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A CLI for having Okta as the IdP for AWS CLI operations

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okta-aws-cli

Okta authentication in support of AWS CLI operation. The okta-aws-cli CLI is native to the Okta Identity Engine and its authentication flows. The CLI is not compatible with Okta Classic orgs.

The Okta AWS Federation application is SAML based and the Okta AWS CLI interacts with AWS IAM using AssumeRoleWithSAML. Okta does not have an OIDC based AWS Federation application at this time.

okta-aws-cli handles authentication through Okta and token exchange with AWS STS to collect a proper IAM role for the AWS CLI operator. The resulting output is a set made up of Access Key ID, Secret Access Key, and Session Token of AWS credentials for the AWS CLI. The Okta AWS CLI expresses the AWS credentials as either environment variables or appended to an AWS CLI credentials file. The Session Token has an expiry of 60 minutes.

# *nix, export statements
$ okta-aws-cli
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=ASIAUJHVCS6UQC52NOL7
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY
export AWS_SESSION_TOKEN=AQoEXAMPLEH4aoAH0gNCAPyJxz4BlCFFxWNE1OPTgk5T...

# *nix, eval export ENV vars into current shell
$ eval `okta-aws-cli` && aws s3 ls
2018-04-04 11:56:00 test-bucket
2021-06-10 12:47:11 mah-bucket

rem Windows setx statements
C:\> okta-aws-cli
SETX AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID ASIAUJHVCS6UQC52NOL7
SETX AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY
SETX AWS_SESSION_TOKEN AQoEXAMPLEH4aoAH0gNCAPyJxz4BlCFFxWNE1OPTgk5T...

Requirements

The Okta AWS CLI requires an OIE organization and an OIDC Native Application paired with an Okta AWS Federation integration application. The Okta AWS Fed app is itself paired with an AWS IAM identity provider.

The OIDC Native Application requires Grant Types Authorization Code, Device Authorization , and Token Exchange. These settings are in the Okta Admin UI at Applications > [the OIDC app] > General Settings > Grant type.

If Multiple AWS environments (see below) are to be supported by a single OIDC application, the OIDC app must have the okta.apps.read grant. Apps read and other application grants are configured at Applications > [the OIDC app] > Okta API Scopes in the Okta Admin UI.

The pairing with the AWS Federation Application is achieved in the Fed app's Sign On Settings. These settings are in the Okta Admin UI at Applications > [the AWS Fed app] > Sign On. There are two values that need to be set on the Sign On form. The first is the Allowed Web SSO Client value which is the Client ID of the OIDC Native Application. The second is Identity Provider ARN (Required only for SAML SSO) value which is the AWS ARN of the associated IAM Identity Provider.

Okta has a wizard to help establish the settings needed in AWS IAM, automatic generation of a SAML certificate for the IAM Identity Provider, and the settings needed for the Okta AWS Federation app. Replace these required values in the URL below. Then follow the directions in that wizard.

  • Org Admin Domain - [ADMIN_DOMAIN] - example: myorg-admin.okta.com
  • Okta AWS Federation app Client ID - [CLIENT_ID] - example: 0oa555555aaaaaaZZZZZ

https://saml-doc.okta.com/SAML_Docs/How-to-Configure-SAML-2.0-for-Amazon-Web-Service.html?baseAdminUrl=https://[ADMIN_DOMAIN]&app=amazon_aws&instanceId=[CLIENT_ID]

Multiple AWS environments

To support multiple AWS environments, associate additional AWS Federation applications with the OIDC app The OIDC app must have the okta.apps.read grant. The following is an illustration of the association of objects that make up this kind of configuration.

okta-aws-cli supporting multiple AWS environments

  • All AWS Federation apps have the OIDC native app as their Allowed Web SSO client
  • Fed App #1 is linked with an IAM IdP that has two Roles, one for S3 read, and one for S3 read/write
  • Fed App #2 is linked to an IdP and Role dedicated to ec2 operations
  • Fed App #3 is oriented for an administrator is comprised of an IdP and Role with many different permissions

Example select from multiple IdPs

select IdP

Example select from multiple Roles

select Role

Example creds consumed for S3 operations

conclusion

Recommendations

We recommend that the AWS Federation Application and OIDC native application have equivalent policies if not share the same policy. If the AWS Federation app has more stringent assurance requirements than the OIDC app a 400 Bad Request API error is likely to occur.

Installation

Binaries

Binary releases for combinations of operating systems and architectures are posted to the okta-aws-cli releases section in Github. Each release includes CHANGELOG notes for that release.

OSX/Homebrew

okta-aws-cli is distributed to OSX via homebrew

$ brew install okta-aws-cli

Local build/install

See Development section.

TL;DR run directly from source

$ go run cmd/okta-aws-cli/main.go --help

TL;DR build from source, installed into golang bin directory

$ make build

Configuration

Note: If your AWS IAM IdP is in a non-commercial region, such as GovCloud, the environmental variable AWS_REGION should be set accordingly.

At a minimum the Okta AWS CLI requires two configuration values. These are the values for the Okta Org domain, and the client ID of the OIDC Native Application.

If the OIDC Native App doesn't also have the okta.apps.read grant the client ID of the Okta AWS Federation integration application is also required.

An optional output format value can be configured. Default output format is as environment variables that can be used for the AWS CLI configuration. Output can also be expressed as credential file values for AWS CLI configuration.

Configuration can be done with environment variables, an .env file, command line flags, or a combination of the three.

Also see the CLI's online help $ okta-aws-cli --help

Name ENV var and .env file value Command line flag Description
Okta Org Domain (required) OKTA_ORG_DOMAIN --org-domain [value] Full domain hostname of the Okta org e.g. test.okta.com
OIDC Client ID (required) OKTA_OIDC_CLIENT_ID --oidc-client-id [value] See Allowed Web SSO Client
Okta AWS Account Federation integration app ID (optional) OKTA_AWS_ACCOUNT_FEDERATION_APP_ID --aws-acct-fed-app-id [value] See AWS Account Federation integration app. This value is only required if the OIDC app doesn't have the okta.apps.read grant for whatever reason
Preselect the AWS IAM Identity Provider ARN (optional) AWS_IAM_IDP --aws-iam-idp [value] Preselects the IdP list to this preferred IAM Identity Provider. If there are other IdPs available they will not be listed.
Preselects the AWS IAM Role ARN to assume (optional) AWS_IAM_ROLE --aws-iam-role [value] Preselects the role list to this preferred IAM role for the given IAM Identity Provider. If there are other Roles available they will not be listed.
AWS Session Duration (optional) AWS_SESSION_DURATION --session-duration [value] The lifetime, in seconds, of the AWS credentials. Must be between 60 and 43200.
Output format (optional) FORMAT --format [value] Default is env-var. Options: env-var for output to environment variables, aws-credentials for output to AWS credentials file
Profile (optional) PROFILE --profile [value] Default is default
Display QR Code (optional) QR_CODE=true --qr-code true if flag is present
Automatically open the activation URL with the system web browser (optional) OPEN_BROWSER=true --open-browser true if flag is present
Alternate AWS credentials file path (optional) AWS_CREDENTIALS --aws-credentials Path to alternative credentials file other than AWS CLI default
(Over)write the given profile to the AWS credentials file (optional). WARNING: When enabled, overwriting can inadvertently remove dangling comments and extraneous formatting from the creds file. WRITE_AWS_CREDENTIALS=true --write-aws-credentials true if flag is present
Emit deprecated AWS variable aws_security_token with duplicated value from aws_session_token LEGACY_AWS_VARIABLES=true --legacy-aws-variables true if flag is present
Verbosely print all API calls/responses to the screen DEBUG_API_CALLS=true --debug-api-calls true if flag is present
HTTP/HTTPS Proxy support HTTP_PROXY or HTTPS_PROXY n/a HTTP/HTTPS URL of proxy service (based on golang net/http/httpproxy package)

NOTE: If AWS_REGION is set in the .env file it will be promoted into the okta-aws-cli runtime if it isn't also already set as an ENV VAR. This will allow operators making use of an .env file have to have proper AWS API behavior in spefific regions, for instance in US govcloud and other non-North America regions.

Allowed Web SSO Client

This is the "Allowed Web SSO Client" value from the "Sign On" settings of an AWS Account Federation" integration app and is an Okta OIDC Native Application ID. The ID is the identifier of the client is Okta app acting as the IdP for AWS.

Example: 0oa5wyqjk6Wm148fE1d7

AWS Account Federation integration app

ID for the AWS Account Federation" integration app.

Example: 0oa9x1rifa2H6Q5d8325

Environment variables example

export OKTA_ORG_DOMAIN=test.okta.com
export OKTA_OIDC_CLIENT_ID=0oa5wyqjk6Wm148fE1d7

.env file variables example

OKTA_ORG_DOMAIN=test.okta.com
OKTA_OIDC_CLIENT_ID=0oa5wyqjk6Wm148fE1d7

Command line flags example

OIDC client has okta.apps.read grant

$ okta-aws-cli --org-domain test.okta.com \
    --oidc-client-id 0oa5wyqjk6Wm148fE1d7

OIDC client does not have okta.apps.read grant

$ okta-aws-cli --org-domain test.okta.com \
    --oidc-client-id 0oa5wyqjk6Wm148fE1d7 \
    --aws-acct-fed-app-id 0oa9x1rifa2H6Q5d8325

Operation

The behavior of the Okta AWS CLI is to be friendly for shell input and scripting. Output of the command that is human oriented is done on STDERR and output for the AWS CLI that can be consumed in scripting is done on STDOUT. This allows for the command's results to be eval'd into the current shell as eval will only make use of STDOUT values.

Plain usage

NOTE: example assumes other Okta AWS CLI configuration values have already been set by ENV variables or .env file.

NOTE: output will be in setx statements if the runtime is Windows.

NOTE: okta-aws-cli only needs to be called the first time to gather AWS creds. Then called again once those creds have expired. It does not need to be called every time before each actual AWS CLI invocation.

$ okta-aws-cli
Open the following URL to begin Okta device authorization for the AWS CLI.

https://test-org.okta.com/activate?user_code=ZNQZQXQQ

? Choose an IdP: arn:aws:iam::123456789012:saml-provider/My_IdP
? Choose a Role: arn:aws:iam::456789012345:role/My_Role

export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=ASIAUJHVCS6UQC52NOL7
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY
export AWS_SESSION_TOKEN=AQoEXAMPLEH4aoAH0gNCAPyJxz4BlCFFxWNE1OPTgk5T...

$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=ASIAUJHVCS6UQC52NOL7
$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY
$ export AWS_SESSION_TOKEN=AQoEXAMPLEH4aoAH0gNCAPyJxz4BlCFFxWNE1OPTgk5T...
$ aws s3 ls
2018-04-04 11:56:00 test-bucket
2021-06-10 12:47:11 mah-bucket

Scripted orientated usages

NOTE: example assumes other Okta AWS CLI configuration values have already been set by ENV variables or .env file.

$ eval `okta-aws-cli` && aws s3 ls
2018-04-04 11:56:00 test-bucket
2021-06-10 12:47:11 mah-bucket

$ eval `okta-aws-cli`

$ aws s3 ls
2018-04-04 11:56:00 test-bucket
2021-06-10 12:47:11 mah-bucket

$ aws s3 ls
2018-04-04 11:56:00 test-bucket
2021-06-10 12:47:11 mah-bucket

AWS credentials file orientated usage

NOTE: example assumes other Okta AWS CLI configuration values have already been set by ENV variables or .env file.

$ okta-aws-cli --profile test --format aws-credentials && \
  aws --profile test s3 ls

Open the following URL to begin Okta device authorization for the AWS CLI.

https://test-org.okta.com/activate?user_code=ZNQZQXQQ

? Choose an IdP: arn:aws:iam::123456789012:saml-provider/My_IdP
? Choose a Role: arn:aws:iam::456789012345:role/My_Role
Wrote profile "test" to /Users/mikemondragon/.aws/credentials

2018-04-04 11:56:00 test-bucket
2021-06-10 12:47:11 mah-bucket

NOTE: the Okta AWS CLI will only append to the AWS credentials file. Be sure to comment out or remove previous named profiles from the credentials file. Otherwise an Unable to parse config file error like the following may occur.

aws --profile example s3 ls

Unable to parse config file: /home/user/.aws/credentials

Help

$ okta-aws-cli --help

Version

$ okta-aws-cli --version

Comparison

Nike gimme-aws-creds

There are a number of differences in terms of operation and functionality between Okta AWS CLI and Nike's gimme-aws-creds.

The Okta AWS CLI is native to the Okta Identity Engine. No matter what kinds of authentication flows (multi-factors, assigned users, etc.) have been applied to the Native OIDC application, the CLI works within those constraints naturally. The Okta CLI is OIE only and will not work with Classic orgs.

A simple URL is given to the operator to open in a browser and from there the CLI's authentication and authorization is initiated. The Okta AWS CLI doesn't prompt for passwords or any other user credentials itself, or offers to store user credentials on a desktop keychain.

The configuration of the Okta AWS CLI is minimal with only two required values: Okta org domain name, and OIDC app id. There isn't a need for a configuration prompt to run for initialization and there isn't a need for a multi-lined configuration file that is dropped somewhere in the user's $HOME directory to operate the CLI.

The Okta CLI is CLI flag and environment variable oriented and its default output is as environment variables. It can also write to AWS credentials file. The default writing option is an apped operation and can be explicitly set to overwrite previous values for a profile with the --write-aws-credentials flag.

Versent saml2aws

The comparison between Okta AWS CLI and Versent saml2aws are identical to the comparison between Okta AWS CLI and Nike gimme-aws-creds.

Development

Run source code locally

go run cmd/okta-aws-cli/main.go

Install tools that the Makefile uses like gofumpt and golint

make tools

Building

make build

Testing

make test

Run golang code quality control tools on the codebase (go vet, golint, etc.)

make qc

Contributing

We're happy to accept contributions and PRs! Please see the contribution guide to understand how to structure a contribution.

References

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