Data Source: aws_iam_policy_document
Generates an IAM policy document in JSON format.
This is a data source which can be used to construct a JSON representation of an IAM policy document, for use with resources which expect policy documents, such as the aws_iam_policy
resource.
data "aws_iam_policy_document" "example" { statement { sid = "1" actions = [ "s3:ListAllMyBuckets", "s3:GetBucketLocation", ] resources = [ "arn:aws:s3:::*", ] } statement { actions = [ "s3:ListBucket", ] resources = [ "arn:aws:s3:::${var.s3_bucket_name}", ] condition { test = "StringLike" variable = "s3:prefix" values = [ "", "home/", "home/&{aws:username}/", ] } } statement { actions = [ "s3:*", ] resources = [ "arn:aws:s3:::${var.s3_bucket_name}/home/&{aws:username}", "arn:aws:s3:::${var.s3_bucket_name}/home/&{aws:username}/*", ] } } resource "aws_iam_policy" "example" { name = "example_policy" path = "/" policy = "${data.aws_iam_policy_document.example.json}" }
Using this data source to generate policy documents is optional. It is also valid to use literal JSON strings within your configuration, or to use the file
interpolation function to read a raw JSON policy document from a file.
Argument Reference
The following arguments are supported:
-
policy_id
(Optional) - An ID for the policy document. -
source_json
(Optional) - An IAM policy document to import as a base for the current policy document. Statements with non-blanksid
s in the current policy document will overwrite statements with the samesid
in the source json. Statements without ansid
cannot be overwritten. -
override_json
(Optional) - An IAM policy document to import and override the current policy document. Statements with non-blanksid
s in the override document will overwrite statements with the samesid
in the current document. Statements without ansid
cannot be overwritten. -
statement
(Required) - A nested configuration block (described below) configuring one statement to be included in the policy document.
Each document configuration must have one or more statement
blocks, which each accept the following arguments:
-
sid
(Optional) - An ID for the policy statement. -
effect
(Optional) - Either "Allow" or "Deny", to specify whether this statement allows or denies the given actions. The default is "Allow". -
actions
(Optional) - A list of actions that this statement either allows or denies. For example,["ec2:RunInstances", "s3:*"]
. -
not_actions
(Optional) - A list of actions that this statement does not apply to. Used to apply a policy statement to all actions except those listed. -
resources
(Optional) - A list of resource ARNs that this statement applies to. This is required by AWS if used for an IAM policy. -
not_resources
(Optional) - A list of resource ARNs that this statement does not apply to. Used to apply a policy statement to all resources except those listed. -
principals
(Optional) - A nested configuration block (described below) specifying a resource (or resource pattern) to which this statement applies. -
not_principals
(Optional) - Likeprincipals
except gives resources that the statement does not apply to. -
condition
(Optional) - A nested configuration block (described below) that defines a further, possibly-service-specific condition that constrains whether this statement applies.
Each policy may have either zero or more principals
blocks or zero or more not_principals
blocks, both of which each accept the following arguments:
-
type
(Required) The type of principal. For AWS accounts this is "AWS". -
identifiers
(Required) List of identifiers for principals. Whentype
is "AWS", these are IAM user or role ARNs.
Each policy statement may have zero or more condition
blocks, which each accept the following arguments:
-
test
(Required) The name of the IAM condition type to evaluate. -
variable
(Required) The name of a Context Variable to apply the condition to. Context variables may either be standard AWS variables starting withaws:
, or service-specific variables prefixed with the service name. -
values
(Required) The values to evaluate the condition against. If multiple values are provided, the condition matches if at least one of them applies. (That is, the tests are combined with the "OR" boolean operation.)
When multiple condition
blocks are provided, they must all evaluate to true for the policy statement to apply. (In other words, the conditions are combined with the "AND" boolean operation.)
Context Variable Interpolation
The IAM policy document format allows context variables to be interpolated into various strings within a statement. The native IAM policy document format uses ${...}
-style syntax that is in conflict with Terraform's interpolation syntax, so this data source instead uses &{...}
syntax for interpolations that should be processed by AWS rather than by Terraform.
Wildcard Principal
In order to define wildcard principal (a.k.a. anonymous user) use type = "*"
and identifiers = ["*"]
. In that case the rendered json will contain "Principal": "*"
. Note, that even though the IAM Documentation states that "Principal": "*"
and "Principal": {"AWS": "*"}
are equivalent, those principals have different behavior for IAM Role Trust Policy. Therefore Terraform will normalize the principal field only in above-mentioned case and principals like type = "AWS"
and identifiers = ["*"]
will be rendered as "Principal": {"AWS": "*"}
.
Attributes Reference
The following attribute is exported:
-
json
- The above arguments serialized as a standard JSON policy document.
Example with Multiple Principals
Showing how you can use this as an assume role policy as well as showing how you can specify multiple principal blocks with different types.
data "aws_iam_policy_document" "event_stream_bucket_role_assume_role_policy" { statement { actions = ["sts:AssumeRole"] principals { type = "Service" identifiers = ["firehose.amazonaws.com"] } principals { type = "AWS" identifiers = ["${var.trusted_role_arn}"] } } }
Example with Source and Override
Showing how you can use source_json
and override_json
data "aws_iam_policy_document" "source" { statement { actions = ["ec2:*"] resources = ["*"] } statement { sid = "SidToOverwrite" actions = ["s3:*"] resources = ["*"] } } data "aws_iam_policy_document" "source_json_example" { source_json = "${data.aws_iam_policy_document.source.json}" statement { sid = "SidToOverwrite" actions = ["s3:*"] resources = [ "arn:aws:s3:::somebucket", "arn:aws:s3:::somebucket/*", ] } } data "aws_iam_policy_document" "override" { statement { sid = "SidToOverwrite" actions = ["s3:*"] resources = ["*"] } } data "aws_iam_policy_document" "override_json_example" { override_json = "${data.aws_iam_policy_document.override.json}" statement { actions = ["ec2:*"] resources = ["*"] } statement { sid = "SidToOverwrite" actions = ["s3:*"] resources = [ "arn:aws:s3:::somebucket", "arn:aws:s3:::somebucket/*", ] } }
data.aws_iam_policy_document.source_json_example.json
will evaluate to:
{ "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Sid": "", "Effect": "Allow", "Action": "ec2:*", "Resource": "*" }, { "Sid": "SidToOverwrite", "Effect": "Allow", "Action": "s3:*", "Resource": [ "arn:aws:s3:::somebucket/*", "arn:aws:s3:::somebucket" ] } ] }
data.aws_iam_policy_document.override_json_example.json
will evaluate to:
{ "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Sid": "", "Effect": "Allow", "Action": "ec2:*", "Resource": "*" }, { "Sid": "SidToOverwrite", "Effect": "Allow", "Action": "s3:*", "Resource": "*" } ] }
You can also combine source_json
and override_json
in the same document.
© 2018 HashiCorpLicensed under the MPL 2.0 License.
https://www.terraform.io/docs/providers/aws/d/iam_policy_document.html