--- layout: "docs" page_title: "Auth Backend: AWS-EC2" sidebar_current: "docs-auth-aws-ec2" description: |- The aws-ec2 backend allows automated authentication of AWS EC2 instances. --- # Auth Backend: aws-ec2 The aws-ec2 auth backend provides a secure introduction mechanism for AWS EC2 instances, allowing automated retrieval of a Vault token. Unlike most Vault authentication backends, this backend does not require first-deploying, or provisioning security-sensitive credentials (tokens, username/password, client certificates, etc). Instead, it treats AWS as a Trusted Third Party and uses the cryptographically signed dynamic metadata information that uniquely represents each EC2 instance. ## Authentication Workflow EC2 instances have access to metadata describing the instance. (For those not familiar with instance metadata, details can be found [here](http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-instance-metadata.html).) One piece of "dynamic metadata" available to the EC2 instance, is the instance identity document, a JSON representation of a collection of instance metadata. Importantly, AWS also provides a copy of this metadata in PKCS#7 format signed with its public key, and publishes the public keys used (which are grouped by region). (Details on the instance identity document and the signature can be found [here](http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/instance-identity-documents.html).) During login, the backend verifies the signature on the PKCS#7 document, ensuring that the information contained within, is certified accurate by AWS. Before succeeding the login attempt and returning a Vault token, the backend verifies the current running status of the instance via the EC2 API. There are various modifications to this workflow that provide more or less security, as detailed later in this documentation. ## Authorization Workflow The basic mechanism of operation is per-role. Roles are registered in the backend and associated with various optional restrictions, such as the set of allowed policies and max TTLs on the generated tokens. Each role can be specified with the constraints that are to be met during the login. For example, one such constraint that is supported is to bind against AMI ID. A role which is bound to a specific AMI, can only be used for login by those instances that are deployed on the same AMI. In many cases, an organization will use a "seed AMI" that is specialized after bootup by configuration management or similar processes. For this reason, a role entry in the backend can also be associated with a "role tag". These tags are generated by the backend and are placed as the value of a tag with the given key on the EC2 instance. The role tag can be used to further restrict the parameters set on the role, but cannot be used to grant additional privileges. If a role with an AMI bind constraint has "role tag" enabled on the role, and the EC2 instance performing login does not have an expected tag on it, or if the tag on the instance is deleted for some reason, authentication fails. The role tags can be generated at will by an operator with appropriate API access. They are HMAC-signed by a per-role key stored within the backend, allowing the backend to verify the authenticity of a found role tag and ensure that it has not been tampered with. There is also a mechanism to blacklist role tags if one has been found to be distributed outside of its intended set of machines. ## Client Nonce If an unintended party gains access to the PKCS#7 signature of the identity document (which by default is available to every process and user that gains access to an EC2 instance), it can impersonate that instance and fetch a Vault token. The backend addresses this problem by using a Trust On First Use (TOFU) mechanism that allows the first client to present the PKCS#7 signature of the document to be authenticated and denying the rest. An important property of this design is detection of unauthorized access: if an unintended party authenticates, the intended client will be unable to authenticate and can raise an alert for investigation. During the first login, the backend stores the instance ID that authenticated in a `whitelist`. One method of operation of the backend is to disallow any authentication attempt for an instance ID contained in the whitelist, using the 'disallow_reauthentication' option on the role, meaning that an instance is allowed to login only once. However, this has consequences for token rotation, as it means that once a token has expired, subsequent authentication attempts would fail. By default, reauthentication is enabled in this backend, and can be turned off using 'disallow_reauthentication' parameter on the registered role. In the default method of operation, the backend will return a unique nonce during the first authentication attempt, as part of auth `metadata`. Clients should present this `nonce` for subsequent login attempts and it should match the `nonce` cached at the identity-whitelist entry at the backend. Since only the original client knows the `nonce`, only the original client is allowed to reauthenticate. (This is the reason that this is a whitelist rather than a blacklist; by default, it's keeping track of clients allowed to reauthenticate, rather than those that are not.). Clients can choose to provide a `nonce` even for the first login attempt, in which case the provided `nonce` will be tied to the cached identity-whitelist entry. It is recommended to use a strong `nonce` value in this case. It is up to the client to behave correctly with respect to the nonce; if the client stores the nonce on disk it can survive reboots, but could also give access to other users or applications on the instance. It is also up to the operator to ensure that client nonces are in fact unique; sharing nonces allows a compromise of the nonce value to enable an attacker that gains access to any EC2 instance to imitate the legitimate client on that instance. This is why nonces can be disabled on the backend side in favor of only a single authentication per instance; in some cases, such as when using ASGs, instances are immutable and single-boot anyways, and in conjunction with a high max TTL, reauthentication may not be needed (and if it is, the instance can simply be shut down and allow ASG to start a new one). In both cases, entries can be removed from the whitelist by instance ID, allowing reauthentication by a client if the nonce is lost (or not used) and an operator approves the process. One other point: if available by the OS/distribution being used with the EC2 instance, it is not a bad idea to firewall access to the signed PKCS#7 metadata to ensure that it is accessible only to the matching user(s) that require access. ## Advanced Options and Caveats ### Dynamic Management of Policies Via Role Tags If the instance is required to have customized set of policies based on the role it plays, the `role_tag` option can be used to provide a tag to set on instances, for a given role. When this option is set, during login, along with verification of PKCS#7 signature and instance health, the backend will query for the value of a specific tag with the configured key that is attached to the instance. The tag holds information that represents a *subset* of privileges that are set on the role and are used to further restrict the set of the role's privileges for that particular instance. A `role_tag` can be created using `auth/aws-ec2/role//tag` endpoint and is immutable. The information present in the tag is SHA256 hashed and HMAC protected. The per-role key to HMAC is only maintained in the backend. This prevents an adversarial operator from modifying the tag when setting it on the EC2 instance in order to escalate privileges. When 'role_tag' option is enabled on a role, the instances are required to have a role tag. If the tag is not found on the EC2 instance, authentication will fail. This is to ensure that privileges of an instance are never escalated for not having the tag on it or for getting the tag removed. If the role tag creation does not specify the policy component, the client will inherit the allowed policies set on the role. If the role tag creation specifies the policy component but it contains no policies, the token will contain only the `default` policy; by default, this policy allows only manipulation (revocation, renewal, lookup) of the existing token, plus access to its [cubbyhole](https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/secrets/cubbyhole/index.html). This can be useful to allow instances access to a secure "scratch space" for storing data (via the token's cubbyhole) but without granting any access to other resources provided by or resident in Vault. ### Handling Lost Client Nonces If an EC2 instance loses its client nonce (due to a reboot, a stop/start of the client, etc.), subsequent login attempts will not succeed. If the client nonce is lost, normally the only option is to delete the entry corresponding to the instance ID from the identity `whitelist` in the backend. This can be done via the `auth/aws-ec2/identity-whitelist/` endpoint. This allows a new client nonce to be accepted by the backend during the next login request. Under certain circumstances there is another useful setting. When the instance is placed onto a host upon creation, it is given a `pendingTime` value in the instance identity document (documentation from AWS does not cover this option, unfortunately). If an instance is stopped and started, the `pendingTime` value is updated (this does not apply to reboots, however). The backend can take advantage of this via the `allow_instance_migration` option, which is set per-role. When this option is enabled, if the client nonce does not match the saved nonce, the `pendingTime` value in the instance identity document will be checked; if it is newer than the stored `pendingTime` value, the backend assumes that the client was stopped/started and allows the client to log in successfully, storing the new nonce as the valid nonce for that client. This essentially re-starts the TOFU mechanism any time the instance is stopped and started, so should be used with caution. Just like with initial authentication, the legitimate client should have a way to alert (or an alert should trigger based on its logs) if it is denied authentication. Unfortunately, the `allow_instance_migration` only helps during stop/start actions; the current metadata does not provide for a way to allow this automatic behavior during reboots. The backend will be updated if this needed metadata becomes available. The `allow_instance_migration` option is set per-role, and can also be specified in a role tag. Since role tags can only restrict behavior, if the option is set to `false` on the role, a value of `true` in the role tag takes effect; however, if the option is set to `true` on the role, a value set in the role tag has no effect. ### Disabling Reauthentication If in a given organization's architecture, a client fetches a long-lived Vault token and has no need to rotate the token, all future logins for that instance ID can be disabled. If the option `disallow_reauthentication` is set, only one login will be allowed per instance. If the intended client successfully retrieves a token during login, it can be sure that its token will not be hijacked by another entity. When `disallow_reauthentication` option is enabled, the client can choose not to supply a nonce during login, although it is not an error to do so (the nonce is simply ignored). Note that reauthentication is enabled by default. If only a single login is desired, `disallow_reauthentication` should be set explicitly on the role or on the role tag. The `disallow_reauthentication` option is set per-role, and can also be specified in a role tag. Since role tags can only restrict behavior, if the option is set to `false` on the role, a value of `true` in the role tag takes effect; however, if the option is set to `true` on the role, a value set in the role tag has no effect. ### Blacklisting Role Tags Role tags are tied to a specific role, but the backend has no control over, which instances using that role, should have any particular role tag; that is purely up to the operator. Although role tags are only restrictive (a tag cannot escalate privileges above what is set on its role), if a role tag is found to have been used incorrectly, and the administrator wants to ensure that the role tag has no further effect, the role tag can be placed on a `blacklist` via the endpoint `auth/aws-ec2/roletag-blacklist/`. Note that this will not invalidate the tokens that were already issued; this only blocks any further login requests from those instances that have the blacklisted tag attached to them. ### Expiration Times and Tidying of `blacklist` and `whitelist` Entries The expired entries in both identity `whitelist` and role tag `blacklist` are deleted automatically. The entries in both of these lists contain an expiration time which is dynamically determined by three factors: `max_ttl` set on the role, `max_ttl` set on the role tag, and `max_ttl` value of the backend mount. The least of these three dictates the maximum TTL of the issued token, and correspondingly will be set as the expiration times of these entries. The endpoints `aws/auth/tidy/identity-whitelist` and `aws/auth/tidy/roletag-blacklist` are provided to clean up the entries present in these lists. These endpoints allow defining a safety buffer, such that an entry must not only be expired, but be past expiration by the amount of time dictated by the safety buffer in order to actually remove the entry. Automatic deletion of expired entries is performed by the periodic function of the backend. This function does the tidying of both blacklist role tags and whitelist identities. Periodic tidying is activated by default and will have a safety buffer of 72 hours, meaning only those entries are deleted which were expired before 72 hours from when the tidy operation is being performed. This can be configured via `config/tidy/roletag-blacklist` and `config/tidy/identity-whitelist` endpoints. ### Varying Public Certificates The AWS public certificate, which contains the public key used to verify the PKCS#7 signature, varies for different AWS regions. The primary AWS public certificate, which covers most AWS regions, is already included in Vault and does not need to be added. Instances whose PKCS#7 signatures cannot be verified by the default public certificate included in Vault can register a different public certificate which can be found [here] (http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/instance-identity-documents.html), via the `auth/aws-ec2/config/certificate/` endpoint. ### Dangling Tokens An EC2 instance, after authenticating itself with the backend gets a Vault token. After that, if the instance terminates or goes down for any reason, the backend will not be aware of such events. The token issued will still be valid, until it expires. The token will likely be expired sooner than its lifetime when the instance fails to renew the token on time. ## Authentication ### Via the CLI #### Enable AWS EC2 authentication in Vault. ``` $ vault auth-enable aws-ec2 ``` #### Configure the credentials required to make AWS API calls If not specified, Vault will attempt to use standard environment variables (`AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID` and `AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY`) or IAM EC2 instance role credentials if available. The IAM account or role to which the credentials map must allow the `ec2:DescribeInstances` action. In addition, if IAM Role binding is used (see `bound_iam_role_arn` below), `iam:GetInstanceProfile` must also be allowed. ``` $ vault write auth/aws-ec2/config/client secret_key=vCtSM8ZUEQ3mOFVlYPBQkf2sO6F/W7a5TVzrl3Oj access_key=VKIAJBRHKH6EVTTNXDHA ``` #### Configure the policies on the role. ``` $ vault write auth/aws-ec2/role/dev-role bound_ami_id=ami-fce3c696 policies=prod,dev max_ttl=500h ``` #### Perform the login operation ``` $ vault write auth/aws-ec2/login role=dev-role pkcs7=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 nonce=5defbf9e-a8f9-3063-bdfc-54b7a42a1f95 ``` ### Via the API #### Enable AWS EC2 authentication in Vault. ``` curl -X POST -H "x-vault-token:123" "http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/sys/auth/aws" -d '{"type":"aws"}' ``` #### Configure the credentials required to make AWS API calls. ``` curl -X POST -H "x-vault-token:123" "http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/auth/aws-ec2/config/client" -d '{"access_key":"VKIAJBRHKH6EVTTNXDHA", "secret_key":"vCtSM8ZUEQ3mOFVlYPBQkf2sO6F/W7a5TVzrl3Oj"}' ``` #### Configure the policies on the role. ``` curl -X POST -H "x-vault-token:123" "http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/auth/aws-ec2/role/dev-role -d '{"bound_ami_id":"ami-fce3c696","policies":"prod,dev","max_ttl":"500h"}' ``` #### Perform the login operation ``` curl -X POST "http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/auth/aws-ec2/login" -d '{"role":"dev-role","pkcs7":"'$(curl -s http://169.254.169.254/latest/dynamic/instance-identity/pkcs7 | tr -d '\n')'","nonce":"5defbf9e-a8f9-3063-bdfc-54b7a42a1f95"}' ``` The response will be in JSON. For example: ```javascript { "auth": { "renewable": true, "lease_duration": 72000, "metadata": { "role_tag_max_ttl": "0s", "role": "ami-f083709d", "region": "us-east-1", "nonce": "5defbf9e-a8f9-3063-bdfc-54b7a42a1f95", "instance_id": "i-a832f734", "ami_id": "ami-f083709d" }, "policies": [ "default", "dev", "prod" ], "accessor": "5cd96cd1-58b7-2904-5519-75ddf957ec06", "client_token": "150fc858-2402-49c9-56a5-f4b57f2c8ff1" }, "warnings": null, "wrap_info": null, "data": null, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "", "request_id": "d7d50c06-56b8-37f4-606c-ccdc87a1ee4c" } ``` ## API ### /auth/aws-ec2/config/client #### POST
Description
Configures the credentials required to perform API calls to AWS. The instance identity document fetched from the PKCS#7 signature will provide the EC2 instance ID. The credentials configured using this endpoint will be used to query the status of the instances via DescribeInstances API. If static credentials are not provided using this endpoint, then the credentials will be retrieved from the environment variables `AWS_ACCESS_KEY`, `AWS_SECRET_KEY` and `AWS_REGION` respectively. If the credentials are still not found and if the backend is configured on an EC2 instance with metadata querying capabilities, the credentials are fetched automatically.
Method
POST
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/config/client`
Parameters
  • access_key required AWS Access key with permissions to query EC2 DescribeInstances API.
  • secret_key required AWS Secret key with permissions to query EC2 DescribeInstances API.
  • endpoint optional URL to override the default generated endpoint for making AWS EC2 API calls.
Returns
`204` response code.
#### GET
Description
Returns the previously configured AWS access credentials.
Method
GET
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/config/client`
Parameters
None.
Returns
``` { "auth": null, "warnings": null, "data": { "secret_key": "vCtSM8ZUEQ3mOFVlYPBQkf2sO6F/W7a5TVzrl3Oj", "access_key": "VKIAJBRHKH6EVTTNXDHA" "endpoint" "", }, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
#### DELETE
Description
Deletes the previously configured AWS access credentials.
Method
DELETE
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/config/client`
Parameters
None.
Returns
`204` response code.
### /auth/aws-ec2/config/certificate/ #### POST
Description
Registers an AWS public key to be used to verify the instance identity documents. While the PKCS#7 signature of the identity documents have DSA digest, the identity signature will have RSA digest, and hence the public keys for each type varies respectively. Indicate the type of the public key using the "type" parameter.
Method
POST
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/config/certificate/`
Parameters
  • cert_name required Name of the certificate.
  • aws_public_cert required AWS Public key required to verify PKCS7 signature of the EC2 instance metadata.
  • type optional Takes the value of either "pkcs7" or "identity", indicating the type of document which can be verified using the given certificate. The PKCS#7 document will have a DSA digest and the identity signature will have an RSA signature, and accordingly the public certificates to verify those also vary. Defaults to "pkcs7".
Returns
`204` response code.
#### GET
Description
Returns the previously configured AWS public key.
Method
GET
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/config/certificate/`
Parameters
None.
Returns
```javascript { "auth": null, "warnings": null, "data": { "aws_public_cert": "-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----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\n7HX32MxXYruse9ACFBNGmdX2ZBrVNGrN9N2f6ROk0k9K\n-----END CERTIFICATE-----\n" }, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
#### LIST
Description
Lists all the AWS public certificates that are registered with the backend.
Method
LIST/GET
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/config/certificates` (LIST) or `/auth/aws-ec2/config/certificates?list=true` (GET)
Parameters
None.
Returns
```javascript { "auth": null, "warnings": null, "data": { "keys": [ "cert1" ] }, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
### /auth/aws-ec2/config/tidy/identity-whitelist ##### POST
Description
Configures the periodic tidying operation of the whitelisted identity entries.
Method
POST
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/config/tidy/identity-whitelist`
Parameters
  • safety_buffer optional The amount of extra time that must have passed beyond the `roletag` expiration, before it is removed from the backend storage. Defaults to 72h.
  • disable_periodic_tidy optional If set to 'true', disables the periodic tidying of the 'identity-whitelist/' entries.
Returns
`204` response code.
#### GET
Description
Returns the previously configured periodic whitelist tidying settings.
Method
GET
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/config/tidy/identity-whitelist`
Parameters
None.
Returns
```javascript { "auth": null, "warnings": null, "data": { "safety_buffer": 60, "disable_periodic_tidy": false }, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
#### DELETE
Description
Deletes the previously configured periodic whitelist tidying settings.
Method
DELETE
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/config/tidy/identity-whitelist`
Parameters
None.
Returns
`204` response code.
### /auth/aws-ec2/config/tidy/roletag-blacklist ##### POST
Description
Configures the periodic tidying operation of the blacklisted role tag entries.
Method
POST
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/config/tidy/roletag-blacklist`
Parameters
  • safety_buffer optional The amount of extra time that must have passed beyond the `roletag` expiration, before it is removed from the backend storage. Defaults to 72h.
  • disable_periodic_tidy optional If set to 'true', disables the periodic tidying of the 'roletag-blacklist/' entries.
Returns
`204` response code.
#### GET
Description
Returns the previously configured periodic blacklist tidying settings.
Method
GET
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/config/tidy/roletag-blacklist`
Parameters
None.
Returns
```javascript { "auth": null, "warnings": null, "data": { "safety_buffer": 60, "disable_periodic_tidy": false }, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
#### DELETE
Description
Deletes the previously configured periodic blacklist tidying settings.
Method
DELETE
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/config/tidy/roletag-blacklist`
Parameters
None.
Returns
`204` response code.
### /auth/aws-ec2/role/[role] #### POST
Description
Registers a role in the backend. Only those instances which are using the role registered using this endpoint, will be able to perform the login operation. Contraints can be specified on the role, that are applied on the instances attempting to login. At least one constraint should be specified on the role.
Method
POST
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/role/`
Parameters
  • role required Name of the role.
  • bound_ami_id optional If set, defines a constraint on the EC2 instances that they should be using the AMI ID specified by this parameter.
  • bound_account_id optional If set, defines a constraint on the EC2 instances that the account ID in its identity document to match the one specified by this parameter.
  • bound_iam_role_arn optional If set, defines a constraint on the authenticating EC2 instance that it must match the IAM role ARN specified by this parameter. The value is prefix-matched (as though it were a glob ending in `*`). The configured IAM user or EC2 instance role must be allowed to execute the `iam:GetInstanceProfile` action if this is specified.
  • bound_iam_instance_profile_arn optional If set, defines a constraint on the EC2 instances to be associated with an IAM instance profile ARN which has a prefix that matches the value specified by this parameter. The value is prefix-matched (as though it were a glob ending in `*`).
  • role_tag optional If set, enables the role tags for this role. The value set for this field should be the 'key' of the tag on the EC2 instance. The 'value' of the tag should be generated using 'role//tag' endpoint. Defaults to an empty string, meaning that role tags are disabled.
  • ttl optional The TTL period of tokens issued using this role, provided as "1h", where hour is the largest suffix.
  • max_ttl optional The maximum allowed lifetime of tokens issued using this role.
  • policies optional Policies to be set on tokens issued using this role.
  • allow_instance_migration optional If set, allows migration of the underlying instance where the client resides. This keys off of pendingTime in the metadata document, so essentially, this disables the client nonce check whenever the instance is migrated to a new host and pendingTime is newer than the previously-remembered time. Use with caution.
  • disallow_reauthentication optional If set, only allows a single token to be granted per instance ID. In order to perform a fresh login, the entry in whitelist for the instance ID needs to be cleared using 'auth/aws-ec2/identity-whitelist/' endpoint. Defaults to 'false'.
Returns
`204` response code.
#### GET
Description
Returns the previously registered role configuration.
Method
GET
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/role/`
Parameters
None.
Returns
```javascript { "auth": null, "warnings": null, "data": { "bound_ami_id": "ami-fce36987", "role_tag": "", "policies": [ "default", "dev", "prod" ], "max_ttl": 1800000, "disallow_reauthentication": false, "allow_instance_migration": false }, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
#### LIST
Description
Lists all the roles that are registered with the backend.
Method
LIST/GET
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/roles` (LIST) or `/auth/aws-ec2/roles?list=true` (GET)
Parameters
None.
Returns
```javascript { "auth": null, "warnings": null, "data": { "keys": [ "dev-role", "prod-role" ] }, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
#### DELETE
Description
Deletes the previously registered role.
Method
DELETE
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/role/`
Parameters
None.
Returns
`204` response code.
### /auth/aws-ec2/role/[role]/tag #### POST
Description
Creates a role tag on the role, which help in restricting the capabilities that are set on the role. Role tags are not tied to any specific ec2 instance unless specified explicitly using the `instance_id` parameter. By default, role tags are designed to be used across all instances that satisfies the constraints on the role. Regardless of which instances have role tags on them, capabilities defined in a role tag must be a strict subset of the given role's capabilities. Note that, since adding and removing a tag is often a widely distributed privilege, care needs to be taken to ensure that the instances are attached with correct tags to not let them gain more privileges than what were intended. If a role tag is changed, the capabilities inherited by the instance will be those defined on the new role tag. Since those must be a subset of the role capabilities, the role should never provide more capabilities than any given instance can be allowed to gain in a worst-case scenario.
Method
POST
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/role//tag`
Parameters
  • role required Name of the role.
  • policies optional Policies to be associated with the tag. If set, must be a subset of the role's policies. If set, but set to an empty value, only the 'default' policy will be given to issued tokens.
  • max_ttl optional If set, specifies the maximum allowed token lifetime.
  • instance_id optional Instance ID for which this tag is intended for. If set, the created tag can only be used by the instance with the given ID.
  • disallow_reauthentication optional If set, only allows a single token to be granted per instance ID. This can be cleared with the auth/aws-ec2/identity-whitelist endpoint. Defaults to 'false'.
  • allow_instance_migration optional If set, allows migration of the underlying instance where the client resides. This keys off of pendingTime in the metadata document, so essentially, this disables the client nonce check whenever the instance is migrated to a new host and pendingTime is newer than the previously-remembered time. Use with caution. Defaults to 'false'.
Returns
```javascript { "auth": null, "warnings": null, "data": { "tag_value": "v1:09Vp0qGuyB8=:r=dev-role:p=default,prod:d=false:t=300h0m0s:uPLKCQxqsefRhrp1qmVa1wsQVUXXJG8UZP/pJIdVyOI=", "tag_key": "VaultRole" }, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
### /auth/aws-ec2/login #### POST
Description
Fetch a token. This endpoint verifies the pkcs7 signature of the instance identity document. Verifies that the instance is actually in a running state. Cross checks the constraints defined on the role with which the login is being performed. As an alternative to pkcs7 signature, the identity document along with its RSA digest can be supplied to this endpoint.
Method
POST
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/login`
Parameters
  • role optional Name of the role against which the login is being attempted. If `role` is not specified, then the login endpoint looks for a role bearing the name of the AMI ID of the EC2 instance that is trying to login. If a matching role is not found, login fails.
  • identity required Base64 encoded EC2 instance identity document. This needs to be supplied along with the `signature` parameter. If using `curl` for fetching the identity document, consider using the option `-w 0` while piping the output to `base64` binary.
  • signature required Base64 encoded SHA256 RSA signature of the instance identity document. This needs to be supplied along with `identity` parameter.
  • pkcs7 required PKCS7 signature of the identity document with all `\n` characters removed. Either this needs to be set *OR* both `identity` and `signature` need to be set.
  • nonce optional The nonce to be used for subsequent login requests. If this parameter is not specified at all and if reauthentication is allowed, then the backend will generate a random nonce, attaches it to the instance's identity-whitelist entry and returns the nonce back as part of auth metadata. This value should be used with further login requests, to establish client authenticity. Clients can choose to set a custom nonce if preferred, in which case, it is recommended that clients provide a strong nonce. If a nonce is provided but with an empty value, it indicates intent to disable reauthentication. Note that, when `disallow_reauthentication` option is enabled on either the role or the role tag, the `nonce` holds no significance.
Returns
```javascript { "auth": { "renewable": true, "lease_duration": 1800000, "metadata": { "role_tag_max_ttl": "0", "instance_id": "i-de0f1344" "ami_id": "ami-fce36983" "role": "dev-role" }, "policies": [ "default", "dev", ], "accessor": "20b89871-e6f2-1160-fb29-31c2f6d4645e", "client_token": "c9368254-3f21-aded-8a6f-7c818e81b17a" }, "warnings": null, "data": null, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
### /auth/aws-ec2/roletag-blacklist/ #### POST
Description
Places a valid role tag in a blacklist. This ensures that the role tag cannot be used by any instance to perform a login operation again. Note that if the role tag was previously used to perform a successful login, placing the tag in the blacklist does not invalidate the already issued token.
Method
POST
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/roletag-blacklist/`
Parameters
  • role_tag required Role tag to be blacklisted. The tag can be supplied as-is. In order to avoid any encoding problems, it can be base64 encoded.
Returns
`204` response code.
#### GET
Description
Returns the blacklist entry of a previously blacklisted role tag.
Method
GET
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/broletag-blacklist/`
Parameters
None.
Returns
```javascript { "auth": null, "warnings": null, "data": { "expiration_time": "2016-04-25T10:35:20.127058773-04:00", "creation_time": "2016-04-12T22:35:01.178348124-04:00" }, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
#### LIST
Description
Lists all the role tags that are blacklisted.
Method
LIST/GET
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/roletag-blacklist` (LIST) or `/auth/aws-ec2/roletag-blacklist?list=true` (GET)
Parameters
None.
Returns
```javascript { "auth": null, "warnings": null, "data": { "keys": [ "v1:09Vp0qGuyB8=:a=ami-fce3c696:p=default,prod:d=false:t=300h0m0s:uPLKCQxqsefRhrp1qmVa1wsQVUXXJG8UZP/" ] }, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
#### DELETE
Description
Deletes a blacklisted role tag.
Method
DELETE
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/roletag-blacklist/`
Parameters
None.
Returns
`204` response code.
### /auth/aws-ec2/tidy/roletag-blacklist #### POST
Description
Cleans up the entries in the blacklist based on expiration time on the entry and `safety_buffer`.
Method
POST
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/tidy/roletag-blacklist`
Parameters
  • safety_buffer optional The amount of extra time that must have passed beyond the `roletag` expiration, before it is removed from the backend storage. Defaults to 72h.
Returns
`204` response code.
### /auth/aws-ec2/identity-whitelist/ #### GET
Description
Returns an entry in the whitelist. An entry will be created/updated by every successful login.
Method
GET
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/identity-whitelist/`
Parameters
  • instance_id required EC2 instance ID. A successful login operation from an EC2 instance gets cached in this whitelist, keyed off of instance ID.
Returns
```javascript { "auth": null, "warnings": null, "data": { "pending_time": "2016-04-14T01:01:41Z", "expiration_time": "2016-05-05 10:09:16.67077232 +0000 UTC", "creation_time": "2016-04-14 14:09:16.67077232 +0000 UTC", "client_nonce": "5defbf9e-a8f9-3063-bdfc-54b7a42a1f95", "role": "dev-role" }, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
#### LIST
Description
Lists all the instance IDs that are in the whitelist of successful logins.
Method
LIST/GET
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/identity-whitelist` (LIST) or `/auth/aws-ec2/identity-whitelist?list=true` (GET)
Parameters
None.
Returns
`204` response code. ```javascript { "auth": null, "warnings": null, "data": { "keys": [ "i-aab47d37" ] }, "lease_duration": 0, "renewable": false, "lease_id": "" } ```
#### DELETE
Description
Deletes a cache of the successful login from an instance.
Method
DELETE
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/identity-whitelist/`
Parameters
None.
Returns
`204` response code.
### /auth/aws-ec2/tidy/identity-whitelist #### POST
Description
Cleans up the entries in the whitelist based on expiration time and `safety_buffer`.
Method
POST
URL
`/auth/aws-ec2/tidy/identity-whitelist`
Parameters
  • safety_buffer optional The amount of extra time that must have passed beyond the identity expiration, before it is removed from the backend storage. Defaults to 72h.
Returns
`204` response code.