setup:

  • routes between multiple subnets within the same VPC are automatically exchanged by GCP
  • the spokes and the landing landing VPC exchange routes through VPC peerings
  • on-premises is connected to the landing landing VPC and it dynamically exchanges BGP routes with GCP (with the landing VPC) using HA VPN
  • for cross-environment (spokes) communications, and for connections to on-premises and to the Internet, the spokes leverage some default tagged routes that send the traffic of each region (whose machines are identified by a dedicated network tag, e.g. ew1) to a corresponding regional NVA in the landing VPC, through an ILB (whose VIP is set as the route next-hop)
  • the spokes are configured with backup default routes, so if the NVAs in the same region become unavailable, more routes to the NVAs in the other region are already available. Current routes are not able to understand if the next-hop ILBs become unhealthy. As such, in case of a regional failure, users will need to manually withdraw the primary default routes, so the secondaries will take over
  • the NVAs are configured with static routes that allow the communication with on-premises and between the GCP resources (including the cross-environment communication)

The Cloud Routers (connected to the VPN gateways in the landing VPC) are configured to exclude the default advertisement of VPC ranges and they only advertise their respective aggregate ranges, via custom advertisements. This greatly simplifies the routing configuration and avoids quota or limit issues, by keeping the number of routes small, instead of making it proportional to the subnets and to the secondary ranges in the VPCs.

Internet egress

In this setup, Internet egress is realized through Cloud NAT, deployed in the dmz landing VPC. This allows instances in all other VPCs to reach the Internet, passing through the NVAs (being the public Internet considered dmz). Cloud NAT is disabled by default; enable it by setting the enable_cloud_nat variable

Several other scenarios are possible, with various degrees of complexity:

  • deploy Cloud NAT in every VPC
  • add forwarding proxies, with optional URL filters
  • send Internet traffic to on-premises, so the existing egress infrastructure can be leveraged

Future pluggable modules will allow users to easily experiment with the above scenarios.

VPC and Hierarchical Firewall

The GCP Firewall is a stateful, distributed feature that allows the creation of L4 policies, either via VPC-level rules or -more recently- via hierarchical policies, applied on the resource hierarchy (organization, folders).

The current setup adopts both firewall types. Hierarchical firewall rules are applied in the networking folder for common ingress rules (egress is open by default): for example, it allows the health checks and the IAP forwarders traffic to reach the VMs.

Rules and policies are defined in simple YAML files, described below.

DNS

DNS goes hand in hand with networking, especially on GCP where Cloud DNS zones and policies are associated at the VPC level. This setup implements both DNS flows:

  • on-prem to cloud via private zones for cloud-managed domains, and an inbound policy used as forwarding target or via delegation (requires some extra configuration) from on-prem DNS resolvers
  • cloud to on-prem via forwarding zones for the on-prem managed domains

DNS configuration is further centralized by leveraging peering zones, so that

  • the hub/landing Cloud DNS hosts configurations for on-prem forwarding, Google API domains, and the top-level private zone/s (e.g. gcp.example.com)
  • the spokes Cloud DNS host configurations for the environment-specific domains (e.g. prod.gcp.example.com), which are bound to the hub/landing leveraging cross-project binding; a peering zone for the . (root) zone is then created on each spoke, delegating all DNS resolution to hub/landing.
  • Private Google Access is enabled via DNS Response Policies for most of the supported domains

To complete the configuration, the 35.199.192.0/19 range should be routed to the VPN tunnels from on-premises, and the following names should be configured for DNS forwarding to cloud:

  • private.googleapis.com
  • restricted.googleapis.com
  • gcp.example.com (used as a placeholder)

In GCP, a forwarding zone in the landing project is configured to forward queries to the placeholder domain onprem.example.com to on-premises.

This configuration is battle-tested, and flexible enough to lend itself to simple modifications without subverting its design.

Stage structure and files layout

VPCs

VPCs are defined in separate files, one for landing (landing and dmz), one for prod and one for dev.

These files contain different resources:

  • project (projects): the "host projects" containing the VPCs and enabling the required APIs.
  • VPCs (net-vpc): manages the subnets, the explicit routes for {private,restricted}.googleapis.com and the DNS inbound policy for the landing landing VPC. Non-infrastructural subnets are created leveraging resource factories. Sample subnets are shipped in data/subnets and can be easily customized to fit users' needs. PSA are configured by the variable psa_ranges if managed services are needed.
  • Cloud NAT (net-cloudnat) (in the dmz landing VPC only): it manages the networking infrastructure required to enable the Internet egress.

VPNs

The connectivity between on-premises and GCP (the landing landing VPC) is implemented with Cloud HA VPN (net-vpn) and defined in vpn-onprem.tf. The file implements a single logical connection between on-premises and the landing landing VPC, both in europe-west1 and europe-west4. The relevant parameters for its configuration are found in the variables vpn_onprem_primary_config and vpn_onprem_secondary_config.

Routing and BGP

Each VPC network (net-vpc) manages a separate routing table, which can define static routes (e.g. to private.googleapis.com) and receives dynamic routes through VPC peering and BGP sessions established with the neighbor networks (e.g. the landing landing VPC receives routes from on-premises, and the spokes receive RFC1918 from the landing landing VPC).

Static routes are defined in vpc-*.tf files in the routes section of each net-vpc module.

BGP sessions for landing landing to on-premises are configured through the variable vpn_onprem_configs.

Firewall

VPC firewall rules (net-vpc-firewall) are defined per-vpc on each vpc-*.tf file and leverage a resource factory to massively create rules. To add a new firewall rule, create a new file or edit an existing one in the data_folder directory defined in the module net-vpc-firewall, following the examples of the "Rules factory" section of the module documentation. Sample firewall rules are shipped in data/firewall-rules/dmz and in data/firewall-rules/landing, and can be easily customized.

Hierarchical firewall policies (folder) are defined in main.tf and managed through a policy factory implemented by the net-firewall-policy module, which is then applied to the Networking folder containing all the core networking infrastructure. Policies are defined in the rules_file file, to define a new one simply use the firewall policy module documentation". Sample hierarchical firewall rules are shipped in data/hierarchical-ingress-rules.yaml and can be easily customised.

DNS architecture

The DNS (dns) infrastructure is defined in [dns-*.tf] files.

Cloud DNS manages onprem forwarding, the main GCP zone (in this example gcp.example.com) and environment-specific zones (i.e. dev.gcp.example.com and prod.gcp.example.com).

Cloud environment

The root DNS zone defined in the landing project acts as the source of truth for DNS within the Cloud environment. The resources defined in the spoke VPCs consume the landing DNS infrastructure through DNS peering (e.g. prod-landing-root-dns-peering). The spokes can optionally define private zones (e.g. prod-dns-private-zone). Granting visibility both to the landing and dmz landing VPCs ensures that the whole cloud environment can query such zones.

Cloud to on-prem

Leveraging the forwarding zone defined in the landing project (e.g. onprem-example-dns-forwarding and reverse-10-dns-forwarding), the cloud environment can resolve in-addr.arpa. and onprem.example.com. using the on-premise DNS infrastructure. On-premise resolver IPs are set in the variable dns.onprem.

DNS queries sent to the on-premise infrastructure come from the 35.199.192.0/19 source range.

On-prem to cloud

The Inbound DNS Policy defined in the landing landing VPC module (net-landing.tf) automatically reserves the first available IP address on each subnet (typically the third one in a CIDR) to expose the Cloud DNS service, so that it can be consumed from outside of GCP.

How to run this stage

This stage is meant to be executed after the resource management stage has run, as it leverages the automation service account and bucket created there, and additional resources configured in the bootstrap stage.

It's of course possible to run this stage in isolation, but that's outside the scope of this document, and you would need to refer to the code for the previous stages for the environmental requirements.

Before running this stage, you need to make sure you have the correct credentials and permissions, and localize variables by assigning values that match your configuration.

Provider and Terraform variables

As all other FAST stages, the mechanism used to pass variable values and pre-built provider files from one stage to the next is also leveraged here.

The commands to link or copy the provider and terraform variable files can be easily derived from the stage-links.sh script in the FAST root folder, passing it a single argument with the local output files folder (if configured) or the GCS output bucket in the automation project (derived from stage 0 outputs). The following examples demonstrate both cases, and the resulting commands that then need to be copy/pasted and run.

../../stage-links.sh ~/fast-config

# copy and paste the following commands for '2-networking-a-peering'

ln -s ~/fast-config/providers/2-networking-providers.tf ./
ln -s ~/fast-config/tfvars/0-globals.auto.tfvars.json ./
ln -s ~/fast-config/tfvars/0-bootstrap.auto.tfvars.json ./
ln -s ~/fast-config/tfvars/1-resman.auto.tfvars.json ./
../../stage-links.sh gs://xxx-prod-iac-core-outputs-0

# copy and paste the following commands for '2-networking-a-peering'

gcloud alpha storage cp gs://xxx-prod-iac-core-outputs-0/providers/2-networking-providers.tf ./
gcloud alpha storage cp gs://xxx-prod-iac-core-outputs-0/tfvars/0-globals.auto.tfvars.json ./
gcloud alpha storage cp gs://xxx-prod-iac-core-outputs-0/tfvars/0-bootstrap.auto.tfvars.json ./
gcloud alpha storage cp gs://xxx-prod-iac-core-outputs-0/tfvars/1-resman.auto.tfvars.json ./

Impersonating the automation service account

The preconfigured provider file uses impersonation to run with this stage's automation service account's credentials. The gcp-devops and organization-admins groups have the necessary IAM bindings in place to do that, so make sure the current user is a member of one of those groups.

Variable configuration

Variables in this stage -- like most other FAST stages -- are broadly divided into three separate sets:

  • variables which refer to global values for the whole organization (org id, billing account id, prefix, etc.), which are pre-populated via the 0-globals.auto.tfvars.json file linked or copied above
  • variables which refer to resources managed by previous stage, which are prepopulated here via the 0-bootstrap.auto.tfvars.json and 1-resman.auto.tfvars.json files linked or copied above
  • and finally variables that optionally control this stage's behaviour and customizations, and can to be set in a custom terraform.tfvars file

The latter set is explained in the Customization sections below, and the full list can be found in the Variables table at the bottom of this document.

Note that the outputs_location variable is disabled by default, you need to explicitly set it in your terraform.tfvars file if you want output files to be generated by this stage. This is a sample terraform.tfvars that configures it, refer to the bootstrap stage documentation for more details:

outputs_location = "~/fast-config"

Using delayed billing association for projects

This configuration is possible but unsupported and only exists for development purposes, use at your own risk:

  • temporarily switch billing_account.id to null in 0-globals.auto.tfvars.json
  • for each project resources in the project modules used in this stage (dev-spoke-project, landing-project, prod-spoke-project)
    • apply using -target, for example terraform apply -target 'module.landing-project.google_project.project[0]'
    • untaint the project resource after applying, for example terraform untaint 'module.landing-project.google_project.project[0]'
  • go through the process to associate the billing account with the two projects
  • switch billing_account.id back to the real billing account id
  • resume applying normally

Running the stage

Once provider and variable values are in place and the correct user is configured, the stage can be run:

terraform init
terraform apply

Post-deployment activities

  • On-prem routers should be configured to advertise all relevant CIDRs to the GCP environments. To avoid hitting GCP quotas, we recommend aggregating routes as much as possible.
  • On-prem routers should accept BGP sessions from their cloud peers.
  • On-prem DNS servers should have forward zones for GCP-managed ones.

Private Google Access

Private Google Access (or PGA) enables VMs and on-prem systems to consume Google APIs from within the Google network, and is already fully configured on this environment:

  • DNS response policies in the landing project implement rules for all supported domains reachable via PGA
  • routes for the private and restricted ranges are defined in all VPCs except dmz

To enable PGA access from on premises advertise the private/restricted ranges via the vpn_onprem_primary_config and vpn_onprem_secondary_config variables, using router or tunnel custom advertisements.

Customizations

Changing default regions

Regions are defined via the regions variable which sets up a mapping between the regions.primary and regions.secondary logical names and actual GCP region names. If you need to change regions from the defaults:

  • change the values of the mappings in the regions variable to the regions you are going to use
  • change the regions in the factory subnet files in the data folder

Configuring the VPNs to on prem

This stage includes basic support for an HA VPN connecting the landing zone in the primary region to on prem. Configuration is via the vpn_onprem_primary_config and vpn_onprem_secondary_config variables, that closely mirrors the variables defined in the net-vpn-ha.

Support for the onprem VPNs is disabled by default so that no resources are created, this is an example of how to configure one variable to enable the VPN in the primary region:

vpn_onprem_primary_config = {
  peer_external_gateways = {
    default = {
      redundancy_type = "SINGLE_IP_INTERNALLY_REDUNDANT"
      interfaces      = ["8.8.8.8"]
    }
  }
  router_config = {
    asn = 65501
    custom_advertise = {
      all_subnets = false
      ip_ranges   = {
        "10.1.0.0/16"     = "gcp"
        "35.199.192.0/19" = "gcp-dns"
        "199.36.153.4/30" = "gcp-restricted"
      }
    }
  }
  tunnels = {
    "0" = {
      bgp_peer = {
        address = "169.254.1.1"
        asn     = 65500
      }
      bgp_session_range               = "169.254.1.2/30"
      peer_external_gateway_interface = 0
      shared_secret                   = "foo"
      vpn_gateway_interface           = 0
    }
    "1" = {
      bgp_peer = {
        address = "169.254.2.1"
        asn     = 64513
      }
      bgp_session_range               = "169.254.2.2/30"
      peer_external_gateway_interface = 1
      shared_secret                   = "foo"
      vpn_gateway_interface           = 1
    }
  }
}

Adding an environment

To create a new environment (e.g. staging), a few changes are required:

Create a net-staging.tf file by copying net-prod.tf file. Adapt the new file by replacing the value "prod" with the value "staging". Running diff net-dev.tf net-prod.tf can help to see how environment files differ.

The new VPC requires a set of dedicated CIDRs, one per region, added to variable gcp_ranges (for example as spoke_staging_ew1 and spoke_staging_ew4).

gcp_ranges is a map that "resolves" CIDR names to the actual addresses, and will be used later to configure routing.

Variables managing L7 Internal Load Balancers (l7ilb_subnets) and Private Service Access (psa_ranges) should also be adapted, and subnets and firewall rules for the new spoke should be added, as described above.

DNS configurations are centralised in the dns-*.tf files. Spokes delegate DNS resolution to Landing through DNS peering, and optionally define a private zone (e.g. dev.gcp.example.com) which the landing peers to. To configure DNS for a new environment, copy one of the other environments DNS files e.g. (dns-dev.tf) into a new dns-*.tf file suffixed with the environment name (e.g. dns-staging.tf), and update its content accordingly. Don't forget to add a peering zone from the landing to the newly created environment private zone.

Files

name description modules resources
dns-dev.tf Development spoke DNS zones and peerings setup. dns
dns-landing.tf Landing DNS zones and peerings setup. dns · dns-response-policy
dns-prod.tf Production spoke DNS zones and peerings setup. dns
main.tf Networking folder and hierarchical policy. folder · net-firewall-policy
monitoring-vpn-onprem.tf VPN monitoring alerts. google_monitoring_alert_policy
monitoring.tf Network monitoring dashboards. google_monitoring_dashboard
net-dev.tf Dev spoke VPC and related resources. net-vpc · net-vpc-firewall · net-vpc-peering · project
net-landing.tf Landing VPC and related resources. net-cloudnat · net-vpc · net-vpc-firewall · project
net-prod.tf Production spoke VPC and related resources. net-vpc · net-vpc-firewall · net-vpc-peering · project
nva.tf None compute-mig · compute-vm · simple-nva
outputs.tf Module outputs. google_storage_bucket_object · local_file
regions.tf Compute short names for regions.
test-resources.tf temporary instances for testing compute-vm
variables.tf Module variables.
vpn-onprem.tf VPN between landing and onprem. net-vpn-ha

Variables

name description type required default producer
automation Automation resources created by the bootstrap stage. object({…}) 0-bootstrap
billing_account Billing account id. If billing account is not part of the same org set is_org_level to false. object({…}) 0-bootstrap
folder_ids Folders to be used for the networking resources in folders/nnnnnnnnnnn format. If null, folder will be created. object({…}) 1-resman
organization Organization details. object({…}) 0-bootstrap
prefix Prefix used for resources that need unique names. Use 9 characters or less. string 0-bootstrap
alert_config Configuration for monitoring alerts. object({…}) {…}
custom_roles Custom roles defined at the org level, in key => id format. object({…}) null 0-bootstrap
dns DNS configuration. object({…}) {}
enable_cloud_nat Deploy Cloud NAT. bool false
essential_contacts Email used for essential contacts, unset if null. string null
factories_config Configuration for network resource factories. object({…}) {…}
gcp_ranges GCP address ranges in name => range format. map(string) {…}
onprem_cidr Onprem addresses in name => range format. map(string) {…}
outputs_location Path where providers and tfvars files for the following stages are written. Leave empty to disable. string null
psa_ranges IP ranges used for Private Service Access (e.g. CloudSQL). Ranges is in name => range format. object({…}) null
regions Region definitions. object({…}) {…}
service_accounts Automation service accounts in name => email format. object({…}) null 1-resman
vpn_onprem_primary_config VPN gateway configuration for onprem interconnection in the primary region. object({…}) null
vpn_onprem_secondary_config VPN gateway configuration for onprem interconnection in the secondary region. object({…}) null

Outputs

name description sensitive consumers
host_project_ids Network project ids.
host_project_numbers Network project numbers.
shared_vpc_self_links Shared VPC host projects.
tfvars Terraform variables file for the following stages.
vpn_gateway_endpoints External IP Addresses for the GCP VPN gateways.