AWS managed policies for AWS Global Networks for Transit Gateways
To add permissions to users, groups, and roles, it is easier to use AWS managed policies than to write policies yourself. It takes time and expertise to create IAM customer managed policies that provide your team with only the permissions they need. To get started quickly, you can use our AWS managed policies. These policies cover common use cases and are available in your AWS account. For more information about AWS managed policies, see AWS managed policies in the IAM User Guide.
AWS services maintain and update AWS managed policies. You can't change the permissions in AWS managed policies. Services occasionally add additional permissions to an AWS managed policy to support new features. This type of update affects all identities (users, groups, and roles) where the policy is attached. Services are most likely to update an AWS managed policy when a new feature is launched or when new operations become available. Services do not remove permissions from an AWS managed policy, so policy updates won't break your existing permissions.
Additionally, AWS supports managed policies for job functions that span multiple
services. For example, the ReadOnlyAccess
AWS managed
policy provides read-only access to all AWS services and resources. When a service launches
a new feature, AWS adds read-only permissions for new operations and resources. For a list
and descriptions of job function policies, see AWS managed policies for
job functions in the IAM User Guide.
AWS managed policy: AWSNetworkManagerReadOnlyAccess
You can attach the AWSNetworkManagerReadOnlyAccess
policy to your IAM
identities. This policy grants permissions that allow registered delegated administrators
and the management account read-only access to global networks. For more
information, see Multi-account access roles for AWS Global Networks for Transit Gateways.
AWS managed policy: NetworkAdministrator
You can attach the NetworkAdministrator
policy to your IAM identities.
This policy grants permissions that allow registered delegated administrators and the
management account administrator access to global networks. For more
information, see Multi-account access roles for AWS Global Networks for Transit Gateways.
AWS managed policy: AWSNetworkManagerServiceRolePolicy
This policy is attached to the service-linked role named
AWSServiceRoleForNetworkManager
to allow global networks to call API actions
on your behalf when you work with global networks. For more information, see AWS Global Networks for Transit Gateways service-linked roles.
global networks updates to AWS managed policies
View details about updates to AWS managed policies for Network Manager since this service began tracking these changes in April 2021. For automatic alerts about changes to this page, subscribe to the RSS feed on the Network Manager Document history page.
Change | Description | Date |
---|---|---|
global networks added permission to call the following API
action:
|
July 12, 2022 | |
global networks began using administrative permissions in member accounts for multi-account access. | May 24, 2022 | |
global networks began using read-only permissions in member accounts for multi-account access. | May 24, 2022 | |
AWServiceRoleForNetworkManager updated existing policy | global networks added permission to call the following API
actions:
|
May 24, 2022 |
NWSServiceRoleForNetworkManager updated existing policy. |
global networks added permissions to call the following API actions:
ec2:DescribeRegions . |
December 2, 2021 |
AWSServiceRoleForNetworkManager: updated existing policy | global networks added permissions to call the following API actions:
directconnect:DescribeDirectConnectGateways ,
ec2:DescribeVpnConnections , ec2:DescribeVpcs ,
ec2:GetTransitGatewayRouteTableAssociations ,
ec2:SearchTransitGatewayRoutes ,
ec2:DescribeTransitGatewayPeeringAttachments ,
ec2:DescribeTransitGatewayConnects and
ec2:DescribeTransitGatewayConnectPeers . |
June 1, 2021 |