Amazon AppStream 2.0 Cross-Service Confused Deputy Prevention
The confused deputy problem is a security issue where an entity that doesn't have permission to perform an action coerces a more-privileged entity to perform the action. In AWS, cross-service impersonation can leave account resources vulnerable to the confused deputy problem. Cross-service impersonation occurs when one service (the calling service) calls another service (the called service). The calling service can manipulate the called service to use its permissions to act on a customer's resources in ways that the calling service doesn't have permission to perform for itself. To prevent this, AWS provides tools that helps you protect your data for all services with service principals that have access to resources in your account.
We recommend using the aws:SourceArn
and aws:SourceAccount
global condition context keys in resource policies to limit permissions when accessing these
resources. The following guidelines detail recommendations and requirements when you use
these keys to protect your resources:
-
Use
aws:SourceArn
if you want only one resource associated with cross-service access. -
Use
aws:SourceAccount
if you want to allow any resource in the specified account associated with cross-service use. -
If the
aws:SourceArn
key doesn't contain an account ID, you must use both global condition context keys (aws:SourceArn
andaws:SourceAccount
) to limit permissions. -
If you use both global condition context keys and the
aws:SourceArn
value contains an account ID, theaws:SourceAccount
key must use the same account ID when used in the same policy statement.
The most effective way to protect against the confused deputy problem is to use the exact
Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource you want to allow. If you don't know the full ARN
of the resource, use the aws:SourceArn
global context condition key with
wildcards (such as *) for the unknown portions of the ARN. You can also use
a wildcard in the ARN if you want to specify multiple resources. For example, you can format
the ARN as
arn:aws:
.servicename
::region-name
::your
AWS account ID
:*
Topics
- Example: AppStream 2.0 service role cross-service confused deputy prevention
- Example: AppStream 2.0 fleet machine role cross-service confused deputy prevention
- Example: AppStream 2.0 Elastic fleets session script Amazon S3 bucket policy cross-service confused deputy prevention
- Example: AppStream 2.0 Application Amazon S3 bucket policy cross-service confused deputy prevention