Book Image

AWS Certified Security – Specialty Exam Guide

By : Stuart Scott
Book Image

AWS Certified Security – Specialty Exam Guide

By: Stuart Scott

Overview of this book

AWS Certified Security – Specialty is a certification exam to validate your expertise in advanced cloud security. With an ever-increasing demand for AWS security skills in the cloud market, this certification can help you advance in your career. This book helps you prepare for the exam and gain certification by guiding you through building complex security solutions. From understanding the AWS shared responsibility model and identity and access management to implementing access management best practices, you'll gradually build on your skills. The book will also delve into securing instances and the principles of securing VPC infrastructure. Covering security threats, vulnerabilities, and attacks such as the DDoS attack, you'll discover how to mitigate these at different layers. You'll then cover compliance and learn how to use AWS to audit and govern infrastructure, as well as to focus on monitoring your environment by implementing logging mechanisms and tracking data. Later, you'll explore how to implement data encryption as you get hands-on with securing a live environment. Finally, you'll discover security best practices that will assist you in making critical decisions relating to cost, security,and deployment complexity. By the end of this AWS security book, you'll have the skills to pass the exam and design secure AWS solutions.
Table of Contents (27 chapters)
1
Section 1: The Exam and Preparation
3
Section 2: Security Responsibility and Access Management
8
Section 3: Security - a Layered Approach
15
Section 4: Monitoring, Logging, and Auditing
18
Section 5: Best Practices and Automation
21
Section 6: Encryption and Data Security

Implementing flow logs

Within your AWS account, it's likely that you have a number of different subnets, both private and public, allowing external connectivity. You may even have multiple VPCs connected via VPC peering connections or via AWS Transit Gateway. Either way, you will have a lot of network traffic traversing your AWS infrastructure from multiple different sources, both internally and externally, across thousands of interfaces. Using flow logs gives you the ability to capture this IP traffic across the network interfaces that are attached to your resources, which could number in the tens of thousands in a corporate environment!  

For a recap of subnets and VPC infrastructure, please review the details found in Chapter 7Configuring Infrastructure Security.

Flow logs can be configured for the following resources:

  • Your VPC
  • A subnet within your VPC
  • A network interface from your EC2 instances, or interfaces created by Elastic Load Balancing, Amazon RDS...