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How Connect Customer works with IAM - Amazon Connect Customer

How Connect Customer works with IAM

Before you use IAM to manage access to Connect Customer, you should understand what IAM features are available to use with Connect Customer. To get a high-level view of how Connect Customer and other AWS services work with IAM, see AWS Services That Work with IAM in the IAM User Guide.

Connect Customer identity-based policies

With IAM identity-based policies, you can specify allowed or denied actions and resources as well as the conditions under which actions are allowed or denied. Connect Customer supports specific actions, resources, and condition keys. To learn about all of the elements that you use in a JSON policy, see IAM JSON Policy Elements Reference in the IAM User Guide.

Actions

Administrators can use AWS JSON policies to specify who has access to what. That is, which principal can perform actions on what resources, and under what conditions.

The Action element of a JSON policy describes the actions that you can use to allow or deny access in a policy. Include actions in a policy to grant permissions to perform the associated operation.

Policy actions in Connect Customer use the following prefix before the action: connect:. Policy statements must include either an Action or NotAction element. Connect Customer defines its own set of actions that describe tasks that you can perform with this service.

To specify multiple actions in a single statement, separate them with commas as follows:

"Action": [ "connect:action1", "connect:action2"

You can specify multiple actions using wildcards (*). For example, to specify all actions that begin with the word Describe, include the following action:

"Action": "connect:Describe*"

To see a list of Connect Customer actions, Actions, Resources, and Condition Keys for Connect Customer.

Resources

Connect Customer supports resource-level permissions (specifying a resource ARN in an IAM policy). Following is a list of Connect Customer resources:

  • Instance

  • Contact

  • User

  • Routing profile

  • Security profile

  • Hierarchy group

  • Queue

  • File

  • Flow

  • Hours of operation

  • Phone number

  • Task templates

  • Customer profile domain

  • Customer profile object type

  • Outbound campaigns

Administrators can use AWS JSON policies to specify who has access to what. That is, which principal can perform actions on what resources, and under what conditions.

The Resource JSON policy element specifies the object or objects to which the action applies. As a best practice, specify a resource using its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). For actions that don't support resource-level permissions, use a wildcard (*) to indicate that the statement applies to all resources.

"Resource": "*"

The Connect Customer instance resource has the following ARN:

arn:${Partition}:connect:${Region}:${Account}:instance/${InstanceId}

For more information about the format of ARNs, see Amazon Resource Names (ARNs) and AWS Service Namespaces.

For example, to specify the i-1234567890abcdef0 instance in your statement, use the following ARN:

"Resource": "arn:aws:connect:us-east-1:123456789012:instance/i-1234567890abcdef0"

To specify all instances that belong to a specific account, use the wildcard (*):

"Resource": "arn:aws:connect:us-east-1:123456789012:instance/*"

Some Connect Customer actions, such as those for creating resources, cannot be performed on a specific resource. In those cases, you must use the wildcard (*).

"Resource": "*"

Many Connect Customer; API actions involve multiple resources. For example,

To specify multiple resources in a single statement, separate the ARNs with commas.

"Resource": [ "resource1", "resource2"

To see a list of Connect Customer resource types and their ARNs, see Actions, Resources, and Condition Keys for Connect Customer. The same article explains with which actions you can specify the ARN of each resource.

Condition keys

Administrators can use AWS JSON policies to specify who has access to what. That is, which principal can perform actions on what resources, and under what conditions.

The Condition element specifies when statements execute based on defined criteria. You can create conditional expressions that use condition operators, such as equals or less than, to match the condition in the policy with values in the request. To see all AWS global condition keys, see AWS global condition context keys in the IAM User Guide.

Connect Customer defines its own set of condition keys and also supports using some global condition keys. To see all AWS global condition keys, see AWS Global Condition Context Keys in the IAM User Guide.

All Amazon EC2 actions support the aws:RequestedRegion and ec2:Region condition keys. For more information, see Example: Restricting Access to a Specific Region.

To see a list of Connect Customer condition keys, see Actions, Resources, and Condition Keys for Connect Customer.

Examples

To view examples of Connect Customer identity-based policies, see Connect Customer identity-based policy examples.

Authorization based on Connect Customer tags

You can attach tags to Connect Customer resources or pass tags in a request to Connect Customer. To control access based on tags, you provide tag information in the condition element of a policy using the connect:ResourceTag/key-name, aws:RequestTag/key-name, or aws:TagKeys condition keys.

To view an example identity-based policy for limiting access to a resource based on the tags on that resource, see Describe and update Connect Customer users based on tags.

Connect Customer IAM roles

An IAM role is an entity within your AWS account that has specific permissions.

Using temporary credentials with Connect Customer

You can use temporary credentials to sign in with federation, assume an IAM role, or to assume a cross-account role. You obtain temporary security credentials by calling AWS STS API operations such as AssumeRole or GetFederationToken.

Connect Customer supports using temporary credentials.

Service-linked roles

Service-linked roles allow AWS services to access resources in other services to complete an action on your behalf. Service-linked roles appear in your IAM account and are owned by the service. An IAM administrator can view but not edit the permissions for service-linked roles.

Connect Customer supports service-linked roles. For details about creating or managing Connect Customer service-linked roles, see Use service-linked roles and role permissions for Connect Customer.

Choosing an IAM role in Connect Customer

When you create a resource in Connect Customer, you must choose a role to allow Connect Customer to access Amazon EC2 on your behalf. If you have previously created a service role or service-linked role, then Connect Customer provides you with a list of roles to choose from. It's important to choose a role that allows access to start and stop Amazon EC2 instances.