This is the AWS CDK v1 Developer Guide. The older CDK v1 entered maintenance on June 1, 2022 and will now only receive critical bug fixes and security patches. New features will be developed for CDK v2 exclusively. Support for CDK v1 will end entirely on June 1, 2023. Migrate to CDK v2 to have access to the latest features and fixes.
Permissions
The AWS Construct Library uses a few common, widely-implemented idioms to manage access and permissions. The IAM module provides you with the tools you need to use these idioms.
AWS CDK uses AWS CloudFormation to deploy changes. Every deployment involves an actor (either a developer, or an automated system) that starts a AWS CloudFormation deployment. In the course of doing this, the actor will assume one or more IAM Identities (user or roles) and optionally pass a role to AWS CloudFormation.
If you use AWS IAM Identity Center to authenticate as a user, then the single sign-on provider supplies short-lived session credentials that authorize you to act as a pre-defined IAM role. To learn how the AWS CDK obtains AWS credentials from IAM Identity Center authentication, see Understand IAM Identity Center authentication in the AWS SDKs and Tools Reference Guide.
Principals
An IAM principal is an authenticated AWS entity representing a user, service, or application that can call AWS APIs. The AWS Construct Library supports specifying principals in several flexible ways to grant them access your AWS resources.
The AWS Construct Library supports specifying principals in several flexible ways to grant them access your AWS resources. In security contexts, the term "principal" refers specifically to authenticated entities such as users. Objects like groups and roles do not represent users (and other authenticated entities) but rather identify them indirectly for the purpose of granting permissions. For example, if you create an IAM group, you can grant the group (i.e. its members) write access to a Amazon RDS table, but the group itself is not a principal since it does not represent a single entity (also, you cannot log in to a group).
In the CDK's IAM library, classes that directly or indirectly identify principals
      implement the IPrincipal
      interface, allowing these objects to be used interchangeably in access policies. However, not
      all of them are principals in the security sense. These objects include:
- 
        
Service principals (
new iam.ServicePrincipal('service.amazonaws.com')) - 
        
Federated principals (
new iam.FederatedPrincipal('cognito-identity.amazonaws.com')) - 
        
Account principals (
new iam.AccountPrincipal('0123456789012')) - 
        
Canonical user principals (
new iam.CanonicalUserPrincipal('79a59d[...]7ef2be')) - 
        
AWS organizations principals (
new iam.OrganizationPrincipal('org-id')) - 
        
Arbitrary ARN principals (
new iam.ArnPrincipal(res.arn)) - 
        
An
iam.CompositePrincipal(principal1, principal2, ...)to trust multiple principals 
Grants
Every construct that represents a resource that can be accessed, such as an Amazon S3 bucket or
      Amazon DynamoDB table, has methods that grant access to another entity. All such methods have names
      starting with grant. For example, Amazon S3 buckets have the
      methods grantRead and grantReadWrite (Python: grant_read,
        grant_read_write) to enable read and read/write access, respectively, from an
      entity to the bucket without having to know exactly which Amazon S3 IAM permissions are required
      to perform these operations.
The first argument of a grant method is always of type
        IGrantable. This interface represents entities that can be granted
      permissions—that is, resources with roles, such as the IAM objects Role, User, and
          Group.
Other entities can also be granted permissions. For example, later in this topic, we show
      how to grant a CodeBuild project access to an Amazon S3 bucket. Generally, the associated role is
      obtained via a role property on the entity being granted access.
Resources that use execution roles, such as lambda.Function, also implement IGrantable, so you can grant
      them access directly instead of granting access to their role. For example, if
        bucket is an Amazon S3 bucket, and function is a Lambda function, the
      code below grants the function read access to the bucket.
Sometimes permissions must be applied while your stack is being deployed. One such case is when you grant a AWS CloudFormation custom resource access to some other resource. The custom resource will be invoked during deployment, so it must have the specified permissions at deployment time. Another case is when a service verifies that the role you pass to it has the right policies applied (a number of AWS services do this to make sure you didn't forget to set the policies). In those cases, the deployment may fail if the permissions are applied too late.
 To force the grant's permissions to be applied before another resource is created, you
      can add a dependency on the grant itself, as shown here. Though the return value of grant
      methods is commonly discarded, every grant method in fact returns an iam.Grant
      object.
Roles
The IAM package contains a Role construct that
      represents IAM roles. The following code creates a new role, trusting the Amazon EC2
      service.
You can add permissions to a role by calling the role's addToPolicy method (Python: add_to_policy), passing in a
          PolicyStatement that defines the rule to be added. The statement is added to
      the role's default policy; if it has none, one is created. 
 The following example adds a Deny policy statement to the role for the
      actions ec2:SomeAction and s3:AnotherAction on the resources
        bucket and otherRole (Python: other_role), under the
      condition that the authorized service is AWS CodeBuild.
 In our example above, we've created a new PolicyStatement inline with the addToPolicy (Python: add_to_policy) call. You can also pass
      in an existing policy statement or one you've modified. The PolicyStatement
      object has numerous
        methods for adding principals, resources, conditions, and actions. 
If you're using a construct that requires a role to function correctly, you can either pass in an existing role when instantiating the construct object, or let the construct create a new role for you, trusting the appropriate service principal. The following example uses such a construct: a CodeBuild project.
Once the object is created, the role (whether the role passed in or the default one
      created by the construct) is available as the property role. This property is not
      available on external resources, however, so such constructs have an
        addToRolePolicy (Python: add_to_role_policy) method that does
      nothing if the construct is a reference to an external resource, and calls the
        addToPolicy (Python: add_to_policy) method of the
        role property otherwise, saving you the trouble of handling the undefined case
      explicitly. The following example demonstrates:
Resource policies
A few resources in AWS, such as Amazon S3 buckets and IAM roles, also have a resource
      policy. These constructs have an addToResourcePolicy method (Python:
        add_to_resource_policy), which takes a PolicyStatement as its argument. Every policy statement added to a resource
      policy must specify at least one principal.
In the following example, the Amazon S3 bucket
      bucket grants a role with the s3:SomeAction permission to
      itself.
Using external IAM objects
If you have defined an IAM user, principal, group, or role outside your AWS CDK app, you can use that IAM object in your AWS CDK app by creating a reference to it using its ARN or (for users, groups, and roles) its name. The returned reference can then be used to grant permissions or to construct policy statements as explained above.
- 
        
For users, call
User.fromUserArn()orUser.fromUserName().User.fromUserAttributes()is also available, but currently provides the same functionality asUser.fromUserArn(). - 
        
For principals, instantiate an
ArnPrincipalobject. - 
        
For groups, call
Group.fromGroupArn()orGroup.fromGroupName(). - 
        
For roles, call
Role.fromRoleArn()orRole.fromRoleName(). 
Policies (including managed policies) can be referenced in similar fashion using the methods listed below. You can use references to these objects anywhere an IAM policy is required.
Note
As with all references to external AWS resources, you cannot modify IAM references returned by the above methods in your CDK app.