steampipe-mod-azure-compliance
steampipe-samples
steampipe-mod-azure-compliance | steampipe-samples | |
---|---|---|
2 | 13 | |
50 | 47 | |
- | - | |
7.7 | 6.5 | |
2 days ago | 3 months ago | |
HCL | HCL | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
steampipe-mod-azure-compliance
-
Need to audit an Azure environment, any tip?
One other thing I've been meaning to R&D is SteamPipe's Azure Compliance Mod , which is open source and looks to make life a bit easier
-
Azure Compliance Scanning
git clone https://github.com/turbot/steampipe-mod-azure-compliance.git cd steampipe-mod-azure-compliance
steampipe-samples
-
We manage 200 open-source repos
If the projects were my own, I'd consider a monorepo. We use this approach for Steampipe samples - https://github.com/turbot/steampipe-samples
If it's a collection of changes, small improvements, etc to existing projects and repos then personally I'd go for separate forked repos. Then you can track your changes relative to the original project source code and (hopefully) contribute back PRs etc more easily.
As always - there are pros & cons to both - just a matter of choosing the approach that feels best 51% of the time :-). Of course, it's minor in general compared to the value of just keeping on moving on your projects and work!
-
Running Steampipe on AWS Fargate
You can find the PRs for documentation here and for the script itself here. If you are lucky, Steampipe has are already merged these PRs by the time you are reading this, and your life just got a bit easier :) One thing you will most likely still need to do is remove or adjust the entries for the main account that you are running Steampipe from. In our case we slightly adjusted the script to skip config generation for that account based on name.
-
Mapping your AWS attack surface
This query will download a list of all public IP addresses tied to the customer’s VPC.
-
Enrich Splunk events with Steampipe
Let's start with a simple example: a list of all AWS Accounts in an organization. This query (accounts.sql) pulls the twelve-digit account id, Account Name, Status (Active or Suspended), and four specific tags on each account.
-
This Steampipe dashboard explores how long issues remain open in a set of repos
Repo: https://github.com/turbot/steampipe-samples/all/github-issue-duration
- [OC] Exploring subreddits
- [OC] Dashboards for Reddit
- Querying OpenAPI Definitions with SQL
-
Querying GitHub Data with SQL
There's all kinds of fun to be had looking at GitHub data through the lens of SQL! Here are a couple of examples based on https://steampipe.io.
https://github.com/turbot/steampipe-samples/tree/main/github...
https://github.com/turbot/steampipe-samples/tree/main/github...
- Querying Gmail with SQL
What are some alternatives?
steampipe-mod-aws-thrifty - Are you a Thrifty AWS dev? This mod checks your AWS accounts for unused and under-utilized resources using Powerpipe and Steampipe.
steampipe-mod-aws-perimeter - Is your AWS perimeter secure? Use Powerpipe and Steampipe to check your AWS accounts for public resources, resources shared with untrusted accounts, insecure network configurations and more.
steampipe-mod-zoom-compliance - Run individual configuration, compliance and security controls or full compliance benchmarks for CIS for Zoom using Powerpipe and Steampipe.
steampipe-mod-aws-compliance - Run individual controls or full compliance benchmarks for CIS, PCI, NIST, HIPAA and more across all of your AWS accounts using Powerpipe and Steampipe.