Preface
Amazon Web Services (AWS) is the largest cloud platform in the world. It was also the first modern cloud services provider and the first to achieve broad enterprise penetration. Whereas being the successful first mover in a market has its advantages, it can also limit a service’s flexibility. Compared to its biggest peers, which logically extend enterprise identity architectures (in part because they came to market years later), AWS’ IAM capabilities can appear slightly alien. Like an archaeologist examining a dig site, we can see artifacts that suggest the service had a history of differing access mechanisms and strategies over the years. Given the success of the service, perhaps it was deemed too great a risk to the growing user base to make sweeping, foundational changes to align more with the familiar IAM patterns found in other organizations.
As AWS predates many enterprise identity best practices and reference architectures, bridging the paradigms of modern enterprise IAM and AWS’ custom approach to IAM is often a difficult leap. Fortunately, with the advent of services such as AWS Organizations, AWS SSO, and Amazon Cognito, the service has never been more approachable. In this book, we will begin by examining the core services and components of identity on AWS in a manner designed to take the rough edges off its more eccentric components. Once we have built up our foundational knowledge, we will then apply what we have learned by solving familiar enterprise use cases.