iamlive
leapp
iamlive | leapp | |
---|---|---|
30 | 73 | |
2,952 | 1,527 | |
- | 0.5% | |
6.2 | 9.7 | |
2 months ago | 17 days ago | |
Go | TypeScript | |
MIT License | Mozilla Public 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.
iamlive
-
Why has AWS made IAM Actions impossible to find?
Also things like this (same guy) if you have a sandbox to play in with wider permissions and are trying to build a more scoped profile: https://github.com/iann0036/iamlive
- iann0036/iamlive: Generate an IAM policy from AWS calls using client-side monitoring (CSM) or embedded proxy
-
Why Companies Still Struggle with Least Privilege in the Cloud?
I know there is a tool called iamlive that logs all API calls on your local machine. So you can run commands as an admin user locally while this is running, and find out what permissions were needed. Then you tear down the infra you just deployed, and add those same permissions to a service user of some kind (e.g. a CICD role) to avoid over-privileging it. It's messy but it can be helpful.
-
AWS Creates New Policy-Based Access Control Language Cedar
actually Ian (aws hero) has a tool that does exactly this
https://github.com/iann0036/iamlive
- Permissions Map
- iamlive
-
Show HN: Slauth.io (YC S22) – IAM Policy Auto-Generation
I have used https://github.com/iann0036/iamlive with great success in the past. On high level, the approach you are describing is iamlive on steroids and UX improved.
Kudos on launch, will check your beta
- IAM Live
-
Pike: Tool to determine your IAM requirements from code
Thanks! Permissions are determined per resource or datasource. There's no easy way that I had found, especially if you want this done statically, https://github.com/iann0036/iamlive does it by inspecting your api calls but there's always a look up somewhere. Hopefully ill manage to get a few community contributions and get the ball rolling, i've made it as easy as I could to add support for other resources without you even really having to know golang.
-
The End of CI
IAM isn’t fun, but there’s lots of options.
https://pypi.org/project/access-undenied-aws/ will allow you to start with least privilege and fix specific issues.
https://github.com/iann0036/iamlive allows an admin to perform the action via CLI and capture the policy.
Access advisor can inspect how you actually use the role and give suggestions on what to remove.
A more helpful suggestion is to experiment with these tools and then find gaps in IAM actions and submit those as feature requests via your TAM.
leapp
-
Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (March 2024)
Summary:
Do you find yourself overwhelmed with work, requests, or complaints and in need of assistance to alleviate the pressure, enhance communication, facilitate organization, prioritize tasks, and foster greater trust and transparency?
Alternatively, I can work as a full stack developer.
AWS Community builder, AWS User group Leader, public speaker (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qdu58NAQfU0&t=271s)
Or perhaps you need both? =)
I have 4+ years of experience as a product manager and 8 in product development (before pm: agile coach, UX designer, and developer).
I've been the co-founder of the open-core company behind the OSS project Leapp (https://github.com/Noovolari/leapp)
Please feel free to reach out.
-
OKTA Identity Engine Upgrade
You can switch to saml2aws using the browser method instead of the Okta method and it will continue to work after the upgrade. There is also a really neat GUI tool to manage your session tokens that also works. https://www.leapp.cloud
-
When using AWS Organizations SSO for multiple accounts (dev, stage, prod) I have a hard time knowing which account I'm currently logged into.
Take a try to Leapp: https://github.com/Noovolari/leapp
-
Ask HN: Should open source projects track you?
Hello everyone, I'm the maintainer of an open-source DeveloperTool (https://github.com/Noovolari/leapp)
With a heuristic of 7000 users daily, I started feeling the need to have more information on how Users are using the project to improve it.
Is it the right thing to do to create a better Developer Experience and gain feedback for the end users?
On a side:
-
Ask HN: Secure and simple way for secret/credential management in a startup?
- For all your employees I can advice you Leapp as open-source project (https://github.com/Noovolari/leapp). It solve mayor of the problem listed here:
-
Alternative Official SDK
I am looking to manage Leapp (https://www.leapp.cloud/) from the StreamDeck. Leapp allows you to manage and switch between different Cloud Accounts (AWS, Azure, etc). Leapp has a command line interface which I could automate with a StreamDeck plugin. Unfortunately it looks like the only official SDK is the sandboxed JavaScript one. This means I cannot automate command line tools with it.
-
What are AWS credentials?
If you’re wondering if there is a tool that allows you to stop thinking about AWS credentials and where to store them in the right way, give a look at Leapp! It takes the responsibility of storing long-term credentials in the system vault, generating/refreshing short-term credentials, and placing them in the right place for the clients to use them.
-
AWS multi-account strategy explained
Still, there is an elementary problem that we need to address, and it’s more on the operational side of things. Once we secured and implemented a tremendous multi-account strategy, how do people access AWS accounts? It turns out there is a fantastic open-source tool that lets you handle that with no effort, and its name is Leapp.
-
AWS Credentials: from Environment Variables to credentials_process
When you have to configure access to multiple AWS accounts using the Assume Role access pattern, it becomes difficult to get rid of all the Named Profiles configuration data and relationships. When you’ve to deal with a complex access scenario, tools like Leapp (https://www.leapp.cloud) come to the rescue! Leapp avoids you to specify relationships between Named Profiles in the config file, as the access methods are stored in the tool-specific configuration file.
-
Multiple active AWS consoles in the same browser with Leapp open-source browser extension (for Firefox and Chrome)
Leapp Github repository
What are some alternatives?
aws-leastprivilege - Generates an IAM policy for the CloudFormation service role that adheres to least privilege.
aws-vault - A vault for securely storing and accessing AWS credentials in development environments
consoleme - A Central Control Plane for AWS Permissions and Access
sshportal - :tophat: simple, fun and transparent SSH (and telnet) bastion server
policy_sentry - IAM Least Privilege Policy Generator
saml2aws - CLI tool which enables you to login and retrieve AWS temporary credentials using a SAML IDP
iamzero - Identity & Access Management simplified and secure.
gatus - ⛑ Automated developer-oriented status page
iamlive-lambda-extension - Lambda Extension for iamlive
lowdefy - The config web stack for business apps - build internal tools, client portals, web apps, admin panels, dashboards, web sites, and CRUD apps with YAML or JSON.
trailscraper - A command-line tool to get valuable information out of AWS CloudTrail
simplelocalize-cli - SimpleLocalize CLI is a developer-friendly command-line tool for uploading and downloading translation files