How to Find AWS CloudTrail Trails with S3 Bucket Access Logging Disabled
Server access logs can assist you in security and access audits, help you learn about your customer base, and understand your Amazon S3 bill.
info
This security check is part of the CIS Amazon Web Services Benchmarks and is rated severity medium.
Prerequisites
This guide assumes that you have already installed and configured Fix Inventory to collect your AWS resources.
Directions
-
Execute the following
search
command in Fix Inventory Shell:> search is(aws_cloud_trail) --> is(aws_s3_bucket) and bucket_logging.target_bucket==null
kind=aws_cloud_trail, ..., region=fixinventory-poweruser
kind=aws_cloud_trail, ..., account=poweruser-team -
Pipe the
search
command into thedump
command:> search is(aws_cloud_trail) --> is(aws_s3_bucket) and bucket_logging.target_bucket==null | dump
reported:
id: /aws/cloudtrail/123
name: some-name
ctime: '2022-12-05T22:53:14Z'
kind: aws_cloud_trail
age: 2mo28dThe command output will list the details of all non-compliant
aws_cloud_trail
resources.
Remediation
- Ensure that S3 buckets have logging enabled. CloudTrail data events can also be used in place of S3 bucket logging. If that is the case, results may include false positives.
note
Please refer to the AWS CloudTrail documentation for details.