This page shows how to send an email using SES. The example works by reading the credentials from ~/.aws/credentials
, which are the root (yet \"shared\"??) credenti
There are a few pieces to this.
First you need an IAM policy. You can use one of the built-in policies, such as AmazonSESFullAccess
or you can create your own. The holder of a particular policy will be able to access the resources and actions defined in the policy. You can create this policy manually, or work through the AWS console and it will walk you through it. IAM --> Policies --> Create Policy
Secondly, you will need a role. Also, easily done in the console. IAM --> Roles --> Create role. Trusted entity is AWS service. Highlight EC2. In the next screen, select the policy you want to associate with this role. This is the policy you created above. If your EC2 already has a role, then you can add the IAM policy to this role. Assigning an IAM policy to a role, is what they refer to as a trust policy.
Now any code that runs on your EC2 instance will be able to send messages to your SES service. The EC2 assumes the role assigned to it. And the SES policy is defined for that role. This will allow EC2 to get temporary credentials (behind the scenes).
The back story is as follows. Any API call to an AWS service needs to have a key and secret. When you make API calls from your local computer, you may use your personal key and secret (or even root ones). When you need to make API calls from another service, you do not have that key and secret. It would not be secure or practical to store the credentials on an EC2. Or even worse, in an S3 bucket. That is why AWS came up with the Role
concept. Roles can request temporary credentials from an internal service called Simple Token Service (STS). A role is attached to an EC2 instance for example. And if the right policy is attached to that role, the EC2 instance can request to get temporary credentials to make an API call to another service. All of this happens behind the scenes.