Using Firewall Manager managed lists
This section explains what managed lists are and how to use them.
Managed application and protocol lists streamline your configuration and management of Amazon Firewall Manager content audit security group policies. You use managed lists to define the protocols and applications that your policy allows and disallows. For information about content audit security group policies, see Using content audit security group policies with Firewall Manager.
You can use the following types of managed lists in a content audit security group policy:
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Firewall Manager application lists and protocol lists – Firewall Manager manages these lists.
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The application lists include
FMS-Default-Public-Access-Apps-Allowed
andFMS-Default-Public-Access-Apps-Denied
, which describe commonly used applications that should be allowed or denied to the general public. -
The protocol lists include
FMS-Default-Protocols-Allowed
, a list of commonly used protocols that should be allowed to the general public. You can use any list that Firewall Manager manages, but you can't edit or delete it.
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Custom application lists and protocol lists – You manage these lists. You can create lists of either type with the settings that you need. You have full control over your own custom managed lists, and you can create, edit, and delete them as needed.
Note
Currently, Firewall Manager doesn't check references to a custom managed list when you delete it. This means that you can delete a custom managed application list or protocol list even when it is in use by an active policy. This can cause the policy to stop functioning. Delete an application list or protocol list only after you have verified that it isn't referenced by any active polices.
Managed lists are Amazon resources. You can tag a custom managed list. You can't tag a Firewall Manager managed list.
Managed list versioning
Custom managed lists don't have versions. When you edit a custom list, policies that reference the list automatically use the updated list.
Firewall Manager managed lists are versioned. The Firewall Manager service team publishes new versions as needed, in order to apply the best security practices to the lists.
When you use a Firewall Manager managed list in a policy, you choose your versioning strategy as follows:
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Latest available version – If you don't specify an explicit version setting for the list, then your policy automatically uses the latest version. This is the only option available through the console.
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Explicit version – If you specify a version for the list, then your policy uses that version. Your policy remains locked to the version that you specified until you modify the version setting. To specify the version, you must define the policy outside of the console, for example through the CLI or one of the SDKs.
For more information about choosing the version setting for a list, see Using managed lists in your content audit security group policies.
Using managed lists in your content audit security group policies
When you create a content audit security group policy, you can choose to use managed audit policy rules. Some of the settings for this option require a managed application list or protocol list. Examples of these settings include protocols that are allowed in security group rules and applications can access the internet.
The following restrictions apply for each policy setting that uses a managed list:
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You can specify at most one Firewall Manager managed list for any setting. By default, you can specify at most one custom list. The custom list limit is a soft quota, so you can request an increase to it. For more information, see Amazon Firewall Manager quotas.
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In the console, if you select a Firewall Manager managed list, you can't specify the version. The policy will always use the latest version of the list. To specify the version, you must define the policy outside of the console, for example through the CLI or one of the SDKs. For information about versioning for Firewall Manager managed lists, see Managed list versioning.
For information about creating a content audit security group policy through the console, see Creating a content audit security group policy.