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Paws::STS::AssumeRoleWithWebIdentityResponse(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Paws::STS::AssumeRoleWithWebIdentityResponse(3) |
Paws::STS::AssumeRoleWithWebIdentityResponse
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) and the assumed role ID, which are identifiers
that you can use to refer to the resulting temporary security credentials. For
example, you can reference these credentials as a principal in a
resource-based policy by using the ARN or assumed role ID. The ARN and ID
include the "RoleSessionName" that you
specified when you called "AssumeRole".
The intended audience (also known as client ID) of the web identity token. This
is traditionally the client identifier issued to the application that
requested the web identity token.
The temporary security credentials, which include an access key ID, a secret
access key, and a security token.
A percentage value that indicates the size of the policy in packed form. The
service rejects any policy with a packed size greater than 100 percent, which
means the policy exceeded the allowed space.
The issuing authority of the web identity token presented. For OpenID Connect ID
Tokens this contains the value of the "iss"
field. For OAuth 2.0 access tokens, this contains the value of the
"ProviderId" parameter that was passed in
the "AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity" request.
The unique user identifier that is returned by the identity provider. This
identifier is associated with the
"WebIdentityToken" that was submitted with
the "AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity" call. The
identifier is typically unique to the user and the application that acquired
the "WebIdentityToken" (pairwise
identifier). For OpenID Connect ID tokens, this field contains the value
returned by the identity provider as the token's
"sub" (Subject) claim.
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