Is it possible to run aws cli from ec2 to create some resources in another account without using aws_secret_key and aws_access_key?
2 Answers
Supposing the scenario with two accounts A & B the explanatory steps should be:
- In account A, I created a role (e.g
RoleForB
) to trust account B, and attach to the before created role a IAM policy to allow it to perform some read operations in account A.e.g ReadOnlyAccess
- In account B, I created a role (e.g
AssumeRoleInA
) and attach a policy to allow it to assume the role that is created in account A. - In account B Associate to your EC2 instance
ec2-profile
the IAM role (AssumeRoleInA
) created in step 2. - In account B login into this EC2 instance to assume the role in Account A using the command
aws sts assume-role --role-arn "arn:aws:iam::Account_A_ID:role/RoleForB" --role-session-name "EC2FromB"
. - In account B EC2 terminal when the command is step 4. finished, you can see the access key ID, secret access key, and session token from wherever you've routed it, in our case
stdout
either manually or by using a script. You can then assign these values to environment variables (AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
,AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
,AWS_SESSION_TOKEN
)
So Let’s check the configurations mentioned above step by step but with some mode detail:
- As before presented in account A, it builds the trust to account B by creating the role named
RoleForB
and attachingReadOnlyAccess
permission to it.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": {
"Effect": "Allow",
"Principal": {"AWS": "arn:aws:iam::Account_B_ID:root"},
"Action": "sts:AssumeRole"
}
}
- In account B, create a role named
AssumeRoleInA
then attach the correspondingpolicy
to allow it to assume the role namedRoleForB
in account A.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": "sts:AssumeRole",
"Resource": [
"arn:aws:iam::Account_A_ID:role/RoleForB"
]
}
]
}
- In account B, create a new EC2 instance (if it does not exists yet), and associate it's ec2-profile with the IAM role named
AssumeRoleInA
.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": {
"Effect": "Allow",
"Principal": {"Service": "ec2.amazonaws.com"},
"Action": "sts:AssumeRole"
}
}
- In account B login into this EC2 instance to assume the role in Account A using the command:
aws sts assume-role --role-arn "arn:aws:iam::Account_A_ID:role/RoleForB" --role-session-name "EC2FromB"`
eg:
jenkins@bb-jenkins-vault:~$ aws sts assume-role --role-arn arn:aws:iam::521111111144:role/DeployMaster --role-session-name "project-dev-jenkins-deploy"
{
"AssumedRoleUser": {
"AssumedRoleId": "AROAJBXGEHOQBXGEHOQ:project-dev-jenkins-deploy",
"Arn": "arn:aws:sts::521111111144:assumed-role/DeployMaster/project-dev-jenkins-deploy"
},
"Credentials": {
"SecretAccessKey": "wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY",
"SessionToken": "FQoGZXIvYXCUm8iG6/zLdQ7foognvCDpxKP7cRJiZgc...CUm8iG6/zLdQ7foognvCDpxKP7c+OQF",
"Expiration": "2019-03-29T15:41:02Z",
"AccessKeyId": "AKIAI44QH8DHBEXAMPLE"
}
}
- In account B EC2 terminal when the command is step 4. finished, you can see the access key ID, secret access key, and session token from wherever you've routed it, in our case
stdout
either manually or by using a script. You can then assign these values to environment variables
$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=AKIAI44QH8DHBEXAMPLE
$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY
$ export AWS_SESSION_TOKEN=FQoGZXIvYXCUm8iG6/zLdQ...<remainder of security token>
$ aws ec2 describe-instances --region us-east-1
Sure, if the EC2 role allows STS::AssumeRole
you can assume a role in the other account and get temporary credentials to do whatever you need to do in the other account.
See for example here: Cross Account Access with AWS-CLI
-
Thank you Mlu. I don't want to use access_key and secret_key inside ec2. Is it possible without aws config file(aws/credential) has access to other accounts?– PzowghiCommented Apr 5, 2019 at 3:29
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@Pzowghi AWS-CLI can use your EC2 IAM Role to get local credentials and then use those to assume role in the other account to get temporary creds from there. No access/secret keys on the filesystem involved.– MLuCommented Apr 5, 2019 at 3:32
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I understand the concept. You shared the solution but there are access and secret key in that. If I don't have aws/credentials and aws/config how I could have different profiles for different accounts?– PzowghiCommented Apr 5, 2019 at 3:43
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@Pzowghi Ah, true. Skip that first step, aws-cli will get the creds from EC2 IAM role by default.– MLuCommented Apr 5, 2019 at 3:46