aws-cdk-lib.aws_lambda.Permission

interface Permission

LanguageType name
.NETAmazon.CDK.AWS.Lambda.Permission
Gogithub.com/aws/aws-cdk-go/awscdk/v2/awslambda#Permission
Javasoftware.amazon.awscdk.services.lambda.Permission
Pythonaws_cdk.aws_lambda.Permission
TypeScript (source)aws-cdk-lib » aws_lambda » Permission

Represents a permission statement that can be added to a Lambda function's resource policy via the addPermission() method.

Example

// Grant permissions to a service
declare const fn: lambda.Function;
const principal = new iam.ServicePrincipal('my-service');

fn.grantInvoke(principal);

// Equivalent to:
fn.addPermission('my-service Invocation', {
  principal: principal,
});

Properties

NameTypeDescription
principalIPrincipalThe entity for which you are granting permission to invoke the Lambda function.
action?stringThe Lambda actions that you want to allow in this statement.
eventSourceToken?stringA unique token that must be supplied by the principal invoking the function.
functionUrlAuthType?FunctionUrlAuthTypeThe authType for the function URL that you are granting permissions for.
organizationId?stringThe organization you want to grant permissions to.
scope?ConstructThe scope to which the permission constructs be attached.
sourceAccount?stringThe AWS account ID (without hyphens) of the source owner.
sourceArn?stringThe ARN of a resource that is invoking your function.

principal

Type: IPrincipal

The entity for which you are granting permission to invoke the Lambda function.

This entity can be any of the following:

  • a valid AWS service principal, such as s3.amazonaws.com or sns.amazonaws.com
  • an AWS account ID for cross-account permissions. For example, you might want to allow a custom application in another AWS account to push events to Lambda by invoking your function.
  • an AWS organization principal to grant permissions to an entire organization.

The principal can be an AccountPrincipal, an ArnPrincipal, a ServicePrincipal, or an OrganizationPrincipal.


action?

Type: string (optional, default: 'lambda:InvokeFunction')

The Lambda actions that you want to allow in this statement.

For example, you can specify lambda:CreateFunction to specify a certain action, or use a wildcard (lambda:*) to grant permission to all Lambda actions. For a list of actions, see Actions and Condition Context Keys for AWS Lambda in the IAM User Guide.


eventSourceToken?

Type: string (optional, default: The caller would not need to present a token.)

A unique token that must be supplied by the principal invoking the function.


functionUrlAuthType?

Type: FunctionUrlAuthType (optional, default: No functionUrlAuthType)

The authType for the function URL that you are granting permissions for.


organizationId?

Type: string (optional, default: No organizationId)

The organization you want to grant permissions to.

Use this ONLY if you need to grant permissions to a subset of the organization. If you want to grant permissions to the entire organization, sending the organization principal through the principal property will suffice.

You can use this property to ensure that all source principals are owned by a specific organization.


scope?

Type: Construct (optional, default: The instance of lambda.IFunction)

The scope to which the permission constructs be attached.

The default is the Lambda function construct itself, but this would need to be different in cases such as cross-stack references where the Permissions would need to sit closer to the consumer of this permission (i.e., the caller).


sourceAccount?

Type: string (optional)

The AWS account ID (without hyphens) of the source owner.

For example, if you specify an S3 bucket in the SourceArn property, this value is the bucket owner's account ID. You can use this property to ensure that all source principals are owned by a specific account.


sourceArn?

Type: string (optional)

The ARN of a resource that is invoking your function.

When granting Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) permission to invoke your function, specify this property with the bucket ARN as its value. This ensures that events generated only from the specified bucket, not just any bucket from any AWS account that creates a mapping to your function, can invoke the function.