ram_promote_permission_created_from_policy: When you attach a resource-based policy to a resource, RAM...

View source: R/ram_operations.R

ram_promote_permission_created_from_policyR Documentation

When you attach a resource-based policy to a resource, RAM automatically creates a resource share of featureSet=CREATED_FROM_POLICY with a managed permission that has the same IAM permissions as the original resource-based policy

Description

When you attach a resource-based policy to a resource, RAM automatically creates a resource share of featureSet=CREATED_FROM_POLICY with a managed permission that has the same IAM permissions as the original resource-based policy. However, this type of managed permission is visible to only the resource share owner, and the associated resource share can't be modified by using RAM.

See https://www.paws-r-sdk.com/docs/ram_promote_permission_created_from_policy/ for full documentation.

Usage

ram_promote_permission_created_from_policy(
  permissionArn,
  name,
  clientToken = NULL
)

Arguments

permissionArn

[required] Specifies the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the CREATED_FROM_POLICY permission that you want to promote. You can get this Amazon Resource Name (ARN) by calling the list_resource_share_permissions operation.

name

[required] Specifies a name for the promoted customer managed permission.

clientToken

Specifies a unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. This lets you safely retry the request without accidentally performing the same operation a second time. Passing the same value to a later call to an operation requires that you also pass the same value for all other parameters. We recommend that you use a UUID type of value..

If you don't provide this value, then Amazon Web Services generates a random one for you.

If you retry the operation with the same ClientToken, but with different parameters, the retry fails with an IdempotentParameterMismatch error.


paws.security.identity documentation built on Sept. 12, 2024, 6:30 a.m.