Using IAM Identity Policies to Grant Access to CBR
System-defined permissions in identity policy-based authorization provided by Identity and Access Management (IAM) let you control access to CBR resources. With IAM, you can:
- Create IAM users or user groups for personnel based on your enterprise's organizational structure. Each IAM user can have their own identity credentials for accessing CBR resources.
- Grant users only the permissions required to perform a given task based on their job responsibilities.
- Entrust a Huawei Cloud account or a cloud service to perform efficient O&M on your CBR resources.
If your Huawei Cloud account meets your permissions requirements, you can skip this section.
Figure 1 shows the process flow of identity policy-based authorization.
Prerequisites
Before granting permissions, learn about CBR system-defined permissions in Permissions Management. For details about how to grant permissions for other services, see System-defined Permissions.
Process Flow
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On the IAM console, create an IAM user or create an IAM user group.
- Attach a system-defined identity policy to the user or user group.
Assign the permissions defined in the system-defined identity policy CBRReadOnlyPolicy to the user or group, or attach the system-defined identity policy to it.
- Log in as the IAM user and verify permissions.
Log in to the CBR console and verify the permissions.
- Choose Service List > Cloud Backup and Recovery. Then click Buy Server Backup Vault on the CBR console. If a message appears indicating insufficient permissions to perform the operation, the CBR ReadOnlyAccess policy is in effect.
- Choose another service in Service List. If a message appears indicating insufficient permissions to access the service, the CBR ReadOnlyAccess policy is in effect.
Example Custom Policies
You can create custom identity policies to supplement the system-defined identity policies of CBR. Add actions in custom policies as needed. For details about supported actions, see Permissions and Supported Actions > Actions Supported by Identity Policy-based Authorization in the Cloud Backup and Recovery API Reference.
- Visual editor: Select cloud services, actions, resources, and request conditions. This does not require knowledge of policy syntax.
- JSON: Create a JSON policy or edit an existing one.
For details, see Creating a Custom Identity Policy and Attaching It to a Principal.
When creating a custom policy, use the Resource element to specify the resources the policy applies to and use the Condition element (service-specific condition keys) to control when the policy is in effect. For details about the supported resource types and condition keys, see Permissions Policies and Supported Actions > Actions Supported by Identity Policy-based Authorization in the Cloud Backup and Recovery API Reference.
The following lists examples of common CBR custom policies.
- Example 1: Grant permission to create, modify, and delete vaults.
{ "Version": "5.0", "Statement": [ { "Effect": "Allow", "Action": [ "cbr:vaults:create", "cbr:vaults:update", "cbr:vaults:delete" ] } ] } { "Version": "5.0", "Statement": [ { "Effect": "Allow", "Action": [ "cbr:vaults:create", "cbr:vaults:update", "cbr:vaults:delete" ], "Resource": [ "cbr:*:*:vault:*" ] } ] } - Example 2: Create a custom policy containing multiple actions.
A custom policy can contain the actions on one or multiple services.
Example policy containing multiple actions:
{ "Version": "5.0", "Statement": [ { "Effect": "Allow", "Action": [ "cbr:vaults:create", "cbr:vaults:delete" ] }, { "Effect": "Allow", "Action": [ "evs:volumes:create", "evs:volumes:list" ] }, { "Effect": "Allow", "Action": [ "ecs:cloudServers:createServers", "ecs:cloudServers:listServersDetails" ] } ] }
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