oci identity policy
Overview
A document that specifies the type of access a group has to the resources in a compartment. For information about policies and other IAM Service components, see Overview of the IAM Service. If you’re new to policies, see Getting Started with Policies.
The word “policy” is used by people in different ways:
- An individual statement written in the policy language
- A collection of statements in a single, named “policy” document (which has an Oracle Cloud ID (OCID) assigned to it)
- The overall body of policies your organization uses to control access to resources
To use any of the API operations, you must be authorized in an IAM policy. If you’re not authorized, talk to an administrator.
Warning: Oracle recommends that you avoid using any confidential information when you supply string values using the API.
Here is an example on how to use this:
oci_identity_policy { 'tenant (root)/my_policy}':
ensure => 'present',
description => 'My own policy',
statements => ['Allow group Administrators to manage all-resources in compartment my_compartment'],
}
This documentation is generated from the Ruby OCI SDK.
Attributes
| Attribute Name | Short Description |
|---|---|
| absent_states | The OCI states, puppet will detect as the resource being absent. |
| compartment | The Puppet® name of the resource identified by compartment_id. |
| compartment_id | The OCID of the compartment that contains the object. |
| defined_tags | Defined tags for this resource. |
| description | The description you assign to the policy during creation. |
| disable_corrective_change | Disable the modification of a resource when Puppet® decides it is a corrective change. |
| disable_corrective_ensure | Disable the creation or removal of a resource when Puppet® decides is a corrective change. |
| ensure | The basic property that the resource should be in. |
| freeform_tags | Free-form tags for this resource. |
| id | The OCID of the resource. |
| inactive_status | The detailed status of INACTIVE lifecycleState. |
| lifecycle_state | The policy’s current state. |
| name | The full name of the object. |
| oci_timeout | The maximum time to wait for the OCI resource to be in the ready state. |
| oci_wait_interval | The interval beween calls to OCI to check if a resource is in the ready state. |
| policy_name | The name of the policy. |
| present_states | The OCI states, puppet will detect as the resource being present. |
| provider | resource. |
| statements | An array of policy statements written in the policy language. |
| synchronized | Specifies if Puppet® waits for OCI actions to be ready before moving on to an other resource. |
| tenant | The tenant for this resource. |
| time_created | Date and time the policy was created, in the format defined by RFC3339. |
| version_date | The version of the policy. |
absent_states
The OCI states, puppet will detect as the resource being absent.
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compartment
The Puppet® name of the resource identified by compartment_id.
See the documentation of compartment_id for all details.
This documentation is generated from the Ruby OCI SDK.
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compartment_id
The OCID of the compartment that contains the object.
Rather use the property compartment instead of a direct OCID reference.
This documentation is generated from the Ruby OCI SDK.
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defined_tags
Defined tags for this resource. Each key is predefined and scoped to a namespace. For more information, see Resource Tags. Example: {"Operations": {"CostCenter": "42"}}
This documentation is generated from the Ruby OCI SDK.
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description
The description you assign to the policy during creation. Does not have to be unique, and it’s changeable.
This documentation is generated from the Ruby OCI SDK.
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disable_corrective_change
Disable the modification of a resource when Puppet® decides it is a corrective change.
(requires easy_type V2.11.0 or higher)
When using a Puppet® Server, Puppet® knows about adaptive and corrective changes. A corrective change is when Puppet® notices that the resource has changed, but the catalog has not changed. This can occur for example, when a user, by accident or willingly, changed something on the system that Puppet® is managing. The normal Puppet® process then repairs this and puts the resource back in the state as defined in the catalog. This process is precisely what you want most of the time, but not always. This can sometimes also occur when a hardware or network error occurs. Then Puppet® cannot correctly determine the current state of the system and thinks the resource is changed, while in fact, it is not. Letting Puppet recreate remove or change the resource in these cases, is NOT wat you want.
Using the disable_corrective_change parameter, you can disable corrective changes on the current resource.
Here is an example of this:
crucial_resource {'be_carefull':
...
disable_corrective_change => true,
...
}
When a corrective ensure does happen on the resource Puppet® will not modify the resource and signal an error:
Error: Corrective change present requested by catalog, but disabled by parameter disable_corrective_change
Error: /Stage[main]/Main/Crucial_resource[be_carefull]/parameter: change from '10' to '20' failed: Corrective change present requested by catalog, but disabled by parameter disable_corrective_change. (corrective)
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disable_corrective_ensure
Disable the creation or removal of a resource when Puppet® decides is a corrective change.
(requires easy_type V2.11.0 or higher)
When using a Puppet® Server, Puppet® knows about adaptive and corrective changes. A corrective change is when Puppet® notices that the resource has changed, but the catalog has not changed. This can occur for example, when a user, by accident or willingly, changed something on the system that Puppet® is managing. The normal Puppet® process then repairs this and puts the resource back in the state as defined in the catalog. This process is precisely what you want most of the time, but not always. This can sometimes also occur when a hardware or network error occurs. Then Puppet® cannot correctly determine the current state of the system and thinks the resource is changed, while in fact, it is not. Letting Puppet recreate remove or change the resource in these cases, is NOT wat you want.
Using the disable_corrective_ensure parameter, you can disable corrective ensure present or ensure absent actions on the current resource.
Here is an example of this:
crucial_resource {'be_carefull':
ensure => 'present',
...
disable_corrective_ensure => true,
...
}
When a corrective ensure does happen on the resource Puppet® will not create or remove the resource and signal an error:
Error: Corrective ensure present requested by catalog, but disabled by parameter disable_corrective_ensure.
Error: /Stage[main]/Main/Crucial_resource[be_carefull]/ensure: change from 'absent' to 'present' failed: Corrective ensure present requested by catalog, but disabled by parameter disable_corrective_ensure. (corrective)
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ensure
The basic property that the resource should be in.
Valid values are present, absent.
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freeform_tags
Free-form tags for this resource. Each tag is a simple key-value pair with no predefined name, type, or namespace. For more information, see Resource Tags. Example: {"Department": "Finance"}
This documentation is generated from the Ruby OCI SDK.
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id
The OCID of the resource. This is a read-only property.
This documentation is generated from the Ruby OCI SDK.
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inactive_status
The detailed status of INACTIVE lifecycleState.
This documentation is generated from the Ruby OCI SDK.
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lifecycle_state
The policy’s current state. After creating a policy, make sure its lifecycleState changes from CREATING to ACTIVE before using it.
This documentation is generated from the Ruby OCI SDK.
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name
The full name of the object.
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oci_timeout
The maximum time to wait for the OCI resource to be in the ready state.
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oci_wait_interval
The interval beween calls to OCI to check if a resource is in the ready state.
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policy_name
The name of the policy.
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present_states
The OCI states, puppet will detect as the resource being present.
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provider
The specific backend to use for this oci_identity_policy resource. You will seldom need to specify this — Puppet® will usually discover the appropriate provider for your platform.Available providers are:
- sdk
- This provider uses the Oracle Ruby OCI SDK to do its work.
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statements
An array of policy statements written in the policy language. See How Policies Work and Common Policies.
This documentation is generated from the Ruby OCI SDK.
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synchronized
Specifies if Puppet® waits for OCI actions to be ready before moving on to an other resource.
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tenant
The tenant for this resource.
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time_created
Date and time the policy was created, in the format defined by RFC3339.
Example: 2016-08-25T21:10:29.600Z
This documentation is generated from the Ruby OCI SDK.
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version_date
The version of the policy. If null or set to an empty string, when a request comes in for authorization, the policy will be evaluated according to the current behavior of the services at that moment. If set to a particular date (YYYY-MM-DD), the policy will be evaluated according to the behavior of the services on that date.
This documentation is generated from the Ruby OCI SDK.
