IAM / Client / put_role_policy

put_role_policy#

IAM.Client.put_role_policy(**kwargs)#

Adds or updates an inline policy document that is embedded in the specified IAM role.

When you embed an inline policy in a role, the inline policy is used as part of the role’s access (permissions) policy. The role’s trust policy is created at the same time as the role, using CreateRole. You can update a role’s trust policy using UpdateAssumerolePolicy. For more information about IAM roles, see Using roles to delegate permissions and federate identities.

A role can also have a managed policy attached to it. To attach a managed policy to a role, use AttachRolePolicy. To create a new managed policy, use CreatePolicy. For information about policies, see Managed policies and inline policies in the IAM User Guide.

For information about the maximum number of inline policies that you can embed with a role, see IAM and STS quotas in the IAM User Guide.

Note

Because policy documents can be large, you should use POST rather than GET when calling PutRolePolicy. For general information about using the Query API with IAM, see Making query requests in the IAM User Guide.

See also: AWS API Documentation

Request Syntax

response = client.put_role_policy(
    RoleName='string',
    PolicyName='string',
    PolicyDocument='string'
)
Parameters:
  • RoleName (string) –

    [REQUIRED]

    The name of the role to associate the policy with.

    This parameter allows (through its regex pattern) a string of characters consisting of upper and lowercase alphanumeric characters with no spaces. You can also include any of the following characters: _+=,.@-

  • PolicyName (string) –

    [REQUIRED]

    The name of the policy document.

    This parameter allows (through its regex pattern) a string of characters consisting of upper and lowercase alphanumeric characters with no spaces. You can also include any of the following characters: _+=,.@-

  • PolicyDocument (string) –

    [REQUIRED]

    The policy document.

    You must provide policies in JSON format in IAM. However, for CloudFormation templates formatted in YAML, you can provide the policy in JSON or YAML format. CloudFormation always converts a YAML policy to JSON format before submitting it to IAM.

    The regex pattern used to validate this parameter is a string of characters consisting of the following:

    • Any printable ASCII character ranging from the space character ( \u0020) through the end of the ASCII character range

    • The printable characters in the Basic Latin and Latin-1 Supplement character set (through \u00FF)

    • The special characters tab ( \u0009), line feed ( \u000A), and carriage return ( \u000D)

Returns:

None

Exceptions

  • IAM.Client.exceptions.LimitExceededException

  • IAM.Client.exceptions.MalformedPolicyDocumentException

  • IAM.Client.exceptions.NoSuchEntityException

  • IAM.Client.exceptions.UnmodifiableEntityException

  • IAM.Client.exceptions.ServiceFailureException

Examples

The following command adds a permissions policy to the role named Test-Role.

response = client.put_role_policy(
    PolicyDocument='{"Version":"2012-10-17","Statement":{"Effect":"Allow","Action":"s3:*","Resource":"*"}}',
    PolicyName='S3AccessPolicy',
    RoleName='S3Access',
)

print(response)

Expected Output:

{
    'ResponseMetadata': {
        '...': '...',
    },
}