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SSO Sync

Github Action gopherbadger-tag-do-not-edit Go Report Card License Apache 2 Taylor Swift

Helping you populate AWS SSO directly with your Google Apps users

SSO Sync will run on any platform that Go can build for. It is available in the AWS Serverless Application Repository

Caution

When using ssosync with an instance of IAM Identity Center integrated with AWS Control Tower. AWS Control Tower creates a number of groups and users (directly via the Identity Store API), when an external identity provider is configured these users and groups are can not be used to log in. However it is important to remember that because ssosync implemements a uni-directional sync it will make the IAM Identity Store match the subset of your Google Workspaces directory you specify, including removing these groups and users created by AWS Control Tower. There is a PFR #179 Configurable handling of 'manually created' Users/Groups in IAM Identity Center to implement an option to ignore these users and groups, hopefully this will be implemented in version 3.x. However, this has a dependancy on PFR #166 Ensure all groups/user creates in IAM Identity Store are via SCIM api and populate externalId field, to be able to reliably and consistently disinguish between SCIM Provisioned users from Manually Created users

Warning

There are breaking changes for versions >= 0.02

Warning

>= 1.0.0-rc.5 groups to do not get deleted in AWS SSO when deleted in the Google Directory, and groups are synced by their email address

Warning

>= 2.0.0 this makes use of the Identity Store API which means:

Warning

>= 2.1.0 make use of named IAM resources, so if deploying via CICD or IaC template will require CAPABILITY_NAMED_IAM to be specified.

Important

>= 2.1.0 switched to using provided.al2 powered by ARM64 instances.

Important

As of v2.2.0 multiple query patterns are supported for both Group and User matching, simply separate each query with a ,. For full sync of groups and/or users specify '*' in the relevant match field. User match and group match can now be used in combination with the sync method of groups. Nested groups will now be flattened into the top level groups. External users are ignored. Group owners are treated as regular group members. User details are now cached to reduce the number of api calls and improve execution times on large directories.

Why?

As per the AWS SSO Homepage:

AWS Single Sign-On (SSO) makes it easy to centrally manage access to multiple AWS accounts and business applications and provide users with single sign-on access to all their assigned accounts and applications from one place.

Key part further down:

With AWS SSO, you can create and manage user identities in AWS SSO’s identity store, or easily connect to your existing identity source including Microsoft Active Directory and Azure Active Directory (Azure AD).

AWS SSO can use other Identity Providers as well... such as Google Apps for Domains. Although AWS SSO supports a subset of the SCIM protocol for populating users, it currently only has support for Azure AD.

This project provides a CLI tool to pull users and groups from Google and push them into AWS SSO. ssosync deals with removing users as well. The heavily commented code provides you with the detail of what it is going to do.

References

Installation

The recommended installation is:

You can also: You can go get github.com/awslabs/ssosync or grab a Release binary from the release page. The binary can be used from your local computer, or you can deploy to AWS Lambda to run on a CloudWatch Event for regular synchronization.

Configuration

You need a few items of configuration. One side from AWS, and the other from Google Cloud to allow for API access to each. You should have configured Google as your Identity Provider for AWS SSO already.

You will need the files produced by these steps for AWS Lambda deployment as well as locally running the ssosync tool.

Google

First, you have to setup your API. In the project you want to use go to the Console and select API & Services > Enable APIs and Services. Search for Admin SDK and Enable the API.

You have to perform this tutorial to create a service account that you use to sync your users. Save the JSON file you create during the process and rename it to credentials.json.

you can also use the --google-credentials parameter to explicitly specify the file with the service credentials. Please, keep this file safe, or store it in the AWS Secrets Manager

In the domain-wide delegation for the Admin API, you have to specify the following scopes for the user.

Back in the Console go to the Dashboard for the API & Services and select "Enable API and Services". In the Search box type Admin and select the Admin SDK option. Click the Enable button.

You will have to specify the email address of an admin via --google-admin to assume this users role in the Directory.

AWS

Go to the AWS Single Sign-On console in the region you have set up AWS SSO and select Settings. Click Enable automatic provisioning.

A pop up will appear with URL and the Access Token. The Access Token will only appear at this stage. You want to copy both of these as a parameter to the ssosync command.

Or you specific these as environment variables.

SSOSYNC_SCIM_ACCESS_TOKEN=<YOUR_TOKEN>
SSOSYNC_SCIM_ENDPOINT=<YOUR_ENDPOINT>

Additionally, authenticate your AWS credentials. Follow this section to create a Shared Credentials File in the home directory or export your Credentials with Environment Variables. Ensure that the default credentials are for the AWS account you intended to be synced.

To obtain your Identity store ID, go to the AWS Identity Center console and select settings. Under the Identity Source section, copy the Identity store ID.

Local Usage

git clone https://github.com/awslabs/ssosync.git
cd ssosync/
make go-build
./ssosync --help
A command line tool to enable you to synchronise your Google
Apps (Google Workspace) users to AWS Single Sign-on (AWS SSO)
Complete documentation is available at https://github.com/awslabs/ssosync

Usage:
  ssosync [flags]

Flags:
  -t, --access-token string         AWS SSO SCIM API Access Token
  -d, --debug                       enable verbose / debug logging
  -e, --endpoint string             AWS SSO SCIM API Endpoint
  -u, --google-admin string         Google Workspace admin user email
  -c, --google-credentials string   path to Google Workspace credentials file (default "credentials.json")
  -g, --group-match string          Google Workspace Groups filter query parameter, a simple '*' denotes sync all groups (and any users that are members of those groups). example: 'name:Admin*,email:aws-*', 'name=Admins' or '*' see: https://developers.google.com/admin-sdk/directory/v1/guides/search-groups, if left empty no groups will be selected.
  -h, --help                        help for ssosync
      --ignore-groups strings       ignores these Google Workspace groups
      --ignore-users strings        ignores these Google Workspace users
      --include-groups strings      include only these Google Workspace groups, NOTE: only works when --sync-method 'users_groups'
      --log-format string           log format (default "text")
      --log-level string            log level (default "info")
  -s, --sync-method string          Sync method to use (users_groups|groups) (default "groups")
  -m, --user-match string           Google Workspace Users filter query parameter, a simple '*' denotes sync all users in the directory. example: 'name:John*,email:admin*', '*' or name=John Doe,email:admin*' see: https://developers.google.com/admin-sdk/directory/v1/guides/search-users, if left empty no users will be selected but if a pattern has been set for GroupMatch users that are members of the groups it matches will still be selected
  -v, --version                     version for ssosync
  -r, --region                      AWS region where identity store exists
  -i, --identity-store-id           AWS Identity Store ID

The function has two behaviour and these are controlled by the --sync-method flag, this behavior could be

  1. groups: (default) The sync procedure work base on Groups, gets the Google Workspace groups and their members, then creates in AWS SSO the users (members of the Google Workspace groups), then the groups and at the end assign the users to their respective groups.
  2. users_groups: (original behavior, previous versions) The sync procedure is simple, gets the Google Workspace users and creates these in AWS SSO Users; then gets Google Workspace groups and creates these in AWS SSO Groups and assigns users to belong to the AWS SSO Groups.

Flags Notes:

Note

  1. Depending on the number of users and groups you have, maybe you can get AWS SSO SCIM API rate limits errors, and more frequently happens if you execute the sync many times in a short time.
  2. Depending on the number of users and groups you have, --debug flag generate too much logs lines in your AWS Lambda function. So test it in locally with the --debug flag enabled and disable it when you use a AWS Lambda function.

AWS Lambda Usage

Tip

Using Lambda may incur costs in your AWS account. Please make sure you have checked the pricing for AWS Lambda and CloudWatch before continuing.

Additionally, before choosing to deploy with Lambda, please ensure that the AWS Lambda SLAs are sufficient for your use cases.

Running ssosync once means that any changes to your Google directory will not appear in AWS SSO. To sync regularly, you can run ssosync via AWS Lambda.

Warning

You find it in the AWS Serverless Application Repository.

Tip

v2.1 Changes

  • user and group selection fields in the Cloudformation template can now be left empty where not required and will not be added as environment variables to the Lambda function, this provides consistency with CLI use of ssosync.
  • Stronger validation of parameters in the Cloudformation template, to improve likelhood of success for new users.
  • Now supports multiple deployment patterns, defaults are consistent with previous versions.

App + secrets This is the default mode and fully backwards compatible with previous versions

App only This mode does not create the secrets but expects you to deployed a separate stack using the Secrets only mode within the same account

Caution

If you want to use your own existing secrets then provide them as a comma separated list in the ##CrossStackConfigI## field in the following order: GoogleCredentials ARN,GoogleAdminEmail ARN,SCIMEndpoint ARN,SCIMAccessToken ARN,Region ARN,IdentityStoreID ARN

App for cross-account This mode is used where you have deployed the secrets in a separate account, the arns of the KMS key and secrets need to be passed into the CrossStackConfig field, It is easiest to have created the secrets in the other account using the ** Secrest for cross-account** mode, as the output can simply copied and pasted into the above field.

Caution

If you want to use your own existing secrets then provide them as a comma separated list in the CrossStackConfig field in the following order: GoogleCredentials ARN,GoogleAdminEmail ARN,SCIMEndpoint ARN,SCIMAccessToken ARN,Region ARN,IdentityStoreID ARN,KMS Key ARN

Important

Be sure to allow access to the key and secrets in their respective policies to the role SSOSyncAppRole in the app account.

Secrets only This mode creates a set of secrets but does not deploy the app itself, it requires the app is deployed in that same account using the App only mode. This allows for decoupling of the secrets and the app.

Secrets for cross-account This mode creates a set of secrets and KMS key but does not deploy the app itself, this is for use with an app stack, deployed using the App for cross-account mode. This allows for a single set of secrets to be shared with multipl app instance for testing, and improve secrets security.

SAM

You can use the AWS Serverless Application Model (SAM) to deploy this to your account.

Please, install the AWS SAM CLI and GoReleaser.

Specify an Amazon S3 Bucket for the upload with export S3_BUCKET=<YOUR_BUCKET> and an S3 prefix with export S3_PREFIX=<YOUR_PREFIX>.

Execute make package in the console. Which will package and upload the function to the bucket. You can then use the packaged.yaml to configure and deploy the stack in AWS CloudFormation Console.

Example

Build

aws cloudformation validate-template --template-body  file://template.yaml 1>/dev/null &&
sam validate &&
sam build

Deploy

sam deploy --guided

License

Apache-2.0