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Working with custom identity providers

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Working with custom identity providers - AWS Transfer Family
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AWS Transfer Family offers several options for custom identity providers to authenticate and authorize users for secure file transfers. Here are the main approaches:

  • Custom identity provider solution—This topic describes the Transfer Family custom identity provider solution, using a toolkit hosted in GitHub.

    Note

    For most use cases, this is the recommended option.

  • Using AWS Lambda to integrate your identity provider—This topic describes how to create an AWS Lambda function that connects to your custom identity provider.

    To authenticate your users, you can use your existing identity provider with AWS Transfer Family. You integrate your identity provider using an AWS Lambda function, which authenticates and authorizes your users for access to Amazon S3 or Amazon Elastic File System (Amazon EFS). For details, see Using AWS Lambda to integrate your identity provider. You can also access CloudWatch graphs for metrics such as number of files and bytes transferred in the AWS Transfer Family Management Console, giving you a single pane of glass to monitor file transfers using a centralized dashboard.

  • Using Amazon API Gateway to integrate your identity provider—This topic describes how to use an AWS Lambda function to back an Amazon API Gateway method.

    You can provide a RESTful interface with a single Amazon API Gateway method. Transfer Family calls this method to connect to your identity provider, which authenticates and authorizes your users for access to Amazon S3 or Amazon EFS. Use this option if you need a RESTful API to integrate your identity provider or if you want to use AWS WAF to leverage its capabilities for geo-blocking or rate-limiting requests. For details, see Using Amazon API Gateway to integrate your identity provider.

  • Transfer Family provides a blog post and a workshop that walk you through building a file transfer solution. This solution leverages AWS Transfer Family for managed SFTP/FTPS endpoints and Amazon Cognito and DynamoDB for user management.

    The blog post is available at Using Amazon Cognito as an identity provider with AWS Transfer Family and Amazon S3. You can view the details for the workshop here.

Note

For custom identity providers, the username must be a minimum of 3 and a maximum of 100 characters. You can use the following characters in the username: a–z, A-Z, 0–9, underscore '_', hyphen '-', period '.' and at sign '@'. The username can't start with a hyphen '-', period '.' or at sign '@'.

When implementing a custom identity provider, consider the following best practices:

  • Deploy the solution in the same AWS account and region as your Transfer Family servers.

  • Implement the principle of least privilege when configuring IAM roles and policies.

  • Use features like IP allow-listing and standardized logging for enhanced security.

  • Test your custom identity provider thoroughly in a non-production environment before deployment.

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