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Published: Aug 6, 2019 License: BSD-2-Clause Imports: 17 Imported by: 0

README

This tool will request and set temporary credentials in your shell environment variables for a given role.

Installation

On OS X, the best way to get it is to use homebrew:

brew install remind101/formulae/assume-role

If you have a working Go 1.6/1.7 environment:

$ go get -u github.com/remind101/assume-role

On Windows with PowerShell, you can use scoop.sh

$ scoop bucket add extras
$ scoop install assume-role

Configuration

Setup a profile for each role you would like to assume in ~/.aws/config.

For example:

~/.aws/config:

[profile usermgt]
region = us-east-1

[profile stage]
# Stage AWS Account.
region = us-east-1
role_arn = arn:aws:iam::1234:role/SuperUser
source_profile = usermgt

[profile prod]
# Production AWS Account.
region = us-east-1
role_arn = arn:aws:iam::9012:role/SuperUser
mfa_serial = arn:aws:iam::5678:mfa/eric-holmes
source_profile = usermgt

~/.aws/credentials:

[usermgt]
aws_access_key_id = AKIMYFAKEEXAMPLE
aws_secret_access_key = wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/MYxFAKEYEXAMPLEKEY

Reference: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/userguide/cli-roles.html

In this example, we have three AWS Account profiles:

  • usermgt
  • stage
  • prod

Each member of the org has their own IAM user and access/secret key for the usermgt AWS Account. The keys are stored in the ~/.aws/credentials file.

The stage and prod AWS Accounts have an IAM role named SuperUser. The assume-role tool helps a user authenticate (using their keys) and then assume the privilege of the SuperUser role, even across AWS accounts!

Usage

Perform an action as the given IAM role:

$ assume-role stage aws iam get-user

The assume-role tool sets AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY and AWS_SESSION_TOKEN environment variables and then executes the command provided.

If the role requires MFA, you will be asked for the token first:

$ assume-role prod aws iam get-user
MFA code: 123456

If no command is provided, assume-role will output the temporary security credentials:

$ assume-role prod
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID="ASIAI....UOCA"
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY="DuH...G1d"
export AWS_SESSION_TOKEN="AQ...1BQ=="
export AWS_SECURITY_TOKEN="AQ...1BQ=="
export ASSUMED_ROLE="prod"
# Run this to configure your shell:
# eval $(assume-role prod)

Or windows PowerShell:

$env:AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID="ASIAI....UOCA"
$env:AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY="DuH...G1d"
$env:AWS_SESSION_TOKEN="AQ...1BQ=="
$env:AWS_SECURITY_TOKEN="AQ...1BQ=="
$env:ASSUMED_ROLE="prod"
# Run this to configure your shell:
# assume-role.exe prod | Invoke-Expression

If you use eval $(assume-role) frequently, you may want to create a alias for it:

  • zsh
alias assume-role='function(){eval $(command assume-role $@);}'
  • bash
function assume-role { eval $( $(which assume-role) $@); }

TODO

  • Cache credentials.

Test

Documentation

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