DeleteSSHPublicKey
Event Information
- The DeleteSSHPublicKey event in AWS for IAM refers to the action of deleting an SSH public key associated with an IAM user.
- This event is triggered when an administrator or the IAM user themselves removes an SSH public key from their IAM user account.
- The DeleteSSHPublicKey event is important for auditing and tracking changes made to SSH public keys, ensuring the security and access control of the IAM user accounts.
Examples
-
Unauthorized deletion of SSH public keys: If security is impacted with DeleteSSHPublicKey in AWS for IAM, one example could be an unauthorized user gaining access to the IAM console or API and deleting SSH public keys of legitimate users. This could result in the loss of secure access to instances or systems.
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Malicious deletion of SSH public keys: Another example could be a malicious insider with privileged access intentionally deleting SSH public keys of other users. This could be done to disrupt operations, gain unauthorized access, or cover their tracks during an attack.
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Accidental deletion of SSH public keys: A third example could be an IAM administrator accidentally deleting SSH public keys while performing routine maintenance or configuration changes. This could lead to unintended loss of access for legitimate users and potential disruption of services.
Remediation
Using Console
-
Example 1: Enforce strong password policy for IAM users
- Step 1: Login to the AWS Management Console.
- Step 2: Go to the IAM service.
- Step 3: Click on “Account settings” in the left navigation pane.
- Step 4: Under the “Password policy” section, click on “Edit”.
- Step 5: Enable the “Require at least one uppercase letter” option.
- Step 6: Enable the “Require at least one lowercase letter” option.
- Step 7: Enable the “Require at least one number” option.
- Step 8: Enable the “Require at least one non-alphanumeric character” option.
- Step 9: Set the “Minimum password length” to an appropriate value.
- Step 10: Click on “Apply password policy”.
-
Example 2: Enable multi-factor authentication (MFA) for IAM users
- Step 1: Login to the AWS Management Console.
- Step 2: Go to the IAM service.
- Step 3: Click on “Users” in the left navigation pane.
- Step 4: Select the IAM user for which you want to enable MFA.
- Step 5: Click on the “Security credentials” tab.
- Step 6: Under the “Multi-factor authentication (MFA)” section, click on “Manage”.
- Step 7: Click on “Activate MFA”.
- Step 8: Choose the appropriate MFA device option (e.g., virtual MFA device, hardware MFA device).
- Step 9: Follow the on-screen instructions to set up the MFA device.
- Step 10: Click on “Assign MFA”.
-
Example 3: Enable AWS CloudTrail for logging IAM events
- Step 1: Login to the AWS Management Console.
- Step 2: Go to the CloudTrail service.
- Step 3: Click on “Trails” in the left navigation pane.
- Step 4: Click on “Create trail”.
- Step 5: Provide a name for the trail and choose the appropriate settings (e.g., log file validation, S3 bucket for storing logs).
- Step 6: Under the “Management events” section, enable logging for IAM events.
- Step 7: Click on “Create”.
- Step 8: Once the trail is created, go to the IAM service.
- Step 9: Click on “Policies” in the left navigation pane.
- Step 10: Create a new IAM policy that allows the necessary CloudTrail actions and attach it to the IAM users or groups that require access to CloudTrail logs.
Using CLI
-
Ensure IAM users have strong passwords:
- Use the
update-login-profile
command to set a strong password for an IAM user:
- Use the
-
Enable multi-factor authentication (MFA) for IAM users:
- Use the
enable-mfa-device
command to enable MFA for an IAM user:
- Use the
-
Remove unnecessary IAM access keys:
- Use the
delete-access-key
command to delete an IAM access key:
- Use the
Using Python
- Ensure IAM users have strong passwords:
- Use the
boto3
library in Python to retrieve a list of IAM users. - For each user, check if their password is strong by validating it against a set of password complexity rules.
- If a user’s password is weak, use the
update_login_profile
method to force a password reset for that user.
- Use the
- Enable multi-factor authentication (MFA) for IAM users:
- Use the
boto3
library in Python to retrieve a list of IAM users. - For each user, check if MFA is enabled by calling the
list_mfa_devices
method. - If MFA is not enabled, use the
enable_mfa
method to enable it for the user.
- Use the
- Remove unused IAM access keys:
- Use the
boto3
library in Python to retrieve a list of IAM users. - For each user, check if they have any access keys by calling the
list_access_keys
method. - If the user has unused access keys, use the
delete_access_key
method to remove them.
- Use the