Infrastructure security in AWS CloudTrail
As a managed service, AWS CloudTrail is protected by AWS global network security. For information about AWS security services and how AWS protects infrastructure, see AWS Cloud Security
You use AWS published API calls to access CloudTrail through the network. Clients must support the following:
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Transport Layer Security (TLS). We require TLS 1.2 and recommend TLS 1.3.
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Cipher suites with perfect forward secrecy (PFS) such as DHE (Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman) or ECDHE (Elliptic Curve Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman). Most modern systems such as Java 7 and later support these modes.
Additionally, requests must be signed by using an access key ID and a secret access key that is associated with an IAM principal. Or you can use the AWS Security Token Service (AWS STS) to generate temporary security credentials to sign requests.
The following security best practices also address infrastructure security in CloudTrail:
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Consider Amazon VPC endpoints for Amazon S3 bucket access. For more information, see Controlling access from VPC endpoints with bucket policies.
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Identify and audit all Amazon S3 buckets that contain CloudTrail log files. Consider using tags to help identify both your CloudTrail trails and the Amazon S3 buckets that contain CloudTrail log files. You can then use resource groups for your CloudTrail resources. For more information, see AWS Resource Groups.