add_permission
(**kwargs)¶Grants an Amazon Web Service, Amazon Web Services account, or Amazon Web Services organization permission to use a function. You can apply the policy at the function level, or specify a qualifier to restrict access to a single version or alias. If you use a qualifier, the invoker must use the full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of that version or alias to invoke the function. Note: Lambda does not support adding policies to version $LATEST.
To grant permission to another account, specify the account ID as the Principal
. To grant permission to an organization defined in Organizations, specify the organization ID as the PrincipalOrgID
. For Amazon Web Services, the principal is a domain-style identifier that the service defines, such as s3.amazonaws.com
or sns.amazonaws.com
. For Amazon Web Services, you can also specify the ARN of the associated resource as the SourceArn
. If you grant permission to a service principal without specifying the source, other accounts could potentially configure resources in their account to invoke your Lambda function.
This operation adds a statement to a resource-based permissions policy for the function. For more information about function policies, see Using resource-based policies for Lambda.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.add_permission(
FunctionName='string',
StatementId='string',
Action='string',
Principal='string',
SourceArn='string',
SourceAccount='string',
EventSourceToken='string',
Qualifier='string',
RevisionId='string',
PrincipalOrgID='string',
FunctionUrlAuthType='NONE'|'AWS_IAM'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Lambda function, version, or alias.
Name formats
my-function
(name-only), my-function:v1
(with alias).arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:123456789012:function:my-function
.123456789012:function:my-function
.You can append a version number or alias to any of the formats. The length constraint applies only to the full ARN. If you specify only the function name, it is limited to 64 characters in length.
[REQUIRED]
A statement identifier that differentiates the statement from others in the same policy.
[REQUIRED]
The action that the principal can use on the function. For example, lambda:InvokeFunction
or lambda:GetFunction
.
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Web Service or Amazon Web Services account that invokes the function. If you specify a service, use SourceArn
or SourceAccount
to limit who can invoke the function through that service.
For Amazon Web Services, the ARN of the Amazon Web Services resource that invokes the function. For example, an Amazon S3 bucket or Amazon SNS topic.
Note that Lambda configures the comparison using the StringLike
operator.
SourceArn
to ensure that the specified account owns the resource. It is possible for an Amazon S3 bucket to be deleted by its owner and recreated by another account.AWS_IAM
if you want to restrict access to authenticated users only. Set to NONE
if you want to bypass IAM authentication to create a public endpoint. For more information, see Security and auth model for Lambda function URLs.dict
Response Syntax
{
'Statement': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
Statement (string) --
The permission statement that's added to the function policy.
Exceptions
Lambda.Client.exceptions.ServiceException
Lambda.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
Lambda.Client.exceptions.ResourceConflictException
Lambda.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterValueException
Lambda.Client.exceptions.PolicyLengthExceededException
Lambda.Client.exceptions.TooManyRequestsException
Lambda.Client.exceptions.PreconditionFailedException
Examples
The following example adds permission for Amazon S3 to invoke a Lambda function named my-function for notifications from a bucket named my-bucket-1xpuxmplzrlbh in account 123456789012.
response = client.add_permission(
Action='lambda:InvokeFunction',
FunctionName='my-function',
Principal='s3.amazonaws.com',
SourceAccount='123456789012',
SourceArn='arn:aws:s3:::my-bucket-1xpuxmplzrlbh/*',
StatementId='s3',
)
print(response)
Expected Output:
{
'Statement': '{"Sid":"s3","Effect":"Allow","Principal":{"Service":"s3.amazonaws.com"},"Action":"lambda:InvokeFunction","Resource":"arn:aws:lambda:us-east-2:123456789012:function:my-function","Condition":{"StringEquals":{"AWS:SourceAccount":"123456789012"},"ArnLike":{"AWS:SourceArn":"arn:aws:s3:::my-bucket-1xpuxmplzrlbh"}}}',
'ResponseMetadata': {
'...': '...',
},
}
The following example adds permission for account 223456789012 invoke a Lambda function named my-function.
response = client.add_permission(
Action='lambda:InvokeFunction',
FunctionName='my-function',
Principal='223456789012',
StatementId='xaccount',
)
print(response)
Expected Output:
{
'Statement': '{"Sid":"xaccount","Effect":"Allow","Principal":{"AWS":"arn:aws:iam::223456789012:root"},"Action":"lambda:InvokeFunction","Resource":"arn:aws:lambda:us-east-2:123456789012:function:my-function"}',
'ResponseMetadata': {
'...': '...',
},
}