Access AWS Resource Access Manager using an interface endpoint (AWS PrivateLink) - AWS Resource Access Manager

Access AWS Resource Access Manager using an interface endpoint (AWS PrivateLink)

You can use AWS PrivateLink to create a private connection between your VPC and AWS Resource Access Manager. You can access AWS RAM as if it were in your VPC, without the use of an internet gateway, NAT device, VPN connection, or AWS Direct Connect connection. Instances in your VPC don't need public IP addresses to access AWS RAM.

You establish this private connection by creating an interface endpoint, powered by AWS PrivateLink. We create an endpoint network interface in each subnet that you enable for the interface endpoint. These are requester-managed network interfaces that serve as the entry point for traffic destined for AWS RAM.

For more information, see Access AWS services through AWS PrivateLink in the AWS PrivateLink Guide.

Considerations for AWS RAM

Before you set up an interface endpoint for AWS RAM, review Considerations in the AWS PrivateLink Guide.

AWS RAM supports making calls to all of its API actions through the interface endpoint.

VPC endpoint policies are supported for AWS RAM. By default, full access to AWS RAM is allowed through the interface endpoint.

Create an interface endpoint for AWS RAM

You can create an interface endpoint for AWS RAM using either the Amazon VPC console or the AWS Command Line Interface (AWS CLI). For more information, see Create an interface endpoint in the AWS PrivateLink Guide.

Create an interface endpoint for AWS RAM using the following service name:

com.amazonaws.region.ram

If you enable private DNS for the interface endpoint, you can make API requests to AWS RAM using its default Regional DNS name. For example, ram.us-east-1.amazonaws.com.

Create an endpoint policy for your interface endpoint

An endpoint policy is an IAM resource that you can attach to an interface endpoint. The default endpoint policy allows full access to AWS RAM through the interface endpoint. To control the access allowed to AWS RAM from your VPC, attach a custom endpoint policy to the interface endpoint.

An endpoint policy specifies the following information:

  • The principals that can perform actions (AWS accounts, IAM users, and IAM roles).

  • The actions that can be performed.

  • The resources on which the actions can be performed.

For more information, see Control access to services using endpoint policies in the AWS PrivateLink Guide.

Example: VPC endpoint policy for AWS RAM actions

The following is an example of a custom endpoint policy. When you attach this policy to your interface endpoint, it grants access to the listed AWS RAM actions for all principals on all resources.

{ "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Effect": "Allow", "Principal": "*", "Action": [ "ram:CreateResourceShare" ], "Resource": "*" } ] }