Control: 1.13 Ensure there is only one active access key available for any single IAM user
Description
Access keys are long-term credentials for an IAM user or the AWS account 'root' user. You can use access keys to sign programmatic requests to the AWS CLI or AWS API (directly or using the AWS SDK).
Access keys are long-term credentials for an IAM user or the AWS account 'root' user. You can use access keys to sign programmatic requests to the AWS CLI or AWS API. One of the best ways to protect your account is to not allow users to have multiple access keys.
Remediation
From Console:
- Sign in to the AWS Management Console and navigate to IAM dashboard at https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/.
- In the left navigation panel, choose
Users
. - Click on the IAM user name that you want to examine.
- On the IAM user configuration page, select
Security Credentials
tab. - In
Access Keys
section, choose one access key that is less than 90 days old. This should be the only active key used by this IAM user to access AWS resources programmatically. Test your application(s) to make sure that the chosen access key is working. - In the same
Access Keys
section, identify your non-operational access keys (other than the chosen one) and deactivate it by clicking theMake Inactive
link. - If you receive the
Change Key Status
confirmation box, clickDeactivate
to switch off the selected key. - Repeat steps no. 3 – 7 for each IAM user in your AWS account.
From Command Line:
- Using the IAM user and access key information provided in the
Audit CLI
, choose one access key that is less than 90 days old. This should be the only active key used by this IAM user to access AWS resources programmatically. Test your application(s) to make sure that the chosen access key is working. - Run the
update-access-key
command below using the IAM user name and the non-operational access key IDs to deactivate the unnecessary key(s). Refer to the Audit section to identify the unnecessary access key ID for the selected IAM user.
Note - the command does not return any output:
aws iam update-access-key --access-key-id <access-key-id> --status Inactive --user-name <user-name>
- To confirm that the selected access key pair has been successfully
deactivated
run thelist-access-keys
audit command again for that IAM User:
aws iam list-access-keys --user-name <user-name>
- The command output should expose the metadata for each access key associated with the IAM user. If the non-operational key pair(s)
Status
is set toInactive
, the key has been successfully deactivated and the IAM user access configuration adheres now to this recommendation.
- Repeat steps no. 1 – 3 for each IAM user in your AWS account.
Usage
Run the control in your terminal:
powerpipe control run aws_compliance.control.cis_v200_1_13
Snapshot and share results via Turbot Pipes:
powerpipe loginpowerpipe control run aws_compliance.control.cis_v200_1_13 --share
SQL
This control uses a named query:
iam_user_one_active_key