Book Image

AWS Security Cookbook

By : Heartin Kanikathottu
Book Image

AWS Security Cookbook

By: Heartin Kanikathottu

Overview of this book

As a security consultant, securing your infrastructure by implementing policies and following best practices is critical. This cookbook discusses practical solutions to the most common problems related to safeguarding infrastructure, covering services and features within AWS that can help you implement security models such as the CIA triad (confidentiality, integrity, and availability), and the AAA triad (authentication, authorization, and availability), along with non-repudiation. The book begins with IAM and S3 policies and later gets you up to speed with data security, application security, monitoring, and compliance. This includes everything from using firewalls and load balancers to secure endpoints, to leveraging Cognito for managing users and authentication. Over the course of this book, you'll learn to use AWS security services such as Config for monitoring, as well as maintain compliance with GuardDuty, Macie, and Inspector. Finally, the book covers cloud security best practices and demonstrates how you can integrate additional security services such as Glacier Vault Lock and Security Hub to further strengthen your infrastructure. By the end of this book, you'll be well versed in the techniques required for securing AWS deployments, along with having the knowledge to prepare for the AWS Certified Security – Specialty certification.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Creating ELB target groups

In this recipe, we will learn how to create a target group. The application load balancer and network load balancer route traffic to target groups, unlike classic load balancers, which route traffic to individual EC2 instances.

Getting ready

We need to create two EC2 instances to complete this recipe. We can do this by following the Using EC2 user data to launch an instance with a web server recipe in Chapter 6, Working with EC2 Instances, but using EC2 user data, as we used in the Getting ready section of the Creating a classic load balancer recipe of this chapter.

Add name tags (tags with Key set to Name) for the instances to identify them from the instances list. For the first instance, set...