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CLI tool which enables you to login and retrieve AWS temporary credentials using a SAML IDP

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saml2aws

GitHub Actions status Build status - Windows codecov

CLI tool which enables you to login and retrieve AWS temporary credentials using with ADFS or PingFederate Identity Providers.

This is based on python code from How to Implement a General Solution for Federated API/CLI Access Using SAML 2.0.

The process goes something like this:

  • Setup an account alias, either using the default or given a name
  • Prompt user for credentials
  • Log in to Identity Provider using form based authentication
  • Build a SAML assertion containing AWS roles
  • Optionally cache the SAML assertion (the cache is not encrypted)
  • Exchange the role and SAML assertion with AWS STS service to get a temporary set of credentials
  • Save these credentials to an aws profile named "saml"

Table of Contents

Requirements

Caveats

Aside from Okta, most of the providers in this project are using screen scraping to log users into SAML, this isn't ideal and hopefully vendors make this easier in the future. In addition to this there are some things you need to know:

  1. AWS defaults to session tokens being issued with a duration of up to 3600 seconds (1 hour), this can now be configured as per Enable Federated API Access to your AWS Resources for up to 12 hours Using IAM Roles and --session-duration flag.
  2. Every SAML provider is different, the login process, MFA support is pluggable and therefore some work may be needed to integrate with your identity server
  3. By default, the temporary security credentials returned do not support SigV4A. If you need SigV4A support then you must set the AWS_STS_REGIONAL_ENDPOINTS enviornment variable to regional when calling saml2aws so that aws-sdk-go uses a regional STS endpoint instead of the global one. See the note at the bottom of Signing AWS API requests and AWS STS Regionalized endpoints.

Install

OSX

If you're on OSX you can install saml2aws using homebrew!

brew install saml2aws
saml2aws --version

Windows

If you're on Windows you can install saml2aws using chocolatey!

choco install saml2aws
saml2aws --version

Linux

While brew is available for Linux you can also run the following without using a package manager.

mkdir -p ~/.local/bin
CURRENT_VERSION=$(curl -Ls https://api.github.com/repos/Versent/saml2aws/releases/latest | grep 'tag_name' | cut -d'v' -f2 | cut -d'"' -f1)
wget -c "https://github.com/Versent/saml2aws/releases/download/v${CURRENT_VERSION}/saml2aws_${CURRENT_VERSION}_linux_amd64.tar.gz" -O - | tar -xzv -C ~/.local/bin
chmod u+x ~/.local/bin/saml2aws
hash -r
saml2aws --version

If U2F support is required then there are separate builds for this - use the following download URL instead:

wget -c "https://github.com/Versent/saml2aws/releases/download/v${CURRENT_VERSION}/saml2aws-u2f_${CURRENT_VERSION}_linux_amd64.tar.gz" -O - | tar -xzv -C ~/.local/bin

Using Make

You will need Go Tools (you can check your package maintainer as well) installed and the Go Lint tool

Clone this repo to your $GOPATH/src directory

Now you can install by running

make
make install

Arch Linux and its derivatives

The saml2aws tool is available in AUR (saml2aws-bin), so you can install it using an available AUR helper:

  • Manjaro: $ pamac build saml2aws-bin

If you are on Void Linux you can use xbps to install the saml2aws package!

xbps-install saml2aws

Autocomplete

saml2aws can generate completion scripts.

Bash

Add the following line to your .bash_profile (or equivalent):

eval "$(saml2aws --completion-script-bash)"

Zsh

Add the following line to your .zshrc (or equivalent):

eval "$(saml2aws --completion-script-zsh)"

Dependency Setup

Install the AWS CLI see, in our case we are using homebrew on OSX.

brew install awscli

Usage

usage: saml2aws [<flags>] <command> [<args> ...]

A command line tool to help with SAML access to the AWS token service.

Flags:
      --help                   Show context-sensitive help (also try --help-long and --help-man).
      --version                Show application version.
      --quiet                  silences logs
      --verbose                Enable verbose logging
  -i, --provider=PROVIDER      This flag is obsolete. See: https://github.com/Versent/saml2aws#configuring-idp-accounts
  -a, --idp-account="default"  The name of the configured IDP account. (env: SAML2AWS_IDP_ACCOUNT)
      --idp-provider=IDP-PROVIDER
                               The configured IDP provider. (env: SAML2AWS_IDP_PROVIDER)
      --mfa=MFA                The name of the mfa. (env: SAML2AWS_MFA)
  -s, --skip-verify            Skip verification of server certificate. (env: SAML2AWS_SKIP_VERIFY)
      --url=URL                The URL of the SAML IDP server used to login. (env: SAML2AWS_URL)
      --username=USERNAME      The username used to login. (env: SAML2AWS_USERNAME)
      --password=PASSWORD      The password used to login. (env: SAML2AWS_PASSWORD)
      --mfa-token=MFA-TOKEN    The current MFA token (supported in Keycloak, ADFS, GoogleApps, Okta). (env: SAML2AWS_MFA_TOKEN)
      --role=ROLE              The ARN of the role to assume. (env: SAML2AWS_ROLE)
      --aws-urn=AWS-URN        The URN used by SAML when you login. (env: SAML2AWS_AWS_URN)
      --skip-prompt            Skip prompting for parameters during login.
      --session-duration=SESSION-DURATION
                               The duration of your AWS Session. (env: SAML2AWS_SESSION_DURATION)
      --disable-keychain       Do not use keychain at all. (env: SAML2AWS_DISABLE_KEYCHAIN)
  -r, --region=REGION          AWS region to use for API requests, e.g. us-east-1, us-gov-west-1, cn-north-1 (env: SAML2AWS_REGION)

Commands:
  help [<command>...]
    Show help.


  configure [<flags>]
    Configure a new IDP account.

        --app-id=APP-ID            OneLogin app id required for SAML assertion. (env: ONELOGIN_APP_ID)
        --client-id=CLIENT-ID      OneLogin client id, used to generate API access token. (env: ONELOGIN_CLIENT_ID)
        --client-secret=CLIENT-SECRET
                                   OneLogin client secret, used to generate API access token. (env: ONELOGIN_CLIENT_SECRET)
        --subdomain=SUBDOMAIN      OneLogin subdomain of your company account. (env: ONELOGIN_SUBDOMAIN)
        --mfa-ip-address=MFA-IP-ADDRESS
                                   IP address whitelisting defined in OneLogin MFA policies. (env: ONELOGIN_MFA_IP_ADDRESS)
    -p, --profile=PROFILE          The AWS profile to save the temporary credentials. (env: SAML2AWS_PROFILE)
        --resource-id=RESOURCE-ID  F5APM SAML resource ID of your company account. (env: SAML2AWS_F5APM_RESOURCE_ID)
        --config=CONFIG            Path/filename of saml2aws config file (env: SAML2AWS_CONFIGFILE)
        --cache-saml               Caches the SAML response (env: SAML2AWS_CACHE_SAML)
        --cache-file=CACHE-FILE    The location of the SAML cache file (env: SAML2AWS_SAML_CACHE_FILE)
        --disable-sessions         Do not use Okta sessions. Uses Okta sessions by default. (env: SAML2AWS_OKTA_DISABLE_SESSIONS)
        --disable-remember-device  Do not remember Okta MFA device. Remembers MFA device by default. (env: SAML2AWS_OKTA_DISABLE_REMEMBER_DEVICE)

  login [<flags>]
    Login to a SAML 2.0 IDP and convert the SAML assertion to an STS token.

    -p, --profile=PROFILE        The AWS profile to save the temporary credentials. (env: SAML2AWS_PROFILE)
        --duo-mfa-option=DUO-MFA-OPTION
                                 The MFA option you want to use to authenticate (supported providers: okta)(env: SAML_DUO_MFA_OPTION)
        --client-id=CLIENT-ID    OneLogin client id, used to generate API access token. (env: ONELOGIN_CLIENT_ID)
        --client-secret=CLIENT-SECRET
                                 OneLogin client secret, used to generate API access token. (env: ONELOGIN_CLIENT_SECRET)
        --mfa-ip-address=MFA-IP-ADDRESS
                                 IP address whitelisting defined in OneLogin MFA policies. (env: ONELOGIN_MFA_IP_ADDRESS)
        --force                  Refresh credentials even if not expired.
        --credential-process     Enables AWS Credential Process support by outputting credentials to STDOUT in a JSON message.
        --credentials-file=CREDENTIALS-FILE
                                 The file that will cache the credentials retrieved from AWS. When not specified, will use the default AWS credentials file location. (env: SAML2AWS_CREDENTIALS_FILE)
        --cache-saml             Caches the SAML response (env: SAML2AWS_CACHE_SAML)
        --cache-file=CACHE-FILE  The location of the SAML cache file (env: SAML2AWS_SAML_CACHE_FILE)
        --download-browser-driver  Automatically download browsers for Browser IDP. (env: SAML2AWS_AUTO_BROWSER_DOWNLOAD)
        --disable-sessions         Do not use Okta sessions. Uses Okta sessions by default. (env: SAML2AWS_OKTA_DISABLE_SESSIONS)
        --disable-remember-device  Do not remember Okta MFA device. Remembers MFA device by default. (env: SAML2AWS_OKTA_DISABLE_REMEMBER_DEVICE)

  exec [<flags>] [<command>...]
    Exec the supplied command with env vars from STS token.

    -p, --profile=PROFILE      The AWS profile to save the temporary credentials. (env: SAML2AWS_PROFILE)
        --exec-profile=EXEC-PROFILE
                               The AWS profile to utilize for command execution. Useful to allow the aws cli to perform secondary role assumption. (env: SAML2AWS_EXEC_PROFILE)
        --credentials-file=CREDENTIALS-FILE
                               The file that will cache the credentials retrieved from AWS. When not specified, will use the default AWS credentials file location. (env: SAML2AWS_CREDENTIALS_FILE)

  console [<flags>]
    Console will open the aws console after logging in.

        --exec-profile=EXEC-PROFILE
                               The AWS profile to utilize for console execution. (env: SAML2AWS_EXEC_PROFILE)
    -p, --profile=PROFILE      The AWS profile to save the temporary credentials. (env: SAML2AWS_PROFILE)
        --force                Refresh credentials even if not expired.
        --link                 Present link to AWS console instead of opening browser
        --credentials-file=CREDENTIALS-FILE
                               The file that will cache the credentials retrieved from AWS. When not specified, will use the default AWS credentials file location. (env: SAML2AWS_CREDENTIALS_FILE)

  list-roles
    List available role ARNs.
        --cache-saml             Caches the SAML response (env: SAML2AWS_CACHE_SAML)
        --cache-file=CACHE-FILE  The location of the SAML cache file (env: SAML2AWS_SAML_CACHE_FILE)


  script [<flags>]
    Emit a script that will export environment variables.

    -p, --profile=PROFILE      The AWS profile to save the temporary credentials. (env: SAML2AWS_PROFILE)
        --shell=bash           Type of shell environment. Options include: bash, /bin/sh, powershell, fish, env
        --credentials-file=CREDENTIALS-FILE
                               The file that will cache the credentials retrieved from AWS. When not specified, will use the default AWS credentials file location. (env: SAML2AWS_CREDENTIALS_FILE)


saml2aws script

If the script sub-command is called, saml2aws will output the following temporary security credentials:

export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID="ASIAI....UOCA"
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY="DuH...G1d"
export AWS_SESSION_TOKEN="AQ...1BQ=="
export AWS_SECURITY_TOKEN="AQ...1BQ=="
export AWS_CREDENTIAL_EXPIRATION="2016-09-04T38:27:00Z00:00"
SAML2AWS_PROFILE=saml

Powershell, sh and fish shells are supported as well. Env is useful for all AWS SDK compatible tools that can source an env file. It is a powerful combo with docker and the --env-file parameter.

If you use eval $(saml2aws script) frequently, you may want to create a alias for it:

zsh:

alias s2a="function(){eval $( $(command saml2aws) script --shell=bash --profile=$@);}"

bash:

function s2a { eval $( $(which saml2aws) script --shell=bash --profile=$@); }

env:

docker run -ti --env-file <(saml2aws script --shell=env) amazon/aws-cli s3 ls

saml2aws exec

If the exec sub-command is called, saml2aws will execute the command given as an argument: By default saml2aws will execute the command with temp credentials generated via saml2aws login.

The --exec-profile flag allows for a command to execute using an aws profile which may have chained "assume role" actions. (via 'source_profile' in ~/.aws/config)

options:
--exec-profile           Execute the given command utilizing a specific profile from your ~/.aws/config file

Configuring IDP Accounts

This is the new way of adding IDP provider accounts, it enables you to have named accounts with whatever settings you like and supports having one default account which is used if you omit the account flag. This replaces the --provider flag and old configuration file in 1.x.

To add a default IdP account to saml2aws just run the following command and follow the prompts.

$ saml2aws configure
? Please choose a provider: Ping
? AWS Profile myaccount

? URL https://example.com
? Username me@example.com

? Password
No password supplied

account {
  URL: https://example.com
  Username: me@example.com
  Provider: Ping
  MFA: Auto
  SkipVerify: false
  AmazonWebservicesURN: urn:amazon:webservices
  SessionDuration: 3600
  Profile: myaccount
  Region: us-east-1
}

Configuration saved for IDP account: default

Then to login using this account.

saml2aws login

You can also add named accounts, below is an example where I am setting up an account under the wolfeidau alias, again just follow the prompts.

saml2aws configure -a wolfeidau

You can also configure the account alias without prompts.

saml2aws configure -a wolfeidau --idp-provider KeyCloak --username mark@wolfe.id.au -r cn-north-1  \
  --url https://keycloak.wolfe.id.au/auth/realms/master/protocol/saml/clients/amazon-aws --skip-prompt

Then your ready to use saml2aws.

Example

Log into a service (without MFA).

$ saml2aws login
Using IDP Account default to access Ping https://id.example.com
To use saved password just hit enter.
Username [mark.wolfe@example.com]:
Password: ************

Authenticating as mark.wolfe@example.com ...
Selected role: arn:aws:iam::123123123123:role/AWS-Admin-CloudOPSNonProd
Requesting AWS credentials using SAML assertion
Saving credentials
Logged in as: arn:aws:sts::123123123123:assumed-role/AWS-Admin-CloudOPSNonProd/wolfeidau@example.com

Your new access key pair has been stored in the AWS configuration
Note that it will expire at 2016-09-19 15:59:49 +1000 AEST
To use this credential, call the AWS CLI with the --profile option (e.g. aws --profile saml ec2 describe-instances).

Log into a service (with MFA).

$ saml2aws login
Using IDP Account default to access Ping https://id.example.com
To use saved password just hit enter.
Username [mark.wolfe@example.com]:
Password: ************

Authenticating as mark.wolfe@example.com ...
Enter passcode: 123456

Selected role: arn:aws:iam::123123123123:role/AWS-Admin-CloudOPSNonProd
Requesting AWS credentials using SAML assertion
Saving credentials
Logged in as: arn:aws:sts::123123123123:assumed-role/AWS-Admin-CloudOPSNonProd/wolfeidau@example.com

Your new access key pair has been stored in the AWS configuration
Note that it will expire at 2016-09-19 15:59:49 +1000 AEST
To use this credential, call the AWS CLI with the --profile option (e.g. aws --profile saml ec2 describe-instances --region us-east-1).

Advanced Configuration

Windows Subsystem Linux (WSL) Configuration

If you are using WSL1 or WSL2, you might get the following error when attempting to save the credentials into the keychain

 No such interface “org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties” on object at path /

This happens because the preferred keyring back-end - uses the gnome-keyring by default - which requires X11 - and if you are not using Windows 11 with support for Linux GUI applications - this can be difficult without configuring a X11 forward.

There are 2 preferred approaches to workaround this issue:

Option 1: Disable Keychain

You can apply the --disable-keychain flag when using both the configure and login commands. Using this flag means that your credentials (such as your password to your IDP, or in the case of Okta the Okta Session Token) will not save to your keychain - and be skipped entierly. This means you will be required to enter your username and password each time you invoke the login command.

Option 2: Configure Pass to be the default keyring

There are a few steps involved with this option - however this option will save your credentials (such as your password to your IDP, and session tokens etc) into the pass[https://www.passwordstore.org/] keyring. The pass keyring is the standard Unix password manager. This option was heavily inspired by a similar issue in aws-vault

To configure pass to be the default keyring the following steps will need to be completed (assuming you are using Ubuntu 20.04 LTS):

  1. Install the pass backend and update gnupg, which encrypts passwords
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y pass gnupg
  1. Generate a key with gpg (gnupg) and take note of your public key
gpg --gen-key

The output of the gpg command will output the something similar to the following:

public and secret key created and signed.

pub   rsa3072 2021-04-22 [SC] [expires: 2023-04-22]
      844E426A53A64C2A916CBD1F522014D5FDBF6E3D
uid                      Meir Gabay <willy@wonka.com>
sub   rsa3072 2021-04-22 [E] [expires: 2023-04-22]
  1. Create a storage key in pass from the previously generated public (pub) key
pass init <GPG_PUBLIC_KEY>

during the init process you'll be requested to enter the passphrase provided in step 2

  1. Now, configure saml2aws to use the pass keyring. This can be done by setting the SAML2AWS_KEYRING_BACKEND environment variable to be pass. You'll need to also set the GPG_TTY to your current tty which means you can set the variable to "$( tty )"

which means the following can be added into your profile

export SAML2AWS_KEYRING_BACKEND=pass
export GPG_TTY="$( tty )"
  1. Profit! Now when you run login/configure commands - you'll be promoted once to enter your passphrase - and your credentials will be saved into your keyring!

Configuring Multiple Accounts

Configuring multiple accounts with custom role and profile in ~/.aws/config with goal being isolation between infra code when deploying to these environments. This setup assumes you're using separate roles and probably AWS accounts for dev and test and is designed to help operations staff avoid accidentally deploying to the wrong AWS account in complex environments. Note that this method configures SAML authentication to each AWS account directly (in this case different AWS accounts). In the example below, separate authentication values are configured for AWS accounts 'profile=customer-dev/awsAccount=was 121234567890' and 'profile=customer-test/awsAccount=121234567891'

Dev Account Setup

To setup the dev account run the following and enter URL, username and password, and assign a standard role to be automatically selected on login.

saml2aws configure -a customer-dev --role=arn:aws:iam::121234567890:role/customer-admin-role -p customer-dev

This will result in the following configuration in ~/.saml2aws.

[customer-dev]
url                     = https://id.customer.cloud
username                = mark@wolfe.id.au
provider                = Ping
mfa                     = Auto
skip_verify             = false
timeout                 = 0
aws_urn                 = urn:amazon:webservices
aws_session_duration    = 28800
aws_profile             = customer-dev
role_arn                = arn:aws:iam::121234567890:role/customer-admin-role
region                  = us-east-1

To use this you will need to export AWS_DEFAULT_PROFILE=customer-dev environment variable to target dev.

Test Account Setup

To setup the test account run the following and enter URL, username and password.

saml2aws configure -a customer-test --role=arn:aws:iam::121234567891:role/customer-admin-role -p customer-test

This results in the following configuration in ~/.saml2aws.

[customer-test]
url                     = https://id.customer.cloud
username                = mark@wolfe.id.au
provider                = Ping
mfa                     = Auto
skip_verify             = false
timeout                 = 0
aws_urn                 = urn:amazon:webservices
aws_session_duration    = 28800
aws_profile             = customer-test
role_arn                = arn:aws:iam::121234567891:role/customer-admin-role
region                  = us-east-1

To use this you will need to export AWS_DEFAULT_PROFILE=customer-test environment variable to target test.

Playwright Browser Drivers for Browser IDP

If you are using the Browser Identity Provider, on first invocation of saml2aws login you need to remember to install the browser drivers in order for playwright-go to work. Otherwise you will see the following error message:

Error authenticating to IDP.: could not start driver: fork/exec ... no such file or directory

To install the drivers, you can:

  • Pass --download-browser-driver to saml2aws login
  • Set in your shell environment SAML2AWS_AUTO_BROWSER_DOWNLOAD=true
  • Set download_browser_driver = true in your saml2aws config file, i.e. ~/.saml2aws

Advanced Configuration (Multiple AWS account access but SAML authenticate against a single 'SSO' AWS account)

Example: (Authenticate to my 'SSO' AWS account. With this setup, there is no need to authenticate again. We can now rely on IAM to assume role cross account)

~/.aws/credentials: #(these are generated by saml2aws login. Sets up SAML authentication into my AWS 'SSO' account)

[saml]
aws_access_key_id        = AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAB
aws_secret_access_key    = duqhdZPRjEdZPRjE=dZPRjEhKjfB
aws_session_token        = #REMOVED#
aws_security_token       = #REMOVED#
x_principal_arn          = arn:aws:sts::000000000123:assumed-role/myInitialAccount
x_security_token_expires = 2019-08-19T15:00:56-06:00

(Use AWS profiles to assume an aws role cross-account) (Note that the "source_profile" is set to SAML which is my SSO AWS account since it is already authenticated)

~/.aws/config:

[profile roleIn2ndAwsAccount]
source_profile=saml
role_arn=arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/OtherRoleInAnyFederatedAccount # Note the different account number here
role_session_name=myAccountName

[profile extraRroleIn2ndAwsAccount]
# this profile uses a _third_ level of role assumption
source_profile=roleIn2ndAwsAccount
role_arn=arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/OtherRoleInAnyFederatedAccount

Running saml2aws without --exec-profile flag:

saml2aws exec aws sts get-caller-identity
{
    "UserId": "AROAYAROAYAROAYOO:myInitialAccount",
    "Account": "000000000123",
    "Arn": "arn:aws:sts::000000000123:assumed-role/myInitialAccount"  # This shows my 'SSO' account (SAML profile)
}

Running saml2aws with --exec-profile flag:

When using '--exec-profile' I can assume-role into a different AWS account without re-authenticating. Note that it does not re-authenticate since we are already authenticated via the SSO account.

saml2aws exec --exec-profile roleIn2ndAwsAccount aws sts get-caller-identity
{
    "UserId": "YOOYOOYOOYOOYOOA:/myAccountName",
    "Account": "123456789012",
    "Arn": "arn:aws:sts::123456789012:assumed-role/myAccountName"
}

As an example

saml2aws login

aws s3 ls --profile saml

An error occurred (AccessDenied) when calling the ListBuckets operation: Access Denied
# This is denied in this example because there are no S3 buckets in the 'SSO' AWS account

saml2aws exec --exec-profile roleIn2ndAwsAccount aws s3 ls  # Runs given CMD with environment configured from --exec-profile role

# If we check env variables we see that our environment is configured with temporary credentials for our 'assumed role'
env | grep AWS
AWS_SESSION_TTL=12h
AWS_FEDERATION_TOKEN_TTL=12h
AWS_ASSUME_ROLE_TTL=1h
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=AAAAAAAASORTENED
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=secretShortened+6jJ5SMqsM5CkYi3Gw7
AWS_SESSION_TOKEN=ShortenedTokenXXX=
AWS_SECURITY_TOKEN=ShortenedSecurityTokenXXX=
AWS_CREDENTIAL_EXPIRATION=2016-09-04T38:27:00Z00:00

# If we desire to execute multiple commands utilizing our assumed profile, we can obtain a new shell with Env variables configured for access

saml2aws exec --exec-profile roleIn2ndAwsAccount $SHELL  # Get a new shell with AWS env vars configured for 'assumed role' account access

# We are now able to execute AWS cli commands with our assume role permissions

# Note that we do not need a --profile flag because our environment variables were set up for this access when we obtained a new shell with the --exec-profile flag

aws s3 ls
2019-07-30 01:32:59 264998d7606497040-sampleBucket

aws iam list-groups
{
    "Groups": [
        {
            "Path": "/",
            "GroupName": "MyGroup",
            "GroupId": "AGAGTENTENTENGOCQFK",
            "Arn": "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:group/MyGroup",
            "CreateDate": "2019-05-13T16:12:19Z"
            ]
        }
}

Advanced Configuration - additional parameters

There are few additional parameters allowing to customise saml2aws configuration. Use following parameters in ~/.saml2aws file:

  • http_attempts_count - configures the number of attempts to send http requests in order to authorise with saml provider. Defaults to 1
  • http_retry_delay - configures the duration (in seconds) of timeout between attempts to send http requests to saml provider. Defaults to 1
  • region - configures which region endpoints to use, See Audience and partition
  • target_url - look for a target endpoint other than signin.aws.amazon.com/saml. The Okta, Pingfed, Pingone and Shibboleth ECP providers need to either explicitly send or look for this URL in a response in order to obtain or identify an appropriate authentication response. This can be overridden here if you wish to authenticate for something other than AWS.

Example: typical configuration with such parameters would look like follows:

[default]
url                     = https://id.customer.cloud
username                = user@versent.com.au
provider                = Ping
mfa                     = Auto
skip_verify             = false
timeout                 = 0
aws_urn                 = urn:amazon:webservices
aws_session_duration    = 28800
aws_profile             = customer-dev
role_arn                = arn:aws:iam::121234567890:role/customer-admin-role
http_attempts_count     = 3
http_retry_delay        = 1
region                  = us-east-1

Building

macOS

To build this software on osx clone to the repo to $GOPATH/src/github.com/versent/saml2aws and ensure you have $GOPATH/bin in your $PATH.

make mod

Install the binary to $GOPATH/bin.

make install

Then to test the software just run.

make test

Before raising a PR please run the linter.

make lint-fix

Linux

To build this software on Debian/Ubuntu, you need to install a build dependency:

sudo apt install libudev-dev

You also need GoReleaser installed, and the binary (or a symlink) in bin/goreleaser.

ln -s $(command -v goreleaser) bin/goreleaser

Then you can build:

make build

Environment vars

The exec sub command will export the following environment variables.

  • AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
  • AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
  • AWS_SESSION_TOKEN
  • AWS_SECURITY_TOKEN
  • EC2_SECURITY_TOKEN
  • AWS_PROFILE
  • AWS_DEFAULT_PROFILE
  • AWS_CREDENTIAL_EXPIRATION

Note: That profile environment variables enable you to use exec with a script or command which requires an explicit profile.

Provider Specific Documentation

Dependencies

This tool would not be possible without some great opensource libraries.

Releasing

Install github-release.

go get github.com/buildkite/github-release

To release run.

make release

Debugging Issues with IDPs

There are two levels of debugging, first emits debug information and the URL / Method / Status line of requests.

saml2aws login --verbose

The second emits the content of requests and responses, this includes authentication related information so don't copy and paste it into chat or tickets!

DUMP_CONTENT=true saml2aws login --verbose

Using saml2aws as credential process

Credential Process is a convenient way of interfacing credential providers with the AWS Cli.

You can use saml2aws as a credential provider by simply configuring it and then adding a profile to the AWS configuration. saml2aws has a flag --credential-process generating an output with the right JSON format, as well as a flag --quiet that will block the logging from being displayed. The AWS credential file (typically ~/.aws/credentials) has precedence over the credential_process provider. That means that if credentials are present in the file, the credential process will not trigger. To counter that you can override the aws credential location of saml2aws to another file using --credential-file or specifying it during configure.

An example of the aws configuration (~/.aws/config):

[profile mybucket]
region = us-west-1
credential_process = saml2aws login --skip-prompt --quiet --credential-process --role <ROLE> --profile mybucket

When using the aws cli with the mybucket profile, the authentication process will be run and the aws will then be executed based on the returned credentials.

Caching the saml2aws SAML assertion for immediate reuse

You can use the flag --cache-saml in order to cache the SAML assertion at authentication time. The SAML assertion cache has a very short validity (5 min) and can be used to authenticate to several roles with a single MFA validation.

there is a file per saml2aws profile, the cache directory is called saml2aws and is located in your .aws directory in your user homedir.

You can toggle --cache-saml during login or during list-roles, and you can set it once during configure and use it implicitly.

Okta Sessions

This requires the use of the keychain (local credentials store). If you disabled the keychain using --disable-keychain, Okta sessions will also be disabled.

Okta sessions are enabled by default. This will store the Okta session locally and save your device for MFA. This means that if the session has not yet expired, you will not be prompted for MFA.

  • To disable remembering the device, you can toggle --disable-remember-device during login or configure commands.
  • To disable using Okta sessions, you can toggle --disable-sessions during login or configure commands.
    • This will also disable the Okta MFA remember device feature

Use the --force flag during login command to prompt for AWS role selection.

If Okta sessions are disabled via any of the methods mentioned above, the login process will default to the standard authentication process (without using sessions).

Please note that your Okta session duration and MFA policies are governed by your Okta host organization.

License

This code is Copyright (c) 2018 Versent and released under the MIT license. All rights not explicitly granted in the MIT license are reserved. See the included LICENSE.md file for more details.

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CLI tool which enables you to login and retrieve AWS temporary credentials using a SAML IDP

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