Book Image

AWS Tools for PowerShell 6

By : Ramesh Waghmare
Book Image

AWS Tools for PowerShell 6

By: Ramesh Waghmare

Overview of this book

AWS Tools for PowerShell 6 shows you exactly how to automate all the aspects of AWS. You can take advantage of the amazing power of the cloud, yet add powerful scripts and mechanisms to perform common tasks faster than ever before. This book expands on the Amazon documentation with real-world, useful examples and production-ready scripts to automate all the aspects of your new cloud platform. It will cover topics such as managing Windows with PowerShell, setting up security services, administering database services, and deploying and managing networking. You will also explore advanced topics such as PowerShell authoring techniques, and configuring and managing storage and content delivery. By the end of this book, you will be able to use Amazon Web Services to automate and manage Windows servers. You will also have gained a good understanding of automating the AWS infrastructure using simple coding.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)

The AWS credential search order

AWS Tools stores the credential in the C:\Users\username>\AppData\Local\AWSToolkit\RegisteredAccounts.json file. This files stores your access and secret access keys in an encrypted format. Even if you copy this file to a different computer, you cannot use it. This is the first file that AWS Tools for PowerShell searches on the Windows platform for the AWS credentials. You can also write the credentials to a different file as follows:

PS C:\> Set-AWSCredentials -AccessKey {xx} -SecretKey {xx} -StoreAs {ProfileName} -ProfilesLocation c:\AWSTools\MyCredential

By default, on a Windows platform, AWS Tools for Windows PowerShell modules read profiles from the file C:\Users<userid>\.aws\credentials. Don't get confused here. I specifically mentioned AWS Tools for Windows PowerShell and not AWS Tools for PowerShell Core. AWS Tools for...