Config File
The tfsec config file can override various tfsec configurations.
The tfsec config file is a file in the .tfsec
folder in the root check path named config.json
or config.yml
and is automatically loaded if it exists.
The config file can also be set with the --config-file
option:
tfsec --config-file tfsec.yml
Config files can be downloaded from remote locations using the --config-file-url
. This must be a HTTP location to a file with either a json
or yaml
extension
tfsec --config-file-url https://github.com/myorg/tfsecconfig/config.json .
Minimum Severity
You can specify the minimum severity of result that should be reported. By default, every severity is reported. You must use one of CRITICAL, HIGH, MEDIUM, LOW.
{
"minimum_severity": "MEDIUM"
}
or in yaml
---
minimum_severity: MEDIUM
Syntax and Overrides
Severity Overrides
There are occasions where the default severity level for one of the built in checks is too severe or in some cases not strong enough.
The config file can be used to specify overrides for any check identifier to replace the result output.
{
"severity_overrides": {
"CUS002": "ERROR",
"aws-s3-enable-versioning": "LOW"
}
}
or in yaml
---
severity_overrides:
CUS002: ERROR
aws-s3-enable-versioning: HIGH
Including checks
In some situations you may want to only scan for a subset of the checks - this may be the case if newly added checks need to be evaluated before adding to the CI. We have removed the option to pass the included checks on the command line but they can be added in the config file.
{
"include": ["CUS002", "aws-s3-enable-versioning"]
}
or in yaml
---
include:
- CUS002
- aws-s3-enable-versioning
Excluding checks
There are moments where the list of checks you'd want to exclude becomes larger and larger.
Rather than passing all the excluded checks via the command line, you can use the configuration
entry exclude
to list them all out.
{
"exclude": ["CUS002", "aws-s3-enable-versioning"]
}
or in yaml
---
exclude:
- CUS002
- aws-s3-enable-versioning
Minimum required version
For your CI you might want to pull a config file into all of your build processes with a centrally managed config file. If this is the case, you might also want to require a minimum tfsec version to be used.
This can be achieved in the config file using the min_required_version
setting.
{
"min_required_version": "v1.1.2"
}
or in yaml
```yaml
---
min_required_version: v1.1.2