I have one organization with multiple sub accounts. I would like to create IAM Policies that grant users full administrator access to any resources in specific sub account (or sub accounts). How can this be achieved?
From an AWS Organization perspective, you have control over the accounts and resources via Service Control policies (SCPs).
"However, an SCP never grants permissions. Instead, SCPs are JSON policies that specify the maximum permissions for the affected accounts."
With that in mind, you can't grant users full administrator access to any resources in a specific subaccount(s) using AWS Organization and AWS IAM Policies only.
This leads us to (roughly) 3 paths:
By default, if you create a member account as part of your organization, AWS automatically creates a role in the account that grants administrator permissions to IAM users in the management account who can assume the role.
The IAM Role in question is OrganizationAccountAccessRole. You can customize its name and use it to grant your users full administrator access across all the resources inside the AWS account.
See: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/organizations/latest/userguide/orgs_manage_accounts_access.html
Observations: Since this IAM Role is created in every account. You would need to intervene and limit the IAM Cross-Account access manually in each sub-account.
You can use AWS CloudFormation StackSets to deploy across multiple AWS accounts a list of IAM Roles your users could use for admin purposes (eg RoleFullAdmin, RoleReadOnly, RoleDevOps), and AWS Organizations enables you to create stack sets with service-managed permissions, using a service-linked role that has the relevant permission in each member account.
From your AWS Organizations management account (or delegated administrator account) you can deploy Stack Sets to current accounts and they are automatically deployed to every new account your create, keeping your resources in sync.
You can target accounts via account ID or organizational units (OUs).
See: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/organizations/latest/userguide/services-that-can-integrate-cloudformation.html
Observations: Similar to 1, since you are using IAM Role Cross-Account access, you need to manually intervene in the policy trust relationship.
Add AWS IAM Identity Center (successor to AWS Single Sign-On) to your AWS Organizations
What you are looking for can be achieved by Permission Sets in the AWS IAM Identity Center.
You can customize the access per user and have a many-to-many relationship between User <-> Accounts <-> Roles. You can define one or more IAM Policies in the Permission Set.
AWS provides predefined permissions that you can use too.
See: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/singlesignon/latest/userguide/permissionsetsconcept.html and https://docs.aws.amazon.com/singlesignon/latest/userguide/permissionsetpredefined.html
Observations: You need to add an extra resource to your AWS Organization and configure the identity source of your users. This also requires a change in the process of "how to login to our aws account". Now you need to use the AWS SSO etc.
As an admin, I wanted my AWS users not to enable unauthenticated user identity in AWS Cognito. Is there any way to restrict this action? Can this be achieved through service control policy?
Basically I don't want my AWS users to enable AWS resource access to any guest users.
I don't think you can do anything but prevent them from creating Cognito resources entirely.
There is nothing in the Cognito SAR pages that indicates that you can differentiate on authenticated/unauthenticated identities.
At my employer, we have an AWS account that uses SAML 2.0 to federate in your user access from the company SSO login to the AWS console. The net effect is that everyone has admin access. Is there a way to place federated users into different IAM groups, thereby giving least privilege access?
The answer we came up with is that all federated users would have very limited access to the console with no programmatic access. Then, create separate IAM users for everyone for programmatic access (no console login) and to place these separate users into IAM groups with varying access. Would this method be considered best practice or is there a better way to accomplish what we would like to do in this case?
The best practices is to use groups to set permissions (policies) for each class of user.
Grant users SSO access to AWS accounts in your organization by
selecting the AWS accounts from a list populated by AWS SSO, and then
selecting users or groups from your directory and the permissions you
want to grant them.
AWS Single Sign-On
Your SSO SAML 2.0 provider should be able to pass role information to AWS at sign-in. You can then have corresponding IAM roles setup in AWS.
We use Azure AD for SSO and set it up using this example: https://blog.flux7.com/aws-best-practice-azure-ad-saml-authentication-configuration-for-aws-console
Basically you create Azure AD Security Groups and map them to IAM roles.
I'm a newbie to AWS, I'm building an application where the users should be logged in via AWS account.
So I created a user pool and authenticated via AWS SDK using the federated identities. But the users were created manually in the Cognito UI.But the requirement is to authenticate the user if they already resides in AWS as an IAM user. But AWS cognito does not provide a workflow to import the IAM users to cognito pool. So is there another way to accomplish this via AWS ? Thanks in Advance.
This is currently not possible. Although AWS Cognito Federated Identities allows, federating an external identity provider to grant AWS access, the other way around is not possible.
In addition, there is no method in AWS IAM SDK to verify AWS Username and Password, which also limits verifying them through your own implementation.
What is the difference between an IAM role and an IAM user? The IAM FAQ has an entry explaining it, but it was vague and not very clear:
An IAM user has permanent long-term credentials and is used to directly interact with AWS services. An IAM role does not have any credentials and cannot make direct requests to AWS services. IAM roles are meant to be assumed by authorized entities, such as IAM users, applications, or an AWS service such as EC2.
I think an IAM role is used for federated logins (using an IdP with SAML tokens for example), and they don't have permanent access keys that you can download like regular IAM users have (the "an IAM role doesn't have any credentials" part).
What do they mean when they say an IAM role can't make direct requests to AWS services? I can login to AWS Console (the web console) and create stacks etc, so it can't be that.
To understand the difference, let us go through IAM basic knowledge
IAM controls: Who (authentication) can do What (authorization) in your AWS account.
Authentication(who) with IAM is done with users/groups and roles whereas authorization(what) is done by policies.
Here the term
User - End user think about people
Groups- a set of users under one set of permission(policies)
Roles - are used to grant specific permission to specific actors for a set of duration of time. These actors can be authenticated by AWS or some trusted external system.
User and roles use policies for authorization. Keep in mind that user and role can't do anything until you allow certain actions with a policy.
Answer the following questions and you will differentiate between a user and a role:
Can have a password? Yes-> user, No-> role
Can have an access key? Yes-> user, No-> role
Can belong to a group? Yes-> user, No -> role
Can be associated with AWS resources (for example EC2 instances)? No-> user, Yes->role
AWS supports 3 Role Types for different scenarios
AWS service roles (for example: EC2, Lambda, Redshift,...)
Cross-Account Access: granting permissions to users from other AWS account, whether you control those account or not.
Identity Provider Access: granting permissions to users authenticated by a trusted external system. AWS supports two kinds of identity federation:
- Web-based identity such as Facebook, Goolge- IAM support ingeration via OpenID Connect
- SAML 2.0 identity such as Active Directory, LDAP.
To understand what role is, you need to read its use case, I don't want to reinvent the wheel so please read the following AWS documents:
https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/security/how-to-use-a-single-iam-user-to-easily-access-all-your-accounts-by-using-the-aws-cli/
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/id_roles_providers_saml.html
Hope it helps.
Main actors in IAM are users, groups, roles and policies. And what you need to understand about AWS and never forget is that
Everything in AWS is an API
And to execute any API or any of its methods, first we have to authenticate and then authorize that particular user/group/role.
Ex: An operator wants to put an object to a S3 bucket. This process happens through a set of API calls within AWS. Basically we call the S3 API and a method of it to put the object into the particular bucket (say method put_object_in_s3). For that we may want to provide the name of the bucket, the object, and most importantly we need to provide set of credentials (username with password or secret key or etc) in order to tell the AWS API Engine who this user/group/role is.
The first thing API Engine does is, look at those credentials sent with the API. Then it validate those (whether they are correct, active) credentials indicating that this request is coming from a actual valid user, group or role. Then what the API Engine does is (as it now knows who sent this API request) it takes the policy documents associated with the particular operator (user or role) and evaluate them as a single view. That is we check whether the action called in the API is authorized for that operator.
IAM user - In the context of IAM, a user is a “permanent” named operator (human or machine). What’s important to note is that it’s credentials (credentials maybe username password or access key or a secret key) are permanent and stays with that named user. So by that AWS knows that what are the authentication methods (username password authentication method or secret key method or etc) for this user (as its permanent and stays with the user).
IAM group - As in the above image, a group is a collection of users. And note that a user can be in many groups as well.
IAM roles - Roles are not Permissions !!!. A role is also an authentication method just as IAM users and groups. As a user, a role is also a operator (could be a human, could be a machine). Difference is that credentials with roles are temporary.
Policy Documents - As stated earlier, roles are not Permissions. Permissions in AWS are completely handled by objects called Policy Documents. Policy Documents are JSON documents. Policy Documents can directly be attached to Users, Groups or Roles. When a policy document gets attached to any of above operator, then only they get permissions do stuff.
A policy document lists things like: Specific API or wildcard group of APIs that gets whitelisted against which resources, and Conditions for those API executions (like allow only if this user, group or role in the home network or allow from any location, allow only at certain times of day and etc)
Last but not least, Authentication in AWS is done via (IAM users,
groups and roles) whereas Authorization is done by Policies.
What do they mean when they say an IAM role can't make direct requests to AWS services? I can login to AWS Console (the web console) and create stacks etc, so it can't be that.
You are an IAM User (with some attached IAM Roles).
Think of IAM Roles as capabilities.
You give an IAM User capabilities (e.g. "can create Lambda function", "can upload to S3").
Note on Federated Users:
From http://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/id.html:
A role can be assigned to a federated user who signs in by using an external identity provider instead of IAM. AWS uses details passed by the identity provider to determine which role is mapped to the federated user.
So, a federated user is similar to an IAM user which you can attach IAM Roles to. Except that you have an external identity provider.
Technically, you are NOT using a role as your identity when you login to AWS console. You are using your federated user account (with its own attached roles) as your identity.
An IAM user is an account which can be used by a person or an application. A user has credentials to log in and perform actions with the privileges assigned to that account.
An IAM role is something virtual that a resource can assume. For example, an EC2 instance can assume a role and execute AWS command with that assigned privileges. The same goes for other services like API gateway, Lambda, Kinesis, RDS and so on.
What do they mean when they say an IAM role can't make direct requests to AWS services?
The role itself is not able to perform any tasks since it has to be assumed by somebody or something. Somebody can also be someone logged in through identity federation and then assume a role.
I am practically new to AWS but I have implemented similar concepts in backend applications. Therefore, I would make an attempt to simplify this more from a newbie perspective.
IAM User - This is an actual account registered into the AWS IAM platform. This means that this is a person/application that is an actual entity. Note that this entity can do nothing, just an existence. Like when I signup for an application, my user entity is created and I can log in with provided credentials and have a profile.
IAM Group - This is a collection of specific users. Although this can also give identity, the focus is on the specific individuals that make the group. For example, how we group employees into departments in organizations based on their specific specialities and skillsets.
IAM Policies - This part seems easiest to understand. This is a specific rule/permission/access to a resource spelt out in clear dos and don'ts in a JSON format. Each policy is about a particular resource. A resource can be anything from an EBS volume, a Lamda Function, or even IAM itself.
IAM Role - This is like a title with specific responsibilities, i.e. a group of policies(permissions/access) that anyone with this title will have. For example, if we have a title of "Note-Taker", anyone from different departments can be assigned this title temporarily for a meeting, a period etc. And only those with this permission will be able to access the note-taking app. However, we can have some roles that will fit well with a group, e.g. all members of the accounting department can have the title of an accountant, which gives access to the books of account. But we can have another title of director, which has access to delete books of account, and this will cut across all departments.
Federated Users - These are entities also, but with no profile in the company(IAM). They are like contractors who can be assigned certain roles or titles through an acquired trust from the Federating platform as well as the access due to those titles. The good thing is that if the Federating platforms replace a user, there would be no reason to deactivate the old user and give access to the new one because the platform is the one with the access and not the "user".
IAM User - An user/application accessing AWS Resources
IAM Roles - Set of permissions/policy that can be applicable to an user or resource.
You can apply Roles to IAM user and to an AWS Resource too.
E.g., Apply IAM Role to Lambda Function. Function can only with that IAM Role.
IAM role is an entity which has specific access defined by the policy. And that access is. It doe snot have the permanent creds (Access keys and Secrets Access Keys)- it works on the "AssumeRole" method where token is granted for accessing the different AWs resources.
IAM User has the permanent access keys and secret access keys, we can define the permissions on the resources , IAM ROLE can be assumed by the IAM USER , as it has the keys - it can have access to the resources all the time...
IAM Policy (permissions- read,write etc.) apply to User,Group and Roles.
User- when a user want to access anything in AWS cloud, it must have IAM policy assigned.
Group - when a group of users is assigned with common IAM policy.
Roles - It needs when a service want to access another service. Service must be assigned with role that have policy assigned to perform certain actions in the AWS cloud. In other words, We can't directly assign policies on Service, first we need to create Role and then assign policy on that role.
Note: Roles are intended to be not used by physical people, instead use by AWS services only.