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condition keys * Actions, resources, and condition keys * Resources * Making HTTP query requests * Document history Changing permissions for an IAM user - AWS Identity and Access Management AWSDocumentationAWS Identity and Access ManagementUser Guide View user accessGenerate a policy based on a user's access activityAdding permissions to a user (console)Changing permissions for a user (console)Removing a permissions policy from a user (console)Removing the permissions boundary from a user (console)Adding and removing a user's permissions (AWS CLI or AWS API) CHANGING PERMISSIONS FOR AN IAM USER PDFRSS You can change the permissions for an IAM user in your AWS account by changing its group memberships, by copying permissions from an existing user, by attaching policies directly to a user, or by setting a permissions boundary. A permissions boundary controls the maximum permissions that a user can have. Permissions boundaries are an advanced AWS feature. For information about the permissions that you need in order to modify the permissions for a user, see Permissions required to access IAM resources. TOPICS * View user access * Generate a policy based on a user's access activity * Adding permissions to a user (console) * Changing permissions for a user (console) * Removing a permissions policy from a user (console) * Removing the permissions boundary from a user (console) * Adding and removing a user's permissions (AWS CLI or AWS API) VIEW USER ACCESS Before you change the permissions for a user, you should review its recent service-level activity. This is important because you don't want to remove access from a principal (person or application) who is using it. For more information about viewing last accessed information, see Refining permissions in AWS using last accessed information. GENERATE A POLICY BASED ON A USER'S ACCESS ACTIVITY You might sometimes grant permissions to an IAM entity (user or role) beyond what they require. To help you refine the permissions that you grant, you can generate an IAM policy that is based on the access activity for an entity. IAM Access Analyzer reviews your AWS CloudTrail logs and generates a policy template that contains the permissions that have been used by the entity in your specified date range. You can use the template to create a managed policy with fine-grained permissions and then attach it to the IAM entity. That way, you grant only the permissions that the user or role needs to interact with AWS resources for your specific use case. To learn more, see Generate policies based on access activity. ADDING PERMISSIONS TO A USER (CONSOLE) IAM offers three ways to add permissions policies to a user: * Add user to group – Make the user a member of a group. The policies from the group are attached to the user. * Copy permissions from existing user – Copy all group memberships, attached managed policies, inline policies, and any existing permissions boundaries from the source user. * Attach policies directly to user – Attach a managed policy directly to the user. For easier permissions management, attach your policies to a group and then make users members of the appropriate groups. IMPORTANT If the user has a permissions boundary, then you cannot add more permissions to a user than are allowed by the permissions boundary. ADDING PERMISSIONS BY ADDING THE USER TO A GROUP Adding a user to a group affects the user immediately. TO ADD PERMISSIONS TO A USER BY ADDING THE USER TO A GROUP 1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the IAM console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/. 2. In the navigation pane, choose Users. 3. Review the current group memberships for users in the Groups column of the console. If necessary, add the column to the users table by completing the following steps: 1. Above the table on the far right, choose the settings symbol ( ). 2. In the Manage Columns dialog box, select the Groups column. Optionally, you can also clear the check box for any column headings that you do not want to appear in the users table. 3. Choose Close to return to the list of users. The Groups column tells you to which groups the user belongs. The column includes the group names for up to two groups. If the user is a member of three or more groups, the first two groups are shown (ordered alphabetically), and the number of additional group memberships is included. For example, if the user belongs to Group A, Group B, Group C, and Group D, then the field contains the value Group A, Group B + 2 more. To see the total number of groups to which the user belongs, you can add the Group count column to the users table. 4. Choose the name of the user whose permissions you want to modify. 5. Choose the Permissions tab, and then choose Add permissions. Choose Add user to group. 6. Select the check box for each group that you want the user to join. The list shows each group's name and the policies that the user receives if made a member of that group. 7. (Optional) In addition to selecting from existing groups, you can choose Create group to define a new group: 1. In the new tab, for User group name, type a name for your new group. NOTE The number and size of IAM resources in an AWS account are limited. For more information, see IAM and AWS STS quotas. Group names can be a combination of up to 128 letters, digits, and these characters: plus (+), equal (=), comma (,), period (.), at sign (@), and hyphen (-). Names must be unique within an account. They are not distinguished by case. For example, you cannot create two groups named TESTGROUP and testgroup. 2. Select one or more check boxes for the managed policies that you want to attach to the group. You can also create a new managed policy by choosing Create policy. If you do, return to this browser tab or window when the new policy is done; choose Refresh; and then choose the new policy to attach it to your group. For more information, see Creating IAM policies. 3. Choose Create user group. 4. Return to the original tab, refresh your list of groups. Then select the check box for your new group. 8. Choose Next to see the list of group memberships to be added to the user. Then choose Add permissions. ADDING PERMISSIONS BY COPYING FROM ANOTHER USER Copying permissions affects the user immediately. TO ADD PERMISSIONS TO A USER BY COPYING PERMISSIONS FROM ANOTHER USER 1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the IAM console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/. 2. Choose Users in the navigation pane, choose the name of the user whose permissions you want to modify, and then choose the Permissions tab. 3. Choose Add permissions, and then choose Copy permissions from existing user. The list displays available users along with their group memberships and attached policies. If the full list of groups or policies doesn't fit on one line, you can choose the link for and n more. Doing that opens a new browser tab and see the full list of policies (Permissions tab) and groups (Groups tab). 4. Select the radio button next to the user whose permissions you want to copy. 5. Choose Next to see the list of changes that are to be made to the user. Then choose Add permissions. ADDING PERMISSIONS BY ATTACHING POLICIES DIRECTLY TO THE USER Attaching policies affects the user immediately. TO ADD PERMISSIONS TO A USER BY DIRECTLY ATTACHING MANAGED POLICIES 1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the IAM console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/. 2. Choose Users in the navigation pane, choose the name of the user whose permissions you want to modify, and then choose the Permissions tab. 3. Choose Add permissions, and then choose Attach policies directly. 4. Select one or more check boxes for the managed policies that you want to attach to the user. You can also create a new managed policy by choosing Create policy. If you do, return to this browser tab or window when the new policy is done. Choose Refresh; and then select the check box for the new policy to attach it to your user. For more information, see Creating IAM policies. 5. Choose Next to see the list of policies that are to be attached to the user. Then choose Add permissions. SETTING THE PERMISSIONS BOUNDARY FOR A USER Setting a permissions boundary affects the user immediately. TO SET THE PERMISSIONS BOUNDARY FOR A USER 1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the IAM console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/. 2. In the navigation pane, choose Users. 3. Choose the name of the user whose permissions boundary you want to change. 4. Choose the Permissions tab. If necessary, open the Permissions boundary section and then choose Set permissions boundary. 5. Select the policy that you want to use for the permissions boundary. 6. Choose Set boundary. CHANGING PERMISSIONS FOR A USER (CONSOLE) IAM allows you to change the permissions that are associated with a user in the following ways: * Edit a permissions policy – Edit a user's inline policy, the inline policy of the user's group, or edit a managed policy that is attached to the user directly or from a group. If the user has a permissions boundary, then you cannot provide more permissions than are allowed by the policy that was used as the user's permissions boundary. * Changing the permissions boundary – Change the policy that is used as the permissions boundary for the user. This can expand or restrict the maximum permissions that a user can have. EDITING A PERMISSIONS POLICY ATTACHED TO A USER Changing permissions affects the user immediately. TO EDIT A USER'S ATTACHED MANAGED POLICIES 1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the IAM console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/. 2. In the navigation pane, choose Users. 3. Choose the name of the user whose permissions policy you want to change. 4. Choose the Permissions tab. If necessary, open the Permissions policies section. 5. Choose the name of the policy that you want to edit to view details about the policy. Choose the Policy usage tab to view other entities that might be affected if you edit the policy. 6. Choose the Permissions tab and review the permissions granted by the policy. Then choose Edit policy. 7. Edit the policy and resolve any policy validation recommendations. For more information, see Editing IAM policies. 8. Choose Review policy, review the policy summary, and then choose Save changes. CHANGING THE PERMISSIONS BOUNDARY FOR A USER Changing a permissions boundary affects the user immediately. TO CHANGE THE POLICY USED TO SET THE PERMISSIONS BOUNDARY FOR A USER 1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the IAM console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/. 2. In the navigation pane, choose Users. 3. Choose the name of the user whose permissions boundary you want to change. 4. Choose the Permissions tab. If necessary, open the Permissions boundary section and then choose Change boundary. 5. Select the policy that you want to use for the permissions boundary. 6. Choose Set boundary. REMOVING A PERMISSIONS POLICY FROM A USER (CONSOLE) Removing a policy affects the user immediately. TO REMOVE PERMISSIONS FOR IAM USERS 1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the IAM console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/. 2. In the navigation pane, choose Users. 3. Choose the name of the user whose permissions boundary you want to remove. 4. Choose the Permissions tab. 5. If you want to remove permissions by removing an existing policy, view the Type to understand how the user is getting that policy before choosing Remove to remove the policy: * If the policy applies because of group membership, then choosing Remove removes the user from the group. Remember that you might have multiple policies attached to a single group. If you remove a user from a group, the user loses access to all policies that it received through that group membership. * If the policy is a managed policy attached directly to the user, then choosing Remove detaches the policy from the user. This does not affect the policy itself or any other entity that the policy might be attached to. * If the policy is an inline embedded policy, then choosing X removes the policy from IAM. Inline policies that are attached directly to a user exist only on that user. REMOVING THE PERMISSIONS BOUNDARY FROM A USER (CONSOLE) Removing a permissions boundary affects the user immediately. TO REMOVE THE PERMISSIONS BOUNDARY FROM A USER 1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the IAM console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/. 2. In the navigation pane, choose Users. 3. Choose the name of the user whose permissions boundary you want to remove. 4. Choose the Permissions tab. If necessary, open the Permissions boundary section and then choose Remove boundary. 5. Choose Remove boundary to confirm that you want to remove the permissions boundary. ADDING AND REMOVING A USER'S PERMISSIONS (AWS CLI OR AWS API) To add or remove permissions programmatically, you must add or remove the group memberships, attach or detach the managed policies, or add or delete the inline policies. For more information, see the following topics: * Adding and removing users in an IAM user group * Adding and removing IAM identity permissions Javascript is disabled or is unavailable in your browser. To use the Amazon Web Services Documentation, Javascript must be enabled. 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