
STS
***


boto.sts
========

boto.sts.connect_to_region(region_name, **kw_params)

   Given a valid region name, return a
   "boto.sts.connection.STSConnection".

   Type:
      str

   Parameters:
      **region_name** -- The name of the region to connect to.

   Return type:
      "boto.sts.connection.STSConnection" or "None"

   Returns:
      A connection to the given region, or None if an invalid region
      name is given

boto.sts.regions()

   Get all available regions for the STS service.

   Return type:
      list

   Returns:
      A list of "boto.regioninfo.RegionInfo" instances

class class boto.sts.STSConnection(aws_access_key_id=None, aws_secret_access_key=None, is_secure=True, port=None, proxy=None, proxy_port=None, proxy_user=None, proxy_pass=None, debug=0, https_connection_factory=None, region=None, path='/', converter=None, validate_certs=True, anon=False, security_token=None, profile_name=None)

   AWS Security Token Service The AWS Security Token Service is a web
   service that enables you to request temporary, limited-privilege
   credentials for AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) users or
   for users that you authenticate (federated users). This guide
   provides descriptions of the AWS Security Token Service API.

   For more detailed information about using this service, go to
   >>`Using Temporary Security Credentials`_<<.

   For information about setting up signatures and authorization
   through the API, go to >>`Signing AWS API Requests`_<< in the AWS
   General Reference . For general information about the Query API, go
   to >>`Making Query Requests`_<< in Using IAM . For information
   about using security tokens with other AWS products, go to >>`Using
   Temporary Security Credentials to Access AWS`_<< in Using Temporary
   Security Credentials .

   If you're new to AWS and need additional technical information
   about a specific AWS product, you can find the product's technical
   documentation at >>`http://aws.amazon.com/documentation/`_<<.

   We will refer to Amazon Identity and Access Management using the
   abbreviated form IAM. All copyrights and legal protections still
   apply.

   APIVersion = '2011-06-15'

   DefaultRegionEndpoint = 'sts.amazonaws.com'

   DefaultRegionName = 'us-east-1'

   assume_role(role_arn, role_session_name, policy=None, duration_seconds=None, external_id=None, mfa_serial_number=None, mfa_token=None)

      Returns a set of temporary security credentials (consisting of
      an access key ID, a secret access key, and a security token)
      that you can use to access AWS resources that you might not
      normally have access to. Typically, you use *AssumeRole* for
      cross-account access or federation.

      For cross-account access, imagine that you own multiple accounts
      and need to access resources in each account. You could create
      long-term credentials in each account to access those resources.
      However, managing all those credentials and remembering which
      one can access which account can be time consuming. Instead, you
      can create one set of long-term credentials in one account and
      then use temporary security credentials to access all the other
      accounts by assuming roles in those accounts. For more
      information about roles, see >>`Roles`_<< in Using IAM .

      For federation, you can, for example, grant single sign-on
      access to the AWS Management Console. If you already have an
      identity and authentication system in your corporate network,
      you don't have to recreate user identities in AWS in order to
      grant those user identities access to AWS. Instead, after a user
      has been authenticated, you call *AssumeRole* (and specify the
      role with the appropriate permissions) to get temporary security
      credentials for that user. With those temporary security
      credentials, you construct a sign-in URL that users can use to
      access the console. For more information, see >>`Scenarios for
      Granting Temporary Access`_<< in AWS Security Token Service .

      The temporary security credentials are valid for the duration
      that you specified when calling *AssumeRole*, which can be from
      900 seconds (15 minutes) to 3600 seconds (1 hour). The default
      is 1 hour.

      The temporary security credentials that are returned from the
      *AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity* response have the permissions that
      are associated with the access policy of the role being assumed
      and any policies that are associated with the AWS resource being
      accessed. You can further restrict the permissions of the
      temporary security credentials by passing a policy in the
      request. The resulting permissions are an intersection of the
      role's access policy and the policy that you passed. These
      policies and any applicable resource-based policies are
      evaluated when calls to AWS service APIs are made using the
      temporary security credentials.

      To assume a role, your AWS account must be trusted by the role.
      The trust relationship is defined in the role's trust policy
      when the IAM role is created. You must also have a policy that
      allows you to call *sts:AssumeRole*.

      **Important:** You cannot call *Assumerole* by using AWS account
      credentials; access will be denied. You must use IAM user
      credentials to call *AssumeRole*.

      Parameters:
         * **role_arn** (*string*) -- The Amazon Resource Name (ARN)
           of the role that the caller is assuming.

         * **role_session_name** (*string*) -- An identifier for the
           assumed role session. The session name is included as part
           of the *AssumedRoleUser*.

         * **policy** (*string*) -- A supplemental policy that is
           associated with the temporary security credentials from the
           *AssumeRole* call. The resulting permissions of the
           temporary security credentials are an intersection of this
           policy and the access policy that is associated with the
           role. Use this policy to further restrict the permissions
           of the temporary security credentials.

         * **duration_seconds** (*integer*) -- The duration, in
           seconds, of the role session. The value can range from 900
           seconds (15 minutes) to 3600 seconds (1 hour). By default,
           the value is set to 3600 seconds.

         * **external_id** (*string*) -- A unique identifier that is
           used by third parties to assume a role in their customers'
           accounts. For each role that the third party can assume,
           they should instruct their customers to create a role with
           the external ID that the third party generated. Each time
           the third party assumes the role, they must pass the
           customer's external ID. The external ID is useful in order
           to help third parties bind a role to the customer who
           created it. For more information about the external ID, see
           >>`About the External ID`_<< in Using Temporary Security
           Credentials .

         * **mfa_serial_number** (*string*) -- The identification
           number of the MFA device that is associated with the user
           who is making the AssumeRole call. Specify this value if
           the trust policy of the role being assumed includes a
           condition that requires MFA authentication. The value is
           either the serial number for a hardware device (such as
           GAHT12345678) or an Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for a
           virtual device (such as
           arn:aws:iam::123456789012:mfa/user). Minimum length of 9.
           Maximum length of 256.

         * **mfa_token** (*string*) -- The value provided by the MFA
           device, if the trust policy of the role being assumed
           requires MFA (that is, if the policy includes a condition
           that tests for MFA). If the role being assumed requires MFA
           and if the TokenCode value is missing or expired, the
           AssumeRole call returns an "access denied" errror. Minimum
           length of 6. Maximum length of 6.

   assume_role_with_saml(role_arn, principal_arn, saml_assertion, policy=None, duration_seconds=None)

      Returns a set of temporary security credentials for users who
      have been authenticated via a SAML authentication response. This
      operation provides a mechanism for tying an enterprise identity
      store or directory to role-based AWS access without user-
      specific credentials or configuration.

      The temporary security credentials returned by this operation
      consist of an access key ID, a secret access key, and a security
      token. Applications can use these temporary security credentials
      to sign calls to AWS services. The credentials are valid for the
      duration that you specified when calling *AssumeRoleWithSAML*,
      which can be up to 3600 seconds (1 hour) or until the time
      specified in the SAML authentication response's *NotOnOrAfter*
      value, whichever is shorter.

      The maximum duration for a session is 1 hour, and the minimum
      duration is 15 minutes, even if values outside this range are
      specified.

      Optionally, you can pass an AWS IAM access policy to this
      operation. The temporary security credentials that are returned
      by the operation have the permissions that are associated with
      the access policy of the role being assumed, except for any
      permissions explicitly denied by the policy you pass. This gives
      you a way to further restrict the permissions for the federated
      user. These policies and any applicable resource-based policies
      are evaluated when calls to AWS are made using the temporary
      security credentials.

      Before your application can call *AssumeRoleWithSAML*, you must
      configure your SAML identity provider (IdP) to issue the claims
      required by AWS. Additionally, you must use AWS Identity and
      Access Management (AWS IAM) to create a SAML provider entity in
      your AWS account that represents your identity provider, and
      create an AWS IAM role that specifies this SAML provider in its
      trust policy.

      Calling *AssumeRoleWithSAML* does not require the use of AWS
      security credentials. The identity of the caller is validated by
      using keys in the metadata document that is uploaded for the
      SAML provider entity for your identity provider.

      For more information, see the following resources:

      * >>`Creating Temporary Security Credentials for SAML
        Federation`_<< in the Using Temporary Security Credentials
        guide.

      * >>`SAML Providers`_<< in the Using IAM guide.

      * >>`<<Configuring a Relying Party and Claims in the Using IAM
        guide. >>`<<_

      * >>`Creating a Role for SAML-Based Federation`_<< in the
        Using IAM guide.

      Parameters:
         * **role_arn** (*string*) -- The Amazon Resource Name (ARN)
           of the role that the caller is assuming.

         * **principal_arn** (*string*) -- The Amazon Resource Name
           (ARN) of the SAML provider in AWS IAM that describes the
           IdP.

         * **saml_assertion** (*string*) -- The base-64 encoded SAML
           authentication response provided by the IdP.

      For more information, see >>`<<Configuring a Relying Party and
      Adding
         Claims`_ in the Using IAM guide.

      Parameters:
         **policy** (*string*) --

      An AWS IAM policy in JSON format.

      The temporary security credentials that are returned by this
      operation
         have the permissions that are associated with the access
         policy of the role being assumed, except for any permissions
         explicitly denied by the policy you pass. These policies and
         any applicable resource-based policies are evaluated when
         calls to AWS are made using the temporary security
         credentials.

      The policy must be 2048 bytes or shorter, and its packed size
      must be
         less than 450 bytes.

      Parameters:
         **duration_seconds** (*integer*) --

      The duration, in seconds, of the role session. The value can
      range from
         900 seconds (15 minutes) to 3600 seconds (1 hour). By
         default, the value is set to 3600 seconds. An expiration can
         also be specified in the SAML authentication response's
         *NotOnOrAfter* value. The actual expiration time is whichever
         value is shorter.

      The maximum duration for a session is 1 hour, and the minimum
      duration
         is 15 minutes, even if values outside this range are
         specified.

   assume_role_with_web_identity(role_arn, role_session_name, web_identity_token, provider_id=None, policy=None, duration_seconds=None)

      Returns a set of temporary security credentials for users who
      have been authenticated in a mobile or web application with a
      web identity provider, such as Login with Amazon, Facebook, or
      Google. *AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity* is an API call that does not
      require the use of AWS security credentials. Therefore, you can
      distribute an application (for example, on mobile devices) that
      requests temporary security credentials without including long-
      term AWS credentials in the application or by deploying server-
      based proxy services that use long-term AWS credentials. For
      more information, see >>`Creating a Mobile Application with
      Third-Party Sign-In`_<< in AWS Security Token Service .

      The temporary security credentials consist of an access key ID,
      a secret access key, and a security token. Applications can use
      these temporary security credentials to sign calls to AWS
      service APIs. The credentials are valid for the duration that
      you specified when calling *AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity*, which
      can be from 900 seconds (15 minutes) to 3600 seconds (1 hour).
      By default, the temporary security credentials are valid for 1
      hour.

      The temporary security credentials that are returned from the
      *AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity* response have the permissions that
      are associated with the access policy of the role being assumed.
      You can further restrict the permissions of the temporary
      security credentials by passing a policy in the request. The
      resulting permissions are an intersection of the role's access
      policy and the policy that you passed. These policies and any
      applicable resource-based policies are evaluated when calls to
      AWS service APIs are made using the temporary security
      credentials.

      Before your application can call *AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity*,
      you must have an identity token from a supported identity
      provider and create a role that the application can assume. The
      role that your application assumes must trust the identity
      provider that is associated with the identity token. In other
      words, the identity provider must be specified in the role's
      trust policy. For more information, see ` Creating Temporary
      Security Credentials for Mobile Apps Using Third-Party Identity
      Providers`_.

      Parameters:
         * **role_arn** (*string*) -- The Amazon Resource Name (ARN)
           of the role that the caller is assuming.

         * **role_session_name** (*string*) -- An identifier for the
           assumed role session. Typically, you pass the name or
           identifier that is associated with the user who is using
           your application. That way, the temporary security
           credentials that your application will use are associated
           with that user. This session name is included as part of
           the ARN and assumed role ID in the *AssumedRoleUser*
           response element.

         * **web_identity_token** (*string*) -- The OAuth 2.0 access
           token or OpenID Connect ID token that is provided by the
           identity provider. Your application must get this token by
           authenticating the user who is using your application with
           a web identity provider before the application makes an
           *AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity* call.

         * **provider_id** (*string*) -- Specify this value only for
           OAuth access tokens. Do not specify this value for OpenID
           Connect ID tokens, such as *accounts.google.com*. This is
           the fully-qualified host component of the domain name of
           the identity provider. Do not include URL schemes and port
           numbers. Currently, *www.amazon.com* and
           *graph.facebook.com* are supported.

         * **policy** (*string*) -- A supplemental policy that is
           associated with the temporary security credentials from the
           *AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity* call. The resulting permissions
           of the temporary security credentials are an intersection
           of this policy and the access policy that is associated
           with the role. Use this policy to further restrict the
           permissions of the temporary security credentials.

         * **duration_seconds** (*integer*) -- The duration, in
           seconds, of the role session. The value can range from 900
           seconds (15 minutes) to 3600 seconds (1 hour). By default,
           the value is set to 3600 seconds.

   decode_authorization_message(encoded_message)

      Decodes additional information about the authorization status of
      a request from an encoded message returned in response to an AWS
      request.

      For example, if a user is not authorized to perform an action
      that he or she has requested, the request returns a
      *Client.UnauthorizedOperation* response (an HTTP 403 response).
      Some AWS actions additionally return an encoded message that can
      provide details about this authorization failure. Only certain
      AWS actions return an encoded authorization message. The
      documentation for an individual action indicates whether that
      action returns an encoded message in addition to returning an
      HTTP code. The message is encoded because the details of the
      authorization status can constitute privileged information that
      the user who requested the action should not see. To decode an
      authorization status message, a user must be granted permissions
      via an IAM policy to request the *DecodeAuthorizationMessage* (
      *sts:DecodeAuthorizationMessage*) action.

      The decoded message includes the following type of information:

      * Whether the request was denied due to an explicit deny or
        due to the absence of an explicit allow. For more information,
        see >>`Determining Whether a Request is Allowed or Denied`_<<
        in Using IAM .

      * The principal who made the request.

      * The requested action.

      * The requested resource.

      * The values of condition keys in the context of the user's
        request.

      Parameters:
         **encoded_message** (*string*) -- The encoded message that
         was returned with the response.

   get_federation_token(name, duration=None, policy=None)

      Returns a set of temporary security credentials (consisting of
      an access key ID, a secret access key, and a security token) for
      a federated user. A typical use is in a proxy application that
      is getting temporary security credentials on behalf of
      distributed applications inside a corporate network. Because you
      must call the *GetFederationToken* action using the long- term
      security credentials of an IAM user, this call is appropriate in
      contexts where those credentials can be safely stored, usually
      in a server-based application.

      **Note:** Do not use this call in mobile applications or client-
      based web applications that directly get temporary security
      credentials. For those types of applications, use
      *AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity*.

      The *GetFederationToken* action must be called by using the
      long-term AWS security credentials of the AWS account or an IAM
      user. Credentials that are created by IAM users are valid for
      the specified duration, between 900 seconds (15 minutes) and
      129600 seconds (36 hours); credentials that are created by using
      account credentials have a maximum duration of 3600 seconds (1
      hour).

      The permissions that are granted to the federated user are the
      intersection of the policy that is passed with the
      *GetFederationToken* request and policies that are associated
      with of the entity making the *GetFederationToken* call.

      For more information about how permissions work, see
      >>`Controlling Permissions in Temporary Credentials`_<< in Using
      Temporary Security Credentials . For information about using
      *GetFederationToken* to create temporary security credentials,
      see >>`Creating Temporary Credentials to Enable Access for
      Federated Users`_<< in Using Temporary Security Credentials .

      Parameters:
         * **name** (*string*) -- The name of the federated user.
           The name is used as an identifier for the temporary
           security credentials (such as *Bob*). For example, you can
           reference the federated user name in a resource-based
           policy, such as in an Amazon S3 bucket policy.

         * **policy** (*string*) -- A policy that specifies the
           permissions that are granted to the federated user. By
           default, federated users have no permissions; they do not
           inherit any from the IAM user. When you specify a policy,
           the federated user's permissions are intersection of the
           specified policy and the IAM user's policy. If you don't
           specify a policy, federated users can only access AWS
           resources that explicitly allow those federated users in a
           resource policy, such as in an Amazon S3 bucket policy.

         * **duration** (*integer*) -- The duration, in seconds,
           that the session should last. Acceptable durations for
           federation sessions range from 900 seconds (15 minutes) to
           129600 seconds (36 hours), with 43200 seconds (12 hours) as
           the default. Sessions for AWS account owners are restricted
           to a maximum of 3600 seconds (one hour). If the duration is
           longer than one hour, the session for AWS account owners
           defaults to one hour.

   get_session_token(duration=None, force_new=False, mfa_serial_number=None, mfa_token=None)

      Return a valid session token.  Because retrieving new tokens
      from the Secure Token Service is a fairly heavyweight operation
      this module caches previously retrieved tokens and returns them
      when appropriate.  Each token is cached with a key consisting of
      the region name of the STS endpoint concatenated with the
      requesting user's access id.  If there is a token in the cache
      meeting with this key, the session expiration is checked to make
      sure it is still valid and if so, the cached token is returned.
      Otherwise, a new session token is requested from STS and it is
      placed into the cache and returned.

      Parameters:
         * **duration** (*int*) -- The number of seconds the
           credentials should remain valid.

         * **force_new** (*bool*) -- If this parameter is True, a
           new session token will be retrieved from the Secure Token
           Service regardless of whether there is a valid cached token
           or not.

         * **mfa_serial_number** (*str*) -- The serial number of an
           MFA device. If this is provided and if the mfa_passcode
           provided is valid, the temporary session token will be
           authorized with to perform operations requiring the MFA
           device authentication.

         * **mfa_token** (*str*) -- The 6 digit token associated
           with the MFA device.


boto.sts.credentials
====================

class class boto.sts.credentials.AssumedRole(connection=None, credentials=None, user=None)

   Variables:
      * **user** -- The assumed role user.

      * **credentials** -- A Credentials object containing the
        credentials.

   endElement(name, value, connection)

   startElement(name, attrs, connection)

class class boto.sts.credentials.Credentials(parent=None)

   Variables:
      * **access_key** -- The AccessKeyID.

      * **secret_key** -- The SecretAccessKey.

      * **session_token** -- The session token that must be passed
        with requests to use the temporary credentials

      * **expiration** -- The timestamp for when the credentials
        will expire

   endElement(name, value, connection)

   classmethod from_json(json_doc)

      Create and return a new Session Token based on the contents of a
      JSON document.

      Parameters:
         **json_doc** (*str*) -- A string containing a JSON document
         with a previously saved Credentials object.

   is_expired(time_offset_seconds=0)

      Checks to see if the Session Token is expired or not.  By
      default it will check to see if the Session Token is expired as
      of the moment the method is called.  However, you can supply an
      optional parameter which is the number of seconds of offset into
      the future for the check.  For example, if you supply a value of
      5, this method will return a True if the Session Token will be
      expired 5 seconds from this moment.

      Parameters:
         **time_offset_seconds** (*int*) -- The number of seconds into
         the future to test the Session Token for expiration.

   classmethod load(file_path)

      Create and return a new Session Token based on the contents of a
      previously saved JSON-format file.

      Parameters:
         **file_path** (*str*) -- The fully qualified path to the
         JSON-format file containing the previously saved Session
         Token information.

   save(file_path)

      Persist a Session Token to a file in JSON format.

      Parameters:
         **path** (*str*) -- The fully qualified path to the file
         where the the Session Token data should be written.  Any
         previous data in the file will be overwritten.  To help
         protect the credentials contained in the file, the
         permissions of the file will be set to readable/writable by
         owner only.

   startElement(name, attrs, connection)

   to_dict()

      Return a Python dict containing the important information about
      this Session Token.

class class boto.sts.credentials.DecodeAuthorizationMessage(request_id=None, decoded_message=None)

   Variables:
      * **request_id** -- The request ID.

      * **decoded_message** -- The decoded authorization message
        (may be JSON).

   endElement(name, value, connection)

   startElement(name, attrs, connection)

class class boto.sts.credentials.FederationToken(parent=None)

   Variables:
      * **credentials** -- A Credentials object containing the
        credentials.

      * **federated_user_arn** -- ARN specifying federated user
        using credentials.

      * **federated_user_id** -- The ID of the federated user using
        credentials.

      * **packed_policy_size** -- A percentage value indicating the
        size of the policy in packed form

   endElement(name, value, connection)

   startElement(name, attrs, connection)

class class boto.sts.credentials.User(arn=None, assume_role_id=None)

   Variables:
      * **arn** -- The arn of the user assuming the role.

      * **assume_role_id** -- The identifier of the assumed role.

   endElement(name, value, connection)

   startElement(name, attrs, connection)
