This page shows you how to use Organization Policy Service custom constraints to restrict specific operations on the following Google Cloud resources:
iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy
To learn more about Organization Policy, see Custom organization policies.
About organization policies and constraints
The Google Cloud Organization Policy Service gives you centralized, programmatic control over your organization's resources. As the organization policy administrator, you can define an organization policy, which is a set of restrictions called constraints that apply to Google Cloud resources and descendants of those resources in the Google Cloud resource hierarchy. You can enforce organization policies at the organization, folder, or project level.
Organization Policy provides built-in managed constraints for various Google Cloud services. However, if you want more granular, customizable control over the specific fields that are restricted in your organization policies, you can also create custom constraints and use those custom constraints in an organization policy.
Policy inheritance
By default, organization policies are inherited by the descendants of the resources on which you enforce the policy. For example, if you enforce a policy on a folder, Google Cloud enforces the policy on all projects in the folder. To learn more about this behavior and how to change it, refer to Hierarchy evaluation rules.
Benefits
You can use custom organization policies that reference IAM attributes to control how your allow policies can be modified. Specifically, you can control the following:
- Who can be granted roles
- Who can have their roles revoked
- Which roles can be granted
- Which roles can be revoked
For example, you can prevent roles that contain the word admin from being
granted to principals whose email addresses end in @gmail.com.
Limitations
Custom organization policies in dry-run mode that reference IAM attributes have some limitations. Namely, audit logs for violations that involve the
setIamPolicymethod might be missing the following fields:resourceNameserviceNamemethodName
Audit logs aren't generated for all IAM-related custom organization policy violations. Namely, if a custom organization policy causes a
setIamPolicyoperation on the organization resource to fail, then Google Cloud doesn't generate an audit log for that event.Custom organization policies that reference IAM attributes don't affect the following:
- Default grants by Cloud Storage ACLs.
- Automatic role grants for Cloud Storage convenience values and BigQuery default dataset access.
- Roles granted by default allow
policies—for example, a project creator
automatically being granted the Owner role (
roles/owner) on the project.
Users can be sent invitations to become owners, even if you have a custom organization policy that prevents the Owner role (
roles/owner) from being granted. However, while the custom organization policy doesn't prevent an invitation from being sent, it does prevent invited users from being granted the Owner role. If invited users try to accept the invitation, they'll encounter an error and won't be granted the Owner role.Some actions in Google Cloud, such as creating resources or enabling APIs, involve automatically granting a role to a service agent or default service account. If an action involves automatically granting a role and an organization policy prevents that role from being granted, then the entire operation might fail.
If you encounter this issue, you can use tags to temporarily disable the constraint that prevents the role grant. Then, perform the action. After the action finishes, re-enable the constraint.
Before you begin
-
If you want to test out custom organization policies that reference IAM resources, create a new project. Testing these organization policies in an existing project could disrupt security workflows.
-
In the Google Cloud console, go to the project selector page.
-
Select or create a Google Cloud project.
Roles required to select or create a project
- Select a project: Selecting a project doesn't require a specific IAM role—you can select any project that you've been granted a role on.
-
Create a project: To create a project, you need the Project Creator role
(
roles/resourcemanager.projectCreator), which contains theresourcemanager.projects.createpermission. Learn how to grant roles.
-
Required roles
To get the permissions that you need to manage organization policies, ask your administrator to grant you the following IAM roles:
-
Organization Policy Administrator (
roles/orgpolicy.policyAdmin) on the organization -
Test the organization policies described on this page:
Project IAM Admin (
roles/resourcemanager.projectIamAdmin) on the project
For more information about granting roles, see Manage access to projects, folders, and organizations.
These predefined roles contain the permissions required to manage organization policies. To see the exact permissions that are required, expand the Required permissions section:
Required permissions
The following permissions are required to manage organization policies:
-
orgpolicy.*on the organization -
Test the organization policies described on this page:
resourcemanager.projects.setIamPolicyon the project
You might also be able to get these permissions with custom roles or other predefined roles.
Set up a custom constraint
A custom constraint is defined in a YAML file by the resources, methods, conditions, and actions that are supported by the service on which you are enforcing the organization policy. Conditions for your custom constraints are defined using Common Expression Language (CEL). For more information about how to build conditions in custom constraints using CEL, see the CEL section of Creating and managing custom constraints.
Console
To create a custom constraint, do the following:
- In the Google Cloud console, go to the Organization policies page.
- From the project picker, select the project that you want to set the organization policy for.
- Click Custom constraint.
- In the Display name box, enter a human-readable name for the constraint. This name is used in error messages and can be used for identification and debugging. Don't use PII or sensitive data in display names because this name could be exposed in error messages. This field can contain up to 200 characters.
-
In the Constraint ID box, enter the name that you want for your new custom
constraint. A custom constraint can only contain letters (including upper and lowercase) or
numbers, for example
custom.disableGkeAutoUpgrade. This field can contain up to 70 characters, not counting the prefix (custom.), for example,organizations/123456789/customConstraints/custom. Don't include PII or sensitive data in your constraint ID, because it could be exposed in error messages. - In the Description box, enter a human-readable description of the constraint. This description is used as an error message when the policy is violated. Include details about why the policy violation occurred and how to resolve the policy violation. Don't include PII or sensitive data in your description, because it could be exposed in error messages. This field can contain up to 2000 characters.
-
In the Resource type box, select the name of the Google Cloud REST resource
containing the object and field that you want to restrict—for example,
container.googleapis.com/NodePool. Most resource types support up to 20 custom constraints. If you attempt to create more custom constraints, the operation fails. - Under Enforcement method, select whether to enforce the constraint on a REST CREATE method or on both CREATE and UPDATE methods. If you enforce the constraint with the UPDATE method on a resource that violates the constraint, changes to that resource are blocked by the organization policy unless the change resolves the violation.
- To define a condition, click Edit condition.
-
In the Add condition panel, create a CEL condition that refers to a supported
service resource, for example,
resource.management.autoUpgrade == false. This field can contain up to 1000 characters. For details about CEL usage, see Common Expression Language. For more information about the service resources you can use in your custom constraints, see Custom constraint supported services. - Click Save.
- Under Action, select whether to allow or deny the evaluated method if the condition is met.
- Click Create constraint.
Not all Google Cloud services support both methods. To see supported methods for each service, find the service in Supported services.
The deny action means that the operation to create or update the resource is blocked if the condition evaluates to true.
The allow action means that the operation to create or update the resource is permitted only if the condition evaluates to true. Every other case except ones explicitly listed in the condition is blocked.
When you have entered a value into each field, the equivalent YAML configuration for this custom constraint appears on the right.
gcloud
- To create a custom constraint, create a YAML file using the following format:
-
ORGANIZATION_ID: your organization ID, such as123456789. -
CONSTRAINT_NAME: the name that you want for your new custom constraint. A custom constraint can only contain letters (including upper and lowercase) or numbers, for example,custom.denyProjectIAMAdmin. This field can contain up to 70 characters. -
RESOURCE_NAME: the fully qualified name of the Google Cloud resource containing the object and field that you want to restrict. For example,iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy. -
CONDITION: a CEL condition that is written against a representation of a supported service resource. This field can contain up to 1000 characters. For example,.resource.bindings.exists(binding, RoleNameMatches(binding.role, ['roles/resourcemanager.projectIamAdmin'])) -
ACTION: the action to take if theconditionis met. Possible values areALLOWandDENY. -
DISPLAY_NAME: a human-friendly name for the constraint. This field can contain up to 200 characters. -
DESCRIPTION: a human-friendly description of the constraint to display as an error message when the policy is violated. This field can contain up to 2000 characters. -
After you have created the YAML file for a new custom constraint, you must set it up to make
it available for organization policies in your organization. To set up a custom constraint,
use the
gcloud org-policies set-custom-constraintcommand: -
To verify that the custom constraint exists, use the
gcloud org-policies list-custom-constraintscommand:
name: organizations/ORGANIZATION_ID/customConstraints/CONSTRAINT_NAME resourceTypes: - RESOURCE_NAME methodTypes: - CREATE
- UPDATE condition: "CONDITION" actionType: ACTION displayName: DISPLAY_NAME description: DESCRIPTION
Replace the following:
For more information about the resources available to write conditions against, see Supported resources.
The allow action means that if the condition evaluates to true, the operation to create or update the resource is permitted. This also means that every other case except the one explicitly listed in the condition is blocked.
The deny action means that if the condition evaluates to true, the operation to create or update the resource is blocked.
gcloud org-policies set-custom-constraint CONSTRAINT_PATH
Replace CONSTRAINT_PATH with the full path to your custom constraint
file. For example, /home/user/customconstraint.yaml.
After this operation is complete, your custom constraints are available as organization policies in your list of Google Cloud organization policies.
gcloud org-policies list-custom-constraints --organization=ORGANIZATION_ID
Replace ORGANIZATION_ID with the ID of your organization resource.
For more information, see Viewing organization policies.
Enforce a custom organization policy
You can enforce a constraint by creating an organization policy that references it, and then applying that organization policy to a Google Cloud resource.Console
- In the Google Cloud console, go to the Organization policies page.
- From the project picker, select the project that you want to set the organization policy for.
- From the list on the Organization policies page, select your constraint to view the Policy details page for that constraint.
- To configure the organization policy for this resource, click Manage policy.
- On the Edit policy page, select Override parent's policy.
- Click Add a rule.
- In the Enforcement section, select whether this organization policy is enforced or not.
- Optional: To make the organization policy conditional on a tag, click Add condition. Note that if you add a conditional rule to an organization policy, you must add at least one unconditional rule or the policy cannot be saved. For more information, see Setting an organization policy with tags.
- Click Test changes to simulate the effect of the organization policy. For more information, see Test organization policy changes with Policy Simulator.
- To enforce the organization policy in dry-run mode, click Set dry run policy. For more information, see Create an organization policy in dry-run mode.
- After you verify that the organization policy in dry-run mode works as intended, set the live policy by clicking Set policy.
gcloud
- To create an organization policy with boolean rules, create a policy YAML file that references the constraint:
-
PROJECT_ID: the project that you want to enforce your constraint on. -
CONSTRAINT_NAME: the name you defined for your custom constraint. For example,custom.denyProjectIAMAdmin. -
To enforce the organization policy in
dry-run mode, run
the following command with the
dryRunSpecflag: -
After you verify that the organization policy in dry-run mode works as intended, set the
live policy with the
org-policies set-policycommand and thespecflag:
name: projects/PROJECT_ID/policies/CONSTRAINT_NAME spec: rules: - enforce: true dryRunSpec: rules: - enforce: true
Replace the following:
gcloud org-policies set-policy POLICY_PATH \ --update-mask=dryRunSpec
Replace POLICY_PATH with the full path to your organization policy
YAML file. The policy requires up to 15 minutes to take effect.
gcloud org-policies set-policy POLICY_PATH \ --update-mask=spec
Replace POLICY_PATH with the full path to your organization policy
YAML file. The policy requires up to 15 minutes to take effect.
Test the custom organization policy
Optionally, you can test the organization policy by setting the policy and then trying to take an action that the policy should prevent.
Create the constraint
Save the following file as
constraint-deny-project-iam-admin.name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.denyProjectIAMAdmin resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy methodTypes: - CREATE - UPDATE condition: "resource.bindings.exists( binding, RoleNameMatches(binding.role, ['roles/resourcemanager.projectIamAdmin']) && binding.members.exists(member, MemberSubjectMatches(member, ['user:EMAIL_ADDRESS']) ) )" actionType: DENY displayName: Do not allow EMAIL_ADDRESS to be granted the Project IAM Admin role.Replace the following values:
ORG_ID: the numeric ID of your Google Cloud organization.MEMBER_EMAIL_ADDRESS: the email address of the principal that you want to use to test the custom constraint. While the constraint is active, this principal won't be able to be granted the Project IAM Admin role (roles/resourcemanager.projectIamAdmin) on the project that you enforce the constraint for.
Apply the constraint:
gcloud org-policies set-custom-constraint ~/constraint-deny-project-iam-admin.yamlVerify that the constraint exists:
gcloud org-policies list-custom-constraints --organization=ORGANIZATION_ID
Create the policy
Save the following file as
policy-deny-project-iam-admin.yaml:name: projects/PROJECT_ID/policies/custom.denyProjectIamAdmin spec: rules: - enforce: trueReplace
PROJECT_IDwith your project ID.Apply the policy:
gcloud org-policies set-policy ~/policy-deny-project-iam-admin.yamlVerify that the policy exists:
gcloud org-policies list --project=PROJECT_ID
After you apply the policy, wait for about two minutes for Google Cloud to start enforcing the policy.
Test the policy
Try to grant the Project IAM Admin role
(roles/resourcemanager.projectIamAdmin) to the principal whose email address
you included in the custom constraint. Before running the command, replace the
following values:
PROJECT_ID: The ID of the Google Cloud project where you enforced the constraintEMAIL_ADDRESS: The email address of the principal that you specified when you created the organization policy constraint.
gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID \ --member=user:EMAIL_ADDRESS --role=roles/resourcemanager.projectIamAdmin
The output is the following:
Operation denied by custom org policies: ["customConstraints/custom.denyProjectIAMAdmin": "EMAIL_ADDRESS can't be granted the Project IAM Admin role."]
Example custom organization policies for common use cases
The following table provides the syntax of some custom constraints for common use cases.
The following examples use the CEL macros all and exists. For more
information about these macros, see
Macros to evaluate lists.
| Description | Constraint syntax |
|---|---|
| Block the ability to grant a specific role. |
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.denyRole resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy methodTypes: - CREATE - UPDATE condition: "resource.bindings.exists( binding, RoleNameMatches(binding.role, ['ROLE']) )" actionType: DENY displayName: Do not allow the ROLE role to be granted |
| Only allow specific roles to be granted. |
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.specificRolesOnly resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy methodTypes: - CREATE - UPDATE condition: "resource.bindings.all( binding, RoleNameMatches(binding.role, ['ROLE_1', 'ROLE_2']) )" actionType: ALLOW displayName: Only allow the ROLE_1 role and ROLE_2 role to be granted |
Prevent any roles that start with roles/storage. from being
granted.
|
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.dontgrantStorageRoles resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy methodTypes: - CREATE - UPDATE condition: "resource.bindings.exists( binding, RoleNameStartsWith(binding.role, ['roles/storage.']) )" actionType: DENY displayName: Prevent roles that start with "roles/storage." from being granted |
Prevent any roles with admin in the name from being
revoked.
|
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.dontRevokeAdminRoles resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy methodTypes: - REMOVE_GRANT condition: "resource.bindings.exists( binding, RoleNameContains(binding.role, ['admin']) )" actionType: DENY displayName: Prevent roles with "admin" in their names from being revoked |
| Only allow specific principals to be granted roles. |
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.allowSpecificPrincipals resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy methodTypes: - CREATE - UPDATE condition: "resource.bindings.all( binding, binding.members.all(member, MemberSubjectMatches(member, ['user:USER','serviceAccount:SERVICE_ACCOUNT']) ) )" actionType: ALLOW displayName: Only allow roles to be granted to USER and SERVICE_ACCOUNT |
| Prevent any roles from being revoked from specific principals. |
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.denyRemovalOfSpecificPrincipals resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy methodTypes: - REMOVE_GRANT condition: "resource.bindings.exists( binding, binding.members.exists(member, MemberSubjectMatches(member, ['user:USER_1','user:USER_2']) ) )" actionType: DENY displayName: Do not allow roles to be revoked from USER_1 or USER_2 |
Prevent principals with email addresses ending in
@gmail.com from being granted roles.
|
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.dontGrantToGmail resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy methodTypes: - CREATE - UPDATE condition: "resource.bindings.exists( binding, binding.members.exists(member, MemberSubjectEndsWith(member, ['@gmail.com']) ) )" actionType: DENY displayName: Do not allow members whose email addresses end with "@gmail.com" to be granted roles |
| Only allow specific roles to be granted, and only to specific principals. |
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.allowSpecificRolesAndPrincipals resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy methodTypes: - CREATE - UPDATE condition: "resource.bindings.all( binding, RoleNameMatches(binding.role, ['ROLE_1', 'ROLE_2']) && binding.members.all(member, MemberSubjectMatches(member, ['serviceAccount:SERVICE_ACCOUNT', 'group:GROUP']) ) )" actionType: ALLOW displayName: Only allow ROLE_1 and ROLE_2 to be granted to SERVICE_ACCOUNT and GROUP |
Prevent Cloud Storage roles from being granted to
allUsers and allAuthenticatedUsers.
|
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.denyStorageRolesForPrincipalAllUsers resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy methodTypes: - CREATE - UPDATE condition: "resource.bindings.exists( binding, RoleNameStartsWith(binding.role, ['roles/storage.']) && binding.members.exists(member, MemberSubjectMatches(member, ['allUsers', 'allAuthenticatedUsers']) ) )" actionType: DENY displayName: Do not allow storage roles to be granted to allUsers or allAuthenticatedUsers |
| Prevent any identities outside of your organization from being granted roles. |
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.allowInternaldentitiesOnly resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy methodTypes: - CREATE - UPDATE condition: "resource.bindings.all( binding, binding.members.all(member, MemberInPrincipalSet(member, ['//cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com/organizations/ORG_ID']) ) )" actionType: ALLOW displayName: Only allow organization members to be granted roles |
| Only allow service accounts to be granted roles. |
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.allowServiceAccountsOnly resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy methodTypes: - CREATE - UPDATE condition: "resource.bindings.all( binding, binding.members.all(member, MemberTypeMatches(member, ['iam.googleapis.com/ServiceAccount']) ) )" actionType: ALLOW displayName: Only allow service accounts to be granted roles |
| Prevent removal of Google-managed service agents from role bindings. |
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.denyRemovalOfGoogleManagedServiceAgents resource_types: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy method_types: - REMOVE_GRANT condition: |- resource.bindings.all( binding, binding.members.all(member, MemberTypeMatches(member, ['iam.googleapis.com/ServiceAgent']) ) ) action_type: DENY display_name: Deny Removal Of Google-Managed Service Agents description: Restricts the removal of Google-managed service agents from role bindings. Please reach out to your organization admins for if you have any questions. |
Conditional organization policies
You can make a custom organization policy conditional using
tags.
For example, imagine that you wrote the following custom constraint to prevent
any roles that start with roles/storage. from being granted:
name: organizations/ORG_ID/customConstraints/custom.dontgrantStorageRoles
resourceTypes: iam.googleapis.com/AllowPolicy
methodTypes:
- CREATE
- UPDATE
condition:
"resource.bindings.exists(
binding,
RoleNameStartsWith(binding.role, ['roles/storage.'])
)"
actionType: DENY
displayName: Prevent roles that start with "roles/storage." from being granted
To enforce the constraint conditionally, you could create an organization policy like the following:
name: organizations/ORG_ID/policies/custom.dontgrantStorageRoles
spec:
rules:
- condition:
expression: "resource.matchTag('ORG_ID/environment', 'dev')"
enforce: true
- enforce: false
This organization policy prevents roles that start with roles/storage. from
being granted on any resource that also has the tag environment=dev.
Identity and Access Management supported resources
IAM supports the AllowPolicy resource. This resource has
the attribute resources.bindings attribute, which is returned for all methods
that modify a resource's allow policy. All of the methods that modify a
resource's allow policy end with setIamPolicy.
The resource.bindings attribute has the following structure, where
BINDINGS is an array of role bindings that were modified
during a change to an allow policy:
{
"bindings": {
BINDINGS
}
}
Each binding in resource.bindings has the following structure, where
ROLE is the name of the role in the role binding and
MEMBERS is a list of identifiers for all principals that
were added to or removed from the role binding:
{
"role": "ROLE"
"members": {
MEMBERS
}
}
To see the formats that principal identifiers can have, see Principal identifiers.
You can only evaluate the resource.bindings attribute and its fields using the
supported functions. Other operators and
functions—like ==, !=, in, contains, startsWith, and
endsWith—are not supported.
Supported functions
You can use the following CEL functions to evaluate individual roles and members in a binding.
To evaluate all bindings in the bindings array or all members in the members
array, use the all and exists macros. For more information, see Macros
to evaluate lists on this page.
You can also use the logical operators && (and) and || (or) to write
multipart conditions.
| Function | Description |
|---|---|
RoleNameMatches(
bool
|
Returns
|
RoleNameStartsWith(
bool
|
Returns
|
RoleNameEndsWith(
bool
|
Returns
|
RoleNameContains(
bool
|
Returns
|
MemberSubjectMatches(
bool
|
Returns
If the identifier for
|
MemberSubjectStartsWith(
bool
|
Returns
If the identifier for
|
MemberSubjectEndsWith(
bool
|
Returns
If the identifier for
|
MemberInPrincipalSet(
bool
|
Returns
|
MemberTypeMatches(
bool
|
Returns
|
Macros to evaluate lists
Use the all and exists macros to evaluate a condition expression for a
list of items.
| Macro | Description |
|---|---|
list.all(
bool
|
Returns
This macro is typically used for custom organization policies with
the
|
list.exists(
bool
|
Returns
This macro is typically used for custom organization policies with the
|
Conditions with nested lists
In general, if your condition includes nested lists, you should use the same macro for all lists in the condition.
Consider the following examples:
- If your policy has the
actionTypeALLOW, then use theallmacro for both thememberslist and thebindingslist to ensure that policy modifications are only allowed if all members in all modified bindings satisfy the condition. - If your policy has the
actionTypeDENY, then use theexistsmacro for both thememberslist and thebindingslist to ensure that policy modifications aren't allowed if any member in any modified binding satisfies the condition.
Mixing macros in a single condition might result in a condition that doesn't behave how you intended.
For example, imagine that you want to prevent roles from being granted to
members outside of the example.com organization. The example.com
organization has the ID 123456789012.
To accomplish this goal, you write the following condition:
Not recommended — misconfigured condition
"resource.bindings.all(
binding,
binding.members.exists(member,
MemberInPrincipalSet(member, ['//cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com/organizations/123456789012'])
)
)"
This condition appears to prevent roles from being granted to members outside of
the example.com organization. However, the condition evaluates to true if
any member in each of the modified role bindings is in the example.com
organization. As a result, you can still grant roles to members outside of the
example.com organization if you also grant the same role to a member in the
example.com organization.
For example, the condition evaluates to true for the following set of
bindings, even though one of the members isn't in the example.com
organization:
"bindings": [ { "members": [ "user:raha@altostrat.com", "user:jie@example.com" ], "role": "roles/resourcemanager.projectCreator" } ],
Instead, you should write a condition like the following:
Recommended — correctly configured condition
"resource.bindings.all(
binding,
binding.members.all(member,
MemberInPrincipalSet(member, ['//cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com/organizations/123456789012'])
)
)"
Using the all macro for both the members.bindings array and the
resource.bindings array ensures that the condition evaluates to true only
if all members in all bindings are in the example.com principal set.
Supported principal types for MemberTypeMatches
The MemberTypeMatches function requires you to specify which principal type
the specified member must match.
The following table lists the principal types that you can enter and a description of what the principal type represents. It also lists the principal identifiers that correspond with each principal type. These identifiers are the values that are used in IAM policies.
| Principal type | Description | Principal identifiers |
|---|---|---|
iam.googleapis.com/ |
A consumer
Google Account. The email addresses for these accounts typically end
in gmail.com.
|
user:USER_EMAIL_ADDRESS |
iam.googleapis.com/ |
A Google Account that is part of a Cloud Identity or Google Workspace account. These accounts are also called managed user accounts. | user:USER_EMAIL_ADDRESS |
iam.googleapis.com/ |
A
Google group created by a consumer Google Account. These groups aren't
owned by a Cloud Identity or Google Workspace account. The email
addresses for these groups typically end in googlegroups.com.
|
group:GROUP_EMAIL_ADDRESS |
iam.googleapis.com/ |
A Google group that's owned by a Cloud Identity or Google Workspace account. | group:GROUP_EMAIL_ADDRESS |
iam.googleapis.com/ |
A Cloud Identity or Google Workspace account. | domain:DOMAIN |
iam.googleapis.com/ |
A single principal in a workforce identity pool. | principal://iam.googleapis.com/ |
iam.googleapis.com/ |
A principal set that contains a set of identities in a workforce identity pool. For example, a principal set containing all principals in a workforce identity pool. |
|
iam.googleapis.com/ |
A single identity in a workload identity pool | principal://iam.googleapis.com/projects/ |
iam.googleapis.com/ |
A principal set that contains a set of identities in a workload identity pool. For example, a principal set containing all principals in a workload identity pool. |
|
iam.googleapis.com/ |
Any service account. A service account is a special type of account that represents a workload rather than a human user.
In the context of the |
serviceAccount:SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL_ADDRESS |
iam.googleapis.com/ |
Any service agent. A service agent is a special type of service account that Google Cloud creates and manages. When granted roles in your projects, service agents let Google Cloud services can perform actions on your behalf. | serviceAccount:SERVICE_AGENT_EMAIL_ADDRESS |
iam.googleapis.com/ |
The principals allUsers and
allAuthenticatedUsers.
|
|
iam.googleapis.com/ |
Principals that are defined based on the role granted to them. These principals are also called convenience values. |
|
iam.googleapis.com/ |
A resource with a built-in identity. | Any of the principal identifiers listed in Principal identifiers for single resources. |
iam.googleapis.com/ |
Resources with built-in identities that share certain characteristics, such as type or ancestor. | Any of the identifiers listed in Principal identifiers for sets of resources. |
What's next
- Learn more about Organization Policy Service.
- Learn more about how to create and manage organization policies.
- See the full list of managed organization policy constraints.