Updated on 2025-11-11 GMT+08:00

Permissions

If you need to assign different permissions to personnel in your enterprise to access your DNS resources, Identity and Access Management (IAM) is a good choice for fine-grained permissions management. IAM provides identity authentication, fine-grained permissions management, and access control. It helps you secure access to your cloud resources. If your Huawei Cloud account does not require IAM for permissions management, you can skip this section.

IAM is a free service. You only pay for the resources in your account.

With IAM, you can control access to specific Huawei Cloud resources. For example, if you want some software developers in your enterprise to use DNS resources but do not want them to delete DNS resources or perform any other high-risk operations, you can grant permission to use DNS resources but not permission to delete them.

IAM supports role/policy-based authorization and identity policy-based authorization.

The following table describes the differences between these two authorization models.

Table 1 Differences between role/policy-based and identity policy-based authorization

Name

Authorization Using

Permissions

Authorization Method

Scenario

Role/Policy

User-permission-authorization scope

  • System-defined roles
  • System-defined policies
  • Custom policies

Assigning roles or policies to principals

To authorize a user, you need to add it to a user group first and then specify the scope of authorization. It is hard to provide fine-grained permissions control using authorization by user groups and a limited number of condition keys. This method is suitable for small- and medium-sized enterprises.

Identity policy

Policies

  • System-defined identity policies
  • Custom policies
  • Assigning identity policies to principals
  • Attaching identity policies to principals

You can authorize a user by attaching an identity policy to it. User-specific authorization and a variety of key conditions allow for more fine-grained permissions control. However, this model can be hard to set up. It requires a certain amount of expertise and is suitable for medium- and large-sized enterprises.

Assume that you want to grant IAM users the permissions needed to create ECSs in CN North-Beijing4 and OBS buckets in CN South-Guangzhou. With role/policy-based authorization, the administrator needs to create two custom policies and assign both to the IAM users. With identity policy-based authorization, the administrator only needs to create one custom policy and configure the condition key g:RequestedRegion for the policy, and then attach the policy to the principals or grant the principals the access permissions to the specified regions. Identity policy-based authorization is more flexible than role/policy-based authorization.

Policies and actions in the two authorization models are not interoperable. You are advised to use identity policy-based authorization. For details about system-defined permissions, see Role/Policy-based Authorization and Identity Policy-based Authorization.

For more information, see IAM Service Overview.

Role/Policy-based Authorization

DNS supports authorization with roles and policies. New IAM users do not have any permissions assigned by default. You need to first add them to one or more groups and attach policies or roles to these groups. The users then inherit permissions from the groups and can perform specified operations on cloud services based on the permissions they have been assigned.

DNS is a project-level service deployed for specific regions. When you set Scope to Region-specific projects and select the specified projects (for example, ap-southeast-2) in the specified regions (for example, AP-Bangkok), the users only have permissions for load balancers in the selected projects. If you set Scope to All resources, the users have permissions for DNS in all region-specific projects. When accessing DNS, the users need to switch to the authorized region.

Table 2 lists all system-defined permissions for DNS. System-defined policies in role/policy-based authorization are not interoperable with those in identity policy-based authorization.

Table 2 System-defined permissions for DNS

Role/Policy Name

Description

Type

Dependencies

DNS FullAccess

Full permissions for DNS

System-defined policy

None

DNS ReadOnlyAccess

Read-only permissions for DNS. Users granted with these permissions can only view DNS resources.

System-defined policy

None

DNS Administrator

Full permissions for DNS

System-defined role

Tenant Guest and VPC Administrator, which must be attached in the same project as the DNS Administrator role

Table 3 lists common operations supported by system-defined permissions for DNS.

Table 3 Common operations supported by system-defined permissions

Operation

DNS FullAccess

DNS ReadOnlyAccess

DNS Administrator

Creating a public zone

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Viewing a public zone

Supported

Supported

Supported

Modifying a public zone

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Deleting a public zone

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Deleting public zones

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Disabling or enabling a public zone

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Creating a private zone

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Viewing a private zone

Supported

Supported

Supported

Modifying a private zone

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Deleting a private zone

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Deleting private zones

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Associating a VPC with a private zone

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Disassociating a VPC from a private zone

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Adding a record set

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Viewing a record set

Supported

Supported

Supported

Modify a record set

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Deleting a record set

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Deleting record sets from multiple public zones

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Disabling or enabling a record set

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Exporting record sets

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Importing record sets

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Creating a PTR record

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Viewing a PTR record

Supported

Supported

Supported

Modifying a PTR record

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Deleting a PTR record

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Deleting PTR records

Supported

Not supported

Supported

Identity Policy-based Authorization

DNS supports identity policy-based authorization. Table 4 lists all the system-defined policies for DNS in identity policy-based authorization. System-defined policies in identity policy-based authorization are not interoperable with those in role/policy-based authorization.

Table 4 System-defined policies for DNS

Policy Name

Description

Type

DNSFullAccessPolicy

Full permissions for DNS

System-defined identity policy

DNSReadOnlyAccessPolicy

Read-only permissions for DNS

System-defined identity policy

Table 5 lists common operations supported by system-defined identity policies for DNS.

Table 5 Common operations supported by each system-defined identity policy of DNS

Operation

DNSFullAccessPolicy

DNSReadOnlyAccessPolicy

Creating a public zone

Supported

Not supported

Viewing a public zone

Supported

Supported

Modifying a public zone

Supported

Not supported

Deleting a public zone

Supported

Not supported

Deleting public zones

Supported

Not supported

Disabling or enabling a public zone

Supported

Not supported

Creating a private zone

Supported

Not supported

Viewing a private zone

Supported

Supported

Modifying a private zone

Supported

Not supported

Deleting a private zone

Supported

Not supported

Deleting private zones

Supported

Not supported

Associating a VPC with a private zone

Supported

Not supported

Disassociating a VPC from a private zone

Supported

Not supported

Adding a record set

Supported

Not supported

Viewing a record set

Supported

Supported

Modify a record set

Supported

Not supported

Deleting a record set

Supported

Not supported

Deleting record sets from multiple public zones

Supported

Not supported

Disabling or enabling a record set

Supported

Not supported

Exporting record sets

Supported

Not supported

Importing record sets

Supported

Not supported

Creating a PTR record

Supported

Not supported

Viewing a PTR record

Supported

Supported

Modifying a PTR record

Supported

Not supported

Deleting a PTR record

Supported

Not supported

Deleting PTR records

Supported

Not supported