gcpdiag is a command-line diagnostics tool for GCP customers. It finds and helps to fix common issues in Google Cloud Platform projects. It is used to test projects against a wide range of best practices and frequent mistakes, based on the troubleshooting experience of the Google Cloud Support team.
gcpdiag is open-source and contributions are welcome! Note that this is not an officially supported Google product, but a community effort. The Google Cloud Support team maintains this code and we do our best to avoid causing any problems in your projects, but we give no guarantees to that end.
You can run gcpdiag using a shell wrapper that starts gcpdiag in a Docker container. This should work on any machine with Docker or Podman installed, including Cloud Shell.
curl https://gcpdiag.dev/gcpdiag.sh >gcpdiag
chmod +x gcpdiag
./gcpdiag lint --project=MYPROJECT
Currently gcpdiag mainly supports one subcommand: lint
, which is used
to run diagnostics on one or more GCP projects.
usage:
gcpdiag lint --project P [OPTIONS]
gcpdiag lint --project P [--name faulty-vm --location us-central1-a --label key:value]
Run diagnostics in GCP projects.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--auth-adc Authenticate using Application Default Credentials (default)
--auth-key FILE Authenticate using a service account private key file
--project P Project ID of project to inspect
--name n [n ...] Resource Name(s) to inspect (e.g.: bastion-host,prod-*)
--location R [R ...] Valid GCP region/zone to scope inspection (e.g.: us-central1-a,us-central1)
--label key:value One or more resource labels as key-value pair(s) to scope inspection
(e.g.: env:prod, type:frontend or env=prod type=frontend)
--billing-project P Project used for billing/quota of API calls done by gcpdiag (default is the inspected project, requires
'serviceusage.services.use' permission)
--show-skipped Show skipped rules
--hide-ok Hide rules with result OK
--enable-gce-serial-buffer
Fetch serial port one output directly from the Compute API. Use this flag when not exporting
serial port output to cloud logging.
--include INCLUDE Include rule pattern (e.g.: `gke`, `gke/*/2021*`). Multiple pattern can be specified (comma separated, or with multiple
arguments)
--exclude EXCLUDE Exclude rule pattern (e.g.: `BP`, `*/*/2022*`)
--include-extended Include extended rules. Additional rules might generate false positives (default: False)
-v, --verbose Increase log verbosity
--within-days D How far back to search logs and metrics (default: 3 days)
--config FILE Read configuration from FILE
--logging-ratelimit-requests R
Configure rate limit for logging queries (default: 60)
--logging-ratelimit-period-seconds S
Configure rate limit period for logging queries (default: 60 seconds)
--logging-page-size P
Configure page size for logging queries (default: 500)
--logging-fetch-max-entries E
Configure max entries to fetch by logging queries (default: 10000)
--logging-fetch-max-time-seconds S
Configure timeout for logging queries (default: 120 seconds)
--output FORMATTER Format output as one of [terminal, json, csv] (default: terminal)
gcpdiag supports authentication using multiple mechanisms:
-
Application default credentials
gcpdiag can use Cloud SDK's Application Default Credentials. This might require that you first run
gcloud auth login --update-adc
to update the cached credentials. This is the default in Cloud Shell because in that environment, ADC credentials are automatically provisioned. -
Service account key
You can also use the
--auth-key
parameter to specify the private key of a service account.
The authenticated principal will need as minimum the following roles granted (both of them):
Viewer
on the inspected projectService Usage Consumer
on the project used for billing/quota enforcement, which is per default the project being inspected, but can be explicitly set using the--billing-project
option
The Editor and Owner roles include all the required permissions, but if you use
service account authentication (--auth-key
), we recommend to only grant the
Viewer+Service Usage Consumer on that service account.
Tests are organized by product, class, and ID.
The product is the GCP service that is being tested. Examples: GKE or GCE.
The class is what kind of test it is, currently we have:
Class name | Description |
---|---|
BP | Best practice, opinionated recommendations |
WARN | Warnings: things that are possibly wrong |
ERR | Errors: things that are very likely to be wrong |
SEC | Potential security issues |
The ID is currently formatted as YYYY_NNN, where YYYY is the year the test was written, and NNN is a counter. The ID must be unique per product/class combination.
Each test also has a short_description and a long_description. The short description is a statement about the good state that is being verified to be true (i.e. we don't test for errors, we test for compliance, i.e. an problem not to be present).
See http://gcpdiag.dev for more information: