Services or capabilities described in Amazon Web Services documentation might vary by Region. To see the differences applicable to the China Regions,
see Getting Started with Amazon Web Services in China
(PDF).
Use PutUserPermissionsBoundary
with an Amazon SDK or command line tool
The following code examples show how to use PutUserPermissionsBoundary
.
- CLI
-
- Amazon CLI
-
Example 1: To apply a permissions boundary based on a custom policy to an IAM user
The following put-user-permissions-boundary
example applies a custom policy named intern-boundary
as the permissions boundary for the specified IAM user.
aws iam put-user-permissions-boundary \
--permissions-boundary arn:aws:iam::123456789012:policy/intern-boundary \
--user-name intern
This command produces no output.
Example 2: To apply a permissions boundary based on an Amazon managed policy to an IAM user
The following put-user-permissions-boundary
example applies the Amazon managed pollicy named PowerUserAccess
as the permissions boundary for the specified IAM user.
aws iam put-user-permissions-boundary \
--permissions-boundary arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/PowerUserAccess \
--user-name developer
This command produces no output.
For more information, see Adding and removing IAM identity permissions in the Amazon IAM User Guide.
- PowerShell
-
- Tools for PowerShell
-
Example 1: This example shows how to set the Permission boundary for the user. You can set Amazon Managed policies or Custom policies as permission boundary.
Set-IAMUserPermissionsBoundary -UserName joe -PermissionsBoundary arn:aws:iam::123456789012:policy/intern-boundary
For a complete list of Amazon SDK developer guides and code examples, see
Using IAM with an Amazon SDK.
This topic also includes information about getting started and details about previous SDK versions.