Internetwork traffic privacy
Connections are protected both between Amazon Aurora and on-premises applications and between Amazon Aurora and other AWS resources within the same AWS Region.
Traffic between service and on-premises clients and applications
You have two connectivity options between your private network and AWS:
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An AWS Site-to-Site VPN connection. For more information, see What is AWS Site-to-Site VPN?
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An AWS Direct Connect connection. For more information, see What is AWS Direct Connect?
You get access to Amazon Aurora through the network by using AWS-published API operations. Clients must support the following:
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Transport Layer Security (TLS). We require TLS 1.2 and recommend TLS 1.3.
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Cipher suites with perfect forward secrecy (PFS) such as DHE (Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman) or ECDHE (Elliptic Curve Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman). Most modern systems such as Java 7 and later support these modes.
Additionally, requests must be signed by using an access key ID and a secret access key that is associated with an IAM principal. Or you can use the AWS Security Token Service (AWS STS) to generate temporary security credentials to sign requests.