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Serverless Better Credentials

The Serverless Better Credentials plugin replaces the existing AWS credential resolution mechanism in the Serverless Framework with an extended version that:

It is designed to be a drop-in replacement; respecting the current credentials resolution order and extensions already provided by the Serverless Framework.

Usage

  1. Install
npm install --save-dev serverless-better-credentials
# or
yarn add --dev serverless-better-credentials
  1. Configure

Add the following to your serverless.yml:

plugins:
  - serverless-better-credentials # as the first plugin
  # - ... other plugins

The following options are supported:

custom:
  betterCredentials:
    # Use this flag to turn off the plugin entirely, which you may want for certain stages.
    # Defaults to true.
    enabled: true

AWS Single Sign On (SSO) Support

AWS SSO profiles configured to work with the AWS CLI should "just work" when this plugin is enabled. This includes prompting and attempting to automatically open the SSO authorization page in your default browser when the credentials require refreshing.

Full details about how to configure AWS SSO can be found in the AWS CLI documentation.

Take note that if you are using SSO with the approach AWS document (a shared .aws/config file) you'll also need to set the AWS_SDK_LOAD_CONFIG enviornment value to something truthy (e.g. AWS_SDK_LOAD_CONFIG=1), as described in the AWS SDK documentation.

Other Credential Resolution

Credentials are resolved in the same order the Serverless Framework currently uses. This order is:

Where:

Help and Support

If you have an issue, suggestion, or want to contribute, please open an issue or create a pull request and I'll take a look.

Troubleshooting

There are a handful of common issues that people have trying to run this plugin. Mostly they surround either the confusing way that AWS resolves credentials, or the way that the Serverless Framework loads plugins.

It's always worth trying the following steps (but feel free to raise an issue if you're still having problems):

If you are having trouble in a CI/CD environment (like GitHub actions), it is probably because you are using a plugin that has migrated to AWS-SDK v3. The easiest workaround is to add a step where you create the ~/.aws/credentials file, for example:

mkdir -p ~/.aws
rm -rf ~/.aws/credentials
echo "[YOUR_PROFILE_NAME]" >> ~/.aws/credentials
echo "aws_access_key_id = ${AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID}" >> ~/.aws/credentials
echo "aws_secret_access_key = ${AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY}" >> ~/.aws/credentials
echo "aws_session_token = ${AWS_SESSION_TOKEN}" >> ~/.aws/credentials
echo "region = eu-west-1" >> ~/.aws/credentials
echo "output = json" >> ~/.aws/credentials