Terraform
Policy Enforcement
Policies are rules that Terraform Cloud enforces on Terraform runs. You can use policies to validate that the Terraform plan complies with security rules and best practices.
Hands-on: Try the Enforce Policy with Sentinel and Detect Infrastructure Drift and Enforce OPA Policies tutorials.
Define Policies
You can use two policy-as-code frameworks to define fine-grained, logic-based policies: Sentinel and Open Policy Agent (OPA). Depending on the settings, policies can act as advisory warnings or firm requirements that prevent Terraform from provisioning infrastructure.
- Sentinel: You define policies with the Sentinel policy language and use imports to parse the Terraform plan, state, and configuration. Refer to Defining Sentinel Policies for details.
- OPA: You define policies with the Rego policy language. Refer to Defining OPA Policies for details.
Apply Policy Sets to Workspaces and Projects
Policy sets are collections of policies you can apply globally or to specific projects and workspaces in your organization. For each run in the selected workspaces, Terraform Cloud checks the Terraform plan against the policy set.
You can create policy sets using the Terraform Cloud user interface, the Terraform Cloud API, or by connecting Terraform Cloud to your version control system. A policy set can only contain policies written in a single policy framework (Sentinel or OPA). However, you can add Sentinel or OPA policy sets to the same workspace.
Refer to Managing Policy Sets for details.
Review Policy Results
The Terraform Cloud UI displays policy results for each policy set you apply to the workspace. Depending on their enforcement level, failed policies can stop the run. You can override failed policies with the right permissions.
Refer to Policy Results for details.