AWS Okta Keyman
Project description
AWS Okta Keyman
This is a simple command-line tool for logging into Okta and generating temporary Amazon AWS Credentials. This tool makes it easy and secure for your developers to generate short-lived, logged and user-attributed credentials that can be used for any of the Amazon SDK libraries or CLI tools.
Features
We have support for logging into Okta, optionally handling MFA Authentication, and then generating new SAML authenticated AWS sessions. This tool has a few core features that help set it apart from other similar tools that are available.
Optional MFA Authentication
If you organization requires MFA for the initial login into Okta, we will automatically detect that requirement during authentication and prompt the user to complete the Multi Factor Authentication. At this time application-level MFA is not supported.
In particular, there is support for standard passcode based auth, as well as support for Okta Verify with Push and Duo Auth. If both are available, Okta Verify with Push will be prioritized and a push notification is automatically sent to the user. If the user declines the validation, then optionally the Passcode can be entered in manually.
For Duo Auth Duo wants you to use a web page to load their iframe to pick your factor and then move forward from there. That is one option and the one most likely to keep working. This tool now also has an alternative browserless option that attempts to use Duo for MFA without a browser. This may eventually be stopped/prevented by Duo but makes this tool work on remote servers or in any other case where you may not be able to use a browser.
Supported MFA Solutions
- Okta Verify
- Duo Auth (push, call, or OTP)
- Okta OTP
- Google Auth OTP
- SMS OTP
- Call OTP
- Question/Answer
Windows Hello, U2F, email, and physical token (RSA, Symantec) are not supported at this time.
Multiple AWS Roles
AWS Okta Keyman supports multiple AWS roles when configured. The user is prompted to select the role they wish to use before the temporary keys are generated. An example of this is shown here:
17:10:21 (WARNING) Multiple AWS roles found; please select one
[0] Role: arn:aws:iam::012345678910:role/admin_noiam
[1] Role: arn:aws:iam::012345678910:role/readonly
[2] Role: arn:aws:iam::012345678910:role/admin_full
Select a role from above: 2
17:10:22 (INFO) Assuming role: arn:aws:iam::012345678910:role/admin_full
Re-Up Mode .. Automatic Credential Re-Generation
Amazon IAM only supports Federated Login sessions that last up to 1 hour. For developers, it can be painful to re-authenticate every hour during your work day. This is made much worse if your organization requires MFA on each login.
You may run the AWS Okta Keyman in "reup" mode to get around this. The tool will continue to run in a sleep loop periodically reaching out to Okta, generating a new SAML Assertion, and then generating updated Amazon AWS credentials. This can run for as long as your Okta administrator has allowed your Login Session to be - often a full work day.
See the --reup
commandline option for help here!
AWS Accounts from Okta
As of v0.5.1 AWS Okta Keyman can pull the AWS Accounts that have been assigned from Okta itself which means the app ID value no longer needs to be provided in the command line or in the config file. A config file can still optionally be used to ensure account names or order if preferred.
Automatic Username
As of v0.5.1 AWS Okta Keyman will use the current user as the username for Okta authentication if no username has been provided.
Config file .. predefined settings for you or your org
The config file, which defaults to ~/.config/aws_okta_keyman.yml
, allows you to
pre-set things like your username, Okta organization name (subdomain), and AWS accounts
and App IDs to make this script simpler to use. This also supports username assumption
based on the current user when the username or email is configured as
automatic-username
if usernames only are an option or
automatic-username@example.com
if you need full emails. Arguments will always
be preferred to the config file so you can override what's in the config file
as needed on each run of the tool.
Example config file:
username: automatic-username@example.com
org: example
accounts:
- name: Test
appid: exampleAppIDFromOkta/123
- name: Dev
appid: exampleAppIDFromOkta/234
- name: Prod
appid: exampleAppIDFromOkta/345
When used you'll get a similar interface to AWS Role selection but for your AWS accounts:
$ aws_okta_keyman
16:56:47 (INFO) AWS Okta Keyman v0.3.0
16:56:47 (WARNING) No app ID provided; please select from available AWS accounts
[0] Account: Test
[1] Account: Dev
[2] Account: Prod
Select an account from above: 0
16:56:49 (INFO) Using account: Test / exampleAppIDFromOkta/123
Interactive Configuration
For interactive configuration and creation of the config file you can start the tool with just config as a parameter and you will be propted to provide the basic information needed to get started.
aws_okta_keyman config
Python Versions
Python 2.7.4+ and Python 3.5.0+ are supported
Usage
Client Setup
Before you can install this tool you need to have a working Python installation with pip. If you're not sure if you have this a good place to start would be the Python Beginner's Guide .
Once your Python environment is configured simply run pip install aws-okta-keyman
to install the tool.
Running AWS Okta Keyman
For detailed usage instructions, see the --help
commandline argument.
Typical usage:
$ aws_okta_keyman -a <application id> -o <your org name> -u <your username>
08:27:44 (INFO) AWS Okta Keyman v0.2.0
Password:
08:27:48 (WARNING) Okta Verify Push being sent...
08:27:48 (INFO) Waiting for Okta Verification...
...
08:28:09 (INFO) Waiting for Okta Verification...
08:28:10 (INFO) Successfully authed Nathan V
08:28:10 (INFO) Getting SAML Assertion from foobar
08:28:11 (INFO) Found credentials in shared credentials file: ~/.aws/credentials
08:28:11 (INFO) Wrote profile "default" to /Users/nathan-v/.aws/credentials
08:28:11 (INFO) Session expires at 2017-07-24 16:28:13+00:00
$
Okta Setup
Before you can use this tool, your Okta administrator needs to set up Amazon/Okta integration using SAML roles.
Background
This is a hard fork of nd_okta_auth by Nextdoor.com, Inc.. I decided to move ahead this way as I wanted to be able to move quickly and add features independently of the existing implementation. A big thank you to @diranged for the original work that this comes from.
The original code is heavily based on the previous work done by ThoughtWorksInc on their OktaAuth and AWS Role Credentials tools.
Developer Info
See CONTRIBUTING.md for more information on contributing to this project.
License
Copyright 2018 Nathan V
Copyright 2018 Nextdoor.com, Inc
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE.txt file for details.
Some code in aws_okta_keyman/okta.py
, aws_okta_keyman/aws.py
,
aws_okta_keyman/aws_saml.py
, and aws_okta_keyman/test/aws_saml_test.py
is
distributed under MIT license. See the source files for details. A copy of the
license is in the LICENSE_MIT.txt file.
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