name: implementing-aws-config-rules-for-compliance description: 'Implementing AWS Config rules for continuous compliance monitoring of AWS resources, deploying managed and custom rules aligned to CIS and PCI DSS frameworks, configuring automatic remediation with SSM Automation, and aggregating compliance data across accounts.
' domain: cybersecurity tags:
- cloud-security
- aws
- config-rules
- compliance
- automation
- remediation subdomain: cloud-security version: '1.0' author: mahipal license: Apache-2.0 nist_csf:
- PR.IR-01
- ID.AM-08
- GV.SC-06
- DE.CM-01
Implementing AWS Config Rules for Compliance
When to Use
- When establishing continuous compliance monitoring for AWS resources against regulatory standards
- When implementing automated detection and remediation of configuration drift
- When building a compliance dashboard across multiple AWS accounts using AWS Organizations
- When audit teams require evidence of continuous compliance rather than point-in-time assessments
- When deploying guardrails that detect non-compliant resources within minutes of creation
Do not use for real-time threat detection (use GuardDuty), for application vulnerability scanning (use Inspector), or for one-time compliance assessments (use Prowler for faster ad-hoc audits).
Prerequisites
- AWS Config recording enabled in all target accounts and regions
- IAM role with
config:*,ssm:*, andlambda:*permissions for rule management - AWS Organizations with delegated administrator for Config aggregation
- S3 bucket for Config delivery channel and SNS topic for notifications
- CloudFormation StackSets or Terraform for multi-account rule deployment
Workflow
- Inventory cloud assets — enumerate services, roles, and configurations in scope
- Assess configurations — check against security best practices and CIS benchmarks
- Test access controls — verify IAM policies, network ACLs, and security group rules
- Validate logging — ensure audit trails are enabled and properly retained
- Document and remediate — report findings with specific configuration changes needed
Step 1: Enable AWS Config Recording
Set up the Config recorder and delivery channel in each target account.
# Create S3 bucket for Config data
aws s3api create-bucket \
--bucket config-compliance-data-ACCOUNT_ID \
--region us-east-1
# Create Config service role
aws iam create-service-linked-role --aws-service-name config.amazonaws.com
# Start the Config recorder
aws configservice put-configuration-recorder \
--configuration-recorder name=default,roleARN=arn:aws:iam::ACCOUNT:role/aws-service-role/config.amazonaws.com/AWSServiceRoleForConfig \
--recording-group allSupported=true,includeGlobalResourceTypes=true
# Set up delivery channel
aws configservice put-delivery-channel \
--delivery-channel '{
"name": "default",
"s3BucketName": "config-compliance-data-ACCOUNT_ID",
"snsTopicARN": "arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:ACCOUNT:config-notifications",
"configSnapshotDeliveryProperties": {"deliveryFrequency": "TwentyFour_Hours"}
}'
# Start recording
aws configservice start-configuration-recorder --configuration-recorder-name default
Step 2: Deploy Managed Config Rules for CIS Compliance
Enable AWS-managed Config rules that map to CIS AWS Foundations Benchmark controls.
# S3 bucket security rules
aws configservice put-config-rule --config-rule '{
"ConfigRuleName": "s3-bucket-public-read-prohibited",
"Source": {"Owner": "AWS", "SourceIdentifier": "S3_BUCKET_PUBLIC_READ_PROHIBITED"}
}'
aws configservice put-config-rule --config-rule '{
"ConfigRuleName": "s3-bucket-server-side-encryption-enabled",
"Source": {"Owner": "AWS", "SourceIdentifier": "S3_BUCKET_SERVER_SIDE_ENCRYPTION_ENABLED"}
}'
aws configservice put-config-rule --config-rule '{
"ConfigRuleName": "s3-bucket-ssl-requests-only",
"Source": {"Owner": "AWS", "SourceIdentifier": "S3_BUCKET_SSL_REQUESTS_ONLY"}
}'
# IAM security rules
aws configservice put-config-rule --config-rule '{
"ConfigRuleName": "iam-root-access-key-check",
"Source": {"Owner": "AWS", "SourceIdentifier": "IAM_ROOT_ACCESS_KEY_CHECK"}
}'
aws configservice put-config-rule --config-rule '{
"ConfigRuleName": "mfa-enabled-for-iam-console-access",
"Source": {"Owner": "AWS", "SourceIdentifier": "MFA_ENABLED_FOR_IAM_CONSOLE_ACCESS"}
}'
aws configservice put-config-rule --config-rule '{
"ConfigRuleName": "iam-password-policy",
"Source": {"Owner": "AWS", "SourceIdentifier": "IAM_PASSWORD_POLICY"},
"InputParameters": "{\"RequireUppercaseCharacters\":\"true\",\"RequireLowercaseCharacters\":\"true\",\"RequireSymbols\":\"true\",\"RequireNumbers\":\"true\",\"MinimumPasswordLength\":\"14\"}"
}'
# Network security rules
aws configservice put-config-rule --config-rule '{
"ConfigRuleName": "restricted-ssh",
"Source": {"Owner": "AWS", "SourceIdentifier": "INCOMING_SSH_DISABLED"}
}'
aws configservice put-config-rule --config-rule '{
"ConfigRuleName": "vpc-flow-logs-enabled",
"Source": {"Owner": "AWS", "SourceIdentifier": "VPC_FLOW_LOGS_ENABLED"}
}'
# Encryption rules
aws configservice put-config-rule --config-rule '{
"ConfigRuleName": "rds-storage-encrypted",
"Source": {"Owner": "AWS", "SourceIdentifier": "RDS_STORAGE_ENCRYPTED"}
}'
aws configservice put-config-rule --config-rule '{
"ConfigRuleName": "encrypted-volumes",
"Source": {"Owner": "AWS", "SourceIdentifier": "ENCRYPTED_VOLUMES"}
}'
Step 3: Create Custom Config Rules with Lambda
Build custom rules for organization-specific compliance requirements.
# custom_config_rule.py - Ensure EC2 instances have required tags
import json
import boto3
config = boto3.client('config')
REQUIRED_TAGS = ['Environment', 'Owner', 'CostCenter', 'Project']
def lambda_handler(event, context):
invoking_event = json.loads(event['invokingEvent'])
configuration_item = invoking_event.get('configurationItem', {})
if configuration_item['resourceType'] != 'AWS::EC2::Instance':
return
tags = {t['key']: t['value'] for t in configuration_item.get('tags', [])}
missing_tags = [tag for tag in REQUIRED_TAGS if tag not in tags]
if missing_tags:
compliance = 'NON_COMPLIANT'
annotation = f"Missing required tags: {', '.join(missing_tags)}"
else:
compliance = 'COMPLIANT'
annotation = 'All required tags present'
config.put_evaluations(
Evaluations=[{
'ComplianceResourceType': configuration_item['resourceType'],
'ComplianceResourceId': configuration_item['resourceId'],
'ComplianceType': compliance,
'Annotation': annotation,
'OrderingTimestamp': configuration_item['configurationItemCaptureTime']
}],
ResultToken=event['resultToken']
)
# Deploy the custom rule
aws configservice put-config-rule --config-rule '{
"ConfigRuleName": "ec2-required-tags",
"Source": {
"Owner": "CUSTOM_LAMBDA",
"SourceIdentifier": "arn:aws:lambda:us-east-1:ACCOUNT:function:config-required-tags",
"SourceDetails": [{
"EventSource": "aws.config",
"MessageType": "ConfigurationItemChangeNotification"
}]
},
"Scope": {"ComplianceResourceTypes": ["AWS::EC2::Instance"]}
}'
Step 4: Configure Automatic Remediation
Set up SSM Automation documents for automatic remediation of non-compliant resources.
# Auto-remediate public S3 buckets
aws configservice put-remediation-configurations --remediation-configurations '[{
"ConfigRuleName": "s3-bucket-public-read-prohibited",
"TargetType": "SSM_DOCUMENT",
"TargetId": "AWS-DisableS3BucketPublicReadWrite",
"Parameters": {
"S3BucketName": {"ResourceValue": {"Value": "RESOURCE_ID"}},
"AutomationAssumeRole": {"StaticValue": {"Values": ["arn:aws:iam::ACCOUNT:role/ConfigRemediationRole"]}}
},
"Automatic": true,
"MaximumAutomaticAttempts": 3,
"RetryAttemptSeconds": 60
}]'
# Auto-remediate unencrypted EBS volumes
aws configservice put-remediation-configurations --remediation-configurations '[{
"ConfigRuleName": "encrypted-volumes",
"TargetType": "SSM_DOCUMENT",
"TargetId": "AWS-EnableEBSEncryptionByDefault",
"Parameters": {
"AutomationAssumeRole": {"StaticValue": {"Values": ["arn:aws:iam::ACCOUNT:role/ConfigRemediationRole"]}}
},
"Automatic": true,
"MaximumAutomaticAttempts": 1,
"RetryAttemptSeconds": 300
}]'
# Auto-remediate security groups allowing SSH from 0.0.0.0/0
aws configservice put-remediation-configurations --remediation-configurations '[{
"ConfigRuleName": "restricted-ssh",
"TargetType": "SSM_DOCUMENT",
"TargetId": "AWS-DisablePublicAccessForSecurityGroup",
"Parameters": {
"GroupId": {"ResourceValue": {"Value": "RESOURCE_ID"}},
"AutomationAssumeRole": {"StaticValue": {"Values": ["arn:aws:iam::ACCOUNT:role/ConfigRemediationRole"]}}
},
"Automatic": true,
"MaximumAutomaticAttempts": 3,
"RetryAttemptSeconds": 60
}]'
Step 5: Set Up Multi-Account Aggregation
Aggregate compliance data from all organization accounts into a central view.
# Create a Config aggregator for the organization
aws configservice put-configuration-aggregator \
--configuration-aggregator-name org-compliance-aggregator \
--organization-aggregation-source '{
"RoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::ACCOUNT:role/ConfigAggregatorRole",
"AllAwsRegions": true
}'
# Query aggregate compliance across all accounts
aws configservice get-aggregate-compliance-details-by-config-rule \
--configuration-aggregator-name org-compliance-aggregator \
--config-rule-name s3-bucket-public-read-prohibited \
--compliance-type NON_COMPLIANT \
--query 'AggregateEvaluationResults[*].[AccountId,AwsRegion,EvaluationResultIdentifier.EvaluationResultQualifier.ResourceId,ComplianceType]' \
--output table
# Get compliance summary by account
aws configservice get-aggregate-compliance-summary-by-source \
--configuration-aggregator-name org-compliance-aggregator \
--query 'AggregateComplianceCounts[*].[GroupName,ComplianceSummary.CompliantResourceCount.CappedCount,ComplianceSummary.NonCompliantResourceCount.CappedCount]' \
--output table
Key Concepts
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| AWS Config Rule | A compliance check that evaluates whether AWS resource configurations meet specified requirements, either continuously or on a schedule |
| Managed Rule | AWS-provided pre-built Config rule with standardized logic for common compliance checks like encryption and public access |
| Custom Rule | Organization-specific Config rule backed by a Lambda function that evaluates custom compliance logic |
| Remediation Action | SSM Automation document or Lambda function triggered to automatically fix non-compliant resources |
| Configuration Aggregator | AWS Config feature that collects compliance data from multiple accounts and regions into a centralized view |
| Conformance Pack | Collection of Config rules and remediation actions packaged as a deployable unit for specific compliance frameworks |
Tools & Systems
- AWS Config: Continuous configuration recording and compliance evaluation service for AWS resources
- SSM Automation: AWS Systems Manager documents for executing automated remediation actions on non-compliant resources
- Config Conformance Packs: Pre-built rule collections for CIS, PCI DSS, NIST 800-53, and HIPAA compliance
- CloudFormation StackSets: Multi-account deployment mechanism for Config rules across AWS Organizations
- Config Aggregator: Cross-account and cross-region compliance data consolidation
Common Scenarios
Scenario 1: Standard Implementing Aws Config Rules For Compliance assessment Follow the workflow from initial scoping through execution and validation, documenting each step and its outcome.
Scenario 2: Emergency Implementing Aws Config Rules For Compliance response Prioritize speed while maintaining accuracy — use pre-configured tools and templates to reduce setup time, but do not skip verification steps.
Scenario: Deploying CIS Compliance Monitoring Across 30 AWS Accounts
Context: A financial services company needs to demonstrate continuous CIS AWS Foundations Benchmark compliance across all 30 production accounts for their annual SOC 2 audit.
Approach:
- Enable AWS Config recording in all accounts via CloudFormation StackSets
- Deploy the CIS conformance pack to all accounts using StackSets
- Set up a Config aggregator in the security account for organization-wide visibility
- Configure auto-remediation for safe-to-fix rules (public S3, unencrypted volumes)
- Create EventBridge rules to alert on new NON_COMPLIANT evaluations
- Build a weekly compliance report aggregating scores across all accounts
- Store Config snapshots in S3 with lifecycle policies for audit retention
Pitfalls: Config recording incurs costs per configuration item recorded. In accounts with many resources, costs can be significant. Use targeted recording groups to focus on compliance-relevant resource types rather than recording all resources. Auto-remediation of network rules (security groups) can disrupt applications if the rule was intentionally permissive.
When NOT to Use
- You need to test the implementation (use performing-* skills)
- Task is about configuring existing tools (use configuring-* skills)
- You need to analyze security events (use analyzing-* skills)
- Task is about building detection rules (use building-* skills)
- You don't have access to the target environment
- Task requires vendor-specific expertise (consult vendor docs)
Red Flags
- Performing actions without explicit written authorization from the asset owner
- Testing against production systems without a defined scope and rules of engagement
- Modifying cloud IAM policies or security groups without approval
- Exposing cloud credentials or secrets in logs or reports
- Running scans that generate excessive API calls and trigger billing alerts
Verification
- All steps executed successfully against a test environment before production use
- Output documented with screenshots or logs demonstrating expected behavior
- Cloud resource changes reverted or documented as intentional
- IAM policies reviewed for least-privilege compliance after testing
- No residual test resources left running (cost and security check)
Output Format
AWS Config Compliance Report
===============================
Organization: Acme Financial (30 accounts)
Framework: CIS AWS Foundations 1.4
Report Date: 2026-02-23
Config Rules Active: 48
COMPLIANCE SUMMARY:
Overall Compliance: 87%
Compliant Resources: 4,234
Non-Compliant Resources: 612
Not Applicable: 189
TOP NON-COMPLIANT RULES:
encrypted-volumes: 89 resources (14 accounts)
vpc-flow-logs-enabled: 67 resources (12 accounts)
mfa-enabled-for-iam-console: 45 resources (8 accounts)
s3-bucket-ssl-requests-only: 34 resources (6 accounts)
restricted-ssh: 28 resources (5 accounts)
AUTO-REMEDIATION (Last 30 Days):
Public S3 buckets remediated: 12
Security groups restricted: 8
EBS default encryption enabled: 6
Total auto-remediated: 26
Failed remediation attempts: 3
ACCOUNT COMPLIANCE RANKING:
1. prod-core (account-001): 96% compliant
2. prod-data (account-002): 94% compliant
...
30. dev-sandbox (account-030): 68% compliant
Overview
Section content — see SKILL.md body for full details.
Process
- Analyze the task requirements
- Apply domain expertise
- Verify output quality