AWS SDN connector using certificates
FortiOS automatically updates dynamic addresses for AWS using an AWS SDN connector, including mapping attributes from AWS instances to dynamic address groups in FortiOS.
Configuring the SDN connector using the GUI, then checking the configuration using the CLI is recommended.
This topic describes one of multiple configuration methods available with this SDN connector type. See the More Links section on the right sidebar for other methods. |
To configure an AWS SDN connector using the GUI:
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Configure the AWS SDN connector:
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Go to Security Fabric > External Connectors.
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Click Create New, and select Amazon Web Services (AWS).
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In the Access key ID field, enter the key created in the AWS management portal.
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In the Secret access key field, enter the secret access key accompanying the above access key.
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In the Region name field, enter the region name. Refer to AWS Regions and Endpoints for the desired region name.
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In the VPC ID field, enter the VPC ID within the specified region you desire to cover with the SDN connector.
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Click OK.
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Check the configuration using the CLI:
config system sdn-connector
edit "<connector-name>"
show
The output resembles the following:
config system sdn-connector
edit "<connector-name>"
set access-key "<example-access-key>"
set secret-key ENC <example-secret-key>
set region "us-west-2"
set vpc-id "vpc-e1e4b587"
set update-interval 1
next
end
If you see that the SDN connector is not enabled in Security Fabric > External Connectors in the GUI, run the following commands to enable the SDN connector:
diagnose deb application awsd -1
diagnose debug enable
The output may display an error like the following:
FGT # awsd sdn connector AWS_SDN prepare to update
awsd sdn connector AWS_SDN start updating
aws curl response err, 403
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<Response><Errors><Error><Code>UnauthorizedOperation</Code><Message>You are not authorized to perform this operation.</Message></Error></Errors><RequestID>8403cc11-b185-41da-ad6d-23bb4db7d00a</RequestID></Response>
awsd curl failed 403
awsd sdn connector AWS_SDN failed to get instance list
aws curl response err, 403
{"Message":"User: arn:aws:iam::956224459807:user/jcarcavallo is not authorized to perform: eks:ListClusters on resource: arn:aws:eks:us-east-1:956224459807:cluster/*"}
awsd sdn connector AWS_SDN get EKS cluster list failed
awsd sdn connector AWS_SDN list EKS cluster failed
awsd sdn connector AWS_SDN start updating IP addresses
awsd sdn connector AWS_SDN finish updating IP addresses
awsd reap child pid: 569
In this case, you must configure power user access for the current administrator in the AWS management console:
After configuring power user access, run the following commands:
diagnose deb application awsd -1
diagnose debug enable
The output should display without error, as follows:
FGT # AWSD: update sdn connector AWS_SDN status to enabled
awsd sdn connector AWS_SDN prepare to update
awsd sdn connector AWS_SDN start updating
awsd get ec2 instance info successfully
awsd sdn connector AWS_SDN start updating IP addresses
awsd sdn connector AWS_SDN finish updating IP addresses
awsd reap child pid: 893
The AWS connector is now enabled.
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Create a dynamic firewall address for the configured AWS SDN connector:
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Go to Policy & Objects > Addresses.
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Click Create New, then select Address.
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From the Type dropdown list, select Dynamic.
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From the Sub Type dropdown list, select Fabric Connector Address.
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In the Filter field, add the desired filters. The following filters are supported:
Description
Key
Example value
Architecture architecture x86
Autoscaling group AutoScaleGroup 10703c-4f731e90-fortigate-payg-auto-scaling-group
AZ placement.availabilityzone us-east-1a
Group name placement.groupname Image ID imageId ami-123456
Instance ID instanceId i-12345678
Instance type instanceType t2.micro
Key name keyName Kubernetes cluster k8s_cluster Kubernetes label and its name k8s_label.Name Kubernetes namespace k8s_namespace Kubernetes node name k8s_nodename Kubernetes pod name k8s_podname Kubernetes region k8s_region Kubernetes service name k8s_servicename Kubernetes zone k8s_zone Private DNS name privateDnsName ip-172-31-10-211.us-west-2.compute.internal
Public DNS name publicDnsName ec2-54-202-168-254.us-west-2.compute.amazonaws.com
Security group ID SecurityGroupId Subnet ID subnetId sub-123456
Tag and its name. This key supports a maximum of eight tags. tag.Name Tenancy placement placement.tenancy VPC ID VpcId
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Ensure that the AWS SDN connector resolves dynamic firewall IP addresses:
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Go to Policy & Objects > Addresses.
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Hover over the address created in step 2 to see a list of IP addresses for instances that belong to the security group configured in step 2.
The following is an example for a public SDN address type:
The following is an example for a private SDN address type:
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To configure AWS SDN connector using CLI commands:
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Configure the AWS connector:
config system sdn-connector
edit "<connector-name>"
set access-key "<example-access-key>"
set secret-key ENC <example-secret-key>
set region "us-west-2"
set vpc-id "vpc-e1e4b587"
set update-interval 1
next
end
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Create a dynamic firewall address for the configured AWS SDN connector with the supported filter:
config firewall address
edit "aws-ec2"
set type dynamic
set sdn "<connector-name>"
set filter "SecurityGroupId=sg-05f4749cf84267548"
set sdn-addr-type public
next
edit "aws-eks1"
set type dynamic
set sdn "<connector-name>"
set filter "K8S_Region=us-west-2"
next
end
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Confirm that the AWS SDN connector resolves dynamic firewall IP addresses using the configured filter:
config firewall address
edit "aws-ec2"
set type dynamic
set sdn "<connector-name>"
set filter "SecurityGroupId=sg-05f4749cf84267548"
set sdn-addr-type public
config list
edit "34.222.246.198"
next
edit "54.188.139.177"
next
edit "54.218.229.229"
next
end
next
edit "aws-eks1"
set type dynamic
set sdn "<connector-name>"
set filter "K8S_Region=us-west-2"
config list
edit "192.168.114.197"
next
edit "192.168.167.20"
next
edit "192.168.180.72"
next
edit "192.168.181.186"
next
edit "192.168.210.107"
next
end
next
end
To add an EC2 instance to test automatic address population:
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Assume that you want to boot up another instance with an IP address of 34.222.246.178, which is currently stopped. This instance belongs to the security group that the aws-ec2 address is filtering for. In the AWS management portal, start the instance.
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Verify that the instance is running.
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At this point, running
show
again shows the SDN connector has automatically populated and added the 34.222.246.178 instance.config firewall address
edit "aws-ec2"
set type dynamic
set sdn "<connector-name>"
set filter "SecurityGroupId=sg-05f4749cf84267548"
set sdn-addr-type public
config list
edit "34.222.246.198"
next
edit "54.188.139.177"
next
edit "54.218.229.229"
next
edit "34.222.246.178"
next
end
next
end
Therefore, administrators do not need to add this instance to the address manually. When a firewall policy is applied to this address, 34.222.246.178 is automatically covered.