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 can coerce a more-privileged entity to perform the action. In Amazon, cross-service impersonation can result in the confused deputy problem. Cross-service impersonation can occur when one service (the calling service) calls another service (the called service). The calling service can be manipulated to use its permissions to act on another customer's resources in a way it should not otherwise have permission to access. To prevent this, Amazon provides tools that help you protect your data for all services with service principals that have been given access to resources in your account.
We recommend using the aws:SourceArn, aws:SourceAccount, aws:SourceOrgID, and aws:SourceOrgPaths global condition context keys in resource
policies to limit the permissions that xraylong gives another service to the resource.
Use aws:SourceArn to associate only one resource with cross-service access. Use
aws:SourceAccount to let any resource in that account be associated with
the cross-service use. Use aws:SourceOrgID to allow any resource from any
account within an organization be associated with the cross-service use. Use
aws:SourceOrgPaths to associate any resource from accounts within an
Amazon Organizations path with the cross-service use. For more information about using and understanding
paths, see Understand the Amazon Organizations entity path.
The most effective way to protect against the confused deputy problem is to use the
aws:SourceArn global condition context key with the full ARN of the
resource. If you don't know the full ARN of the resource or if you are specifying multiple
resources, use the aws:SourceArn global context condition key with wildcard
characters (*) for the unknown portions of the ARN. For example,
arn:aws-cn:. servicename:*:123456789012:*
If the aws:SourceArn value does not contain the account ID, such as an Amazon S3
bucket ARN, you must use both aws:SourceAccount and aws:SourceArn
to limit permissions.
To protect against the confused deputy problem at scale, use the
aws:SourceOrgID or aws:SourceOrgPaths global condition context
key with the organization ID or organization path of the resource in your resource-based
policies. Policies that include the aws:SourceOrgID or
aws:SourceOrgPaths key will automatically include the correct accounts and
you don't have to manually update the policies when you add, remove, or move accounts in
your organization.
The following example shows how you can use the aws:SourceArn and
aws:SourceAccount global condition context keys in xray to prevent the
confused deputy problem.
{ "Sid": "BlockCrossAccountUnlessSameSource", "Effect": "Deny", "Principal": { "AWS": "*" }, "Action": [ "kms:Decrypt", "kms:GenerateDataKeyWithoutPlaintext" ], "Resource": "*", "Condition": { "StringNotEquals": { "aws:PrincipalAccount": "123456789012", "aws:SourceAccount": "123456789012" }, "ArnNotLike": { "aws:SourceArn": "arn:*:*:*:123456789012:*" } } }