aws-sso-util
consoleme
aws-sso-util | consoleme | |
---|---|---|
6 | 10 | |
916 | 3,066 | |
- | 0.2% | |
2.5 | 0.0 | |
about 1 month ago | 6 months ago | |
Python | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
aws-sso-util
-
an easier way to have aws account credentials in the credentials file
This tool allows you to configure all accounts your SSO has access to as well as login to all of them at once: https://github.com/benkehoe/aws-sso-util
- AWS SSO: Strategy for access to all member accounts
-
aws-sso-util — what a fantastic project
I just wanted to give a shout out to the maintainers of https://github.com/benkehoe/aws-sso-util . It fills in so many little gaps with AWS SSO (which itself may be a bit clunky, but is a service I wish more people made use of). If you're using CloudFormation to manage SSO access to various organisation accounts, this project provides a really great CloudFormation Macro to make everything easier.
-
Adding AWS SSO and controlling permissions
AWS SSO prevents the need to store credentials on disk. Adding and removing users from a group dynamically changes their permissions, and you can customise the maximum session durations. There are some shortcomings with the service, and if you want to get more involved, it's worth checking out aws-sso-util by Ben Kehoe.
-
Is there a way to have multiple config files for multiple AWS accounts
Only in rare cases where I work with tooling that can't support SSO vended credentials do I configure my .config profiles with a credential helper script like Ben's stuff over at https://github.com/benkehoe/aws-sso-util
- benkehoe/aws-sso-util: Smooth out the rough edges of AWS SSO (temporarily, until AWS makes it better).
consoleme
-
Launch HN: Slauth (YC S22) – auto-generate secure IAM policies for AWS and GCP
Why are you using (very expensive) GPT, or any LLM for that matter, when this was already a solved problem using rulesets? Netflix for example has open source that does this already: https://github.com/Netflix/consoleme
Instead of analyzing your code, you just run your code with no permissions and it automatically detects permission failures and thens open those permissions, with a UI showing you what it did so you can remove any permissions you don't want.
That actually seems much more secure than trying to divine the rules from reading the code.
What value is the LLM adding here?
-
AWS SSO: Strategy for access to all member accounts
You may also want to look into Netflix’s ConsoleMe https://github.com/Netflix/consoleme
-
AWS IAM Roles, a tale of unnecessary complexity
This is the way. I’ve seen this happen countless times. It’s happened to me too. It’s happened to colleagues.
The worst case I’m aware of from first-hand knowledge was a large cluster of resources that got deployed for a product demo by a sales engineer and forgotten about. Turned into a nice ~$100,000 surprise in the quarterly budget.
Netflix built a tool for managing IAM permission requests as an auditable workflow, called ConsoleMe: https://github.com/Netflix/consoleme
-
How do you handle IAM requests?
There’s this tool as well https://github.com/Netflix/consoleme among others, check them out and see if the overhead is ok for you all now, but keep it simple to start.
-
Permissions manager
Perhaps Consoleme from Netflix is a useful tool for you?
- Netflix/Consoleme: A Central Control Plane for AWS Permissions and Access
-
Anyone willing to be an AWS mentor?
For sure, you can DM me. Might want to check out https://github.com/Netflix/consoleme too
- Netflix Open Sources ConsoleMe to Manage Permissions and Access on AWS
-
I built a tool which automatically suggests least-privilege IAM policies
The tool is in a similar space to iamlive, policy_sentry, and consoleme (all of which are worth checking out too if you're interested in making AWS security easier) but the main points of difference I see are:
-
Zero knowledge of multiple accounts/cross accounts rolea/budgets/consolidated bill etc. Any good resources to read ?
After you read the resources, you can stand on the "shoulders of giants" https://github.com/Netflix/consoleme
What are some alternatives?
awesome-aws - A curated list of awesome Amazon Web Services (AWS) libraries, open source repos, guides, blogs, and other resources. Featuring the Fiery Meter of AWSome.
aws-iam-generator - Generate Multi-Account IAM users/groups/roles/policies from a simple YAML configuration file and Jinja2 templates.
sceptre - Build better AWS infrastructure
iamlive - Generate an IAM policy from AWS, Azure, or Google Cloud (GCP) calls using client-side monitoring (CSM) or embedded proxy
aws-cloudformation-templates - Cloud Formation Templates for getting you started in AWS with Fortinet.
policy_sentry - IAM Least Privilege Policy Generator
checkov - Prevent cloud misconfigurations and find vulnerabilities during build-time in infrastructure as code, container images and open source packages with Checkov by Bridgecrew.
tfquery - tfquery: Run SQL queries on your Terraform infrastructure. Query resources and analyze its configuration using a SQL-powered framework.
yawsso - Yet Another AWS SSO - sync up AWS CLI v2 SSO login session to legacy CLI v1 credentials
AirIAM - Least privilege AWS IAM Terraformer
paco - Paco: Prescribed automation for cloud orchestration
ElectricEye - ElectricEye is a multi-cloud, multi-SaaS Python CLI tool for Asset Management, Security Posture Management & Attack Surface Monitoring supporting 100s of services and evaluations to harden your CSP & SaaS environments with controls mapped to over 20 industry, regulatory, and best practice controls frameworks