A____________ is an individual, system, or application that interacts with AWS programmatically.
A.
user
B.
AWS Account
C.
Group
D.
Role
A____________ is an individual, system, or application that interacts with AWS programmatically.
A____________ is an individual, system, or application that interacts with AWS programmatically.
A.
user
B.
AWS Account
C.
Group
D.
Role
D.
Role
D.
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/id_roles.html
why do you say it role ? I still feel its a user
from IAM FAQ
Q: Can I enable and disable user access?
Yes. You can enable and disable an IAM user’s access keys via the IAM APIs, AWS CLI, or IAM console. If you disable the access keys, the user cannot programmatically access AWS services.
So it says user can’t programmatically access AWS service if we disable the access key, so in the normal situation a user can access the AWS services programmatically
welcome any thoughts
i agree with your answer.
Thanks for clearing doubt.
thanks for this answer Manu
Ans. is User, I agree with Manu.
User
https://aws.amazon.com/iam/faqs
Ans: A
Q: What is a user?
A user is a unique identity recognized by AWS services and applications. Similar to a login user in an operating system like Windows or UNIX, a user has a unique name and can identify itself using familiar security credentials such as a password or access key. A user can be an individual, system, or application requiring access to AWS services. IAM supports users (referred to as “IAM users”) managed in AWS’s identity management system, and it also enables you to grant access to AWS resources for users managed outside of AWS in your corporate directory (referred to as “federated users”).
A
If you disable the access keys, the user cannot programmatically access AWS services.
The question is who interacts with AWS programmatically so,user is the one who interacts and IAM roles are the permissions.
We cannot interact with IAM role.
A : user
https://www.ncloud24.com/aws/img/file/AWS_Security_Best_Practices.pdf
IAM roles and temporary security credentials address these use cases. An IAM role lets you define a set of permissions
to access the resources that a user or service needs, but the permissions are not attached to a specific IAM user or
group. Instead, IAM users, mobile and EC2-based applications, or AWS services (like Amazon EC2) can programmatically
assume a role. Assuming the role returns temporary security credentials that the user or application can use to make for
programmatic requests to AWS. These temporary security credentials have a configurable expiration and are
automatically rotated. Using IAM roles and temporary security credentials means you don’t always have to manage
long-term credentials and IAM users for each entity that requires access to a resource.
role is the answer
A
Definitely a user
A role is an individual???? are you kidding me??
A is the right answer.
See https://aws.amazon.com/iam/faqs/
Q: What is a user?
A user is a unique identity recognized by AWS services and applications. Similar to a login user in an operating system like Windows or UNIX, a user has a unique name and can identify itself using familiar security credentials such as a password or access key. A user can be an individual, system, or application requiring access to AWS services.
Answer is A
https://aws.amazon.com/iam/faqs/
A user can be an individual, system, or application requiring access to AWS services.
(As per Vladams Post)
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/id.html
A primary use for IAM users is to give people the ability to sign in to the AWS Management Console for interactive tasks and to make programmatic requests to AWS services using the API or CLI.
A
User: A person or application under an account that needs to make API calls to AWS products. Each user has a unique name within the AWS account, and a set of security credentials not shared with other users. These credentials are separate from the AWS account’s security credentials. Each user is associated with one and only one AWS account.
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/glos-chap.html#AWSUser
API calls mean interactions with AWS programmatically.
Correct answer is A
Has anyone sat for this exam recently? Are these ?’s applicable to both Associate and Professional exams?
Zane, I just took the test and passed with a 94%. I can say that a majority of the questions I answered (90%+) were found in the 400+ questions on this site. But clearly this 400 questions include things outside the scope of the AWS-SAA
I just took the test 2 hours ago and passed with a 94%. Almost all of the questions were listed on this site. Of course you can’t trust any of the answers provided here but I find that more helpful because if forces you to research the correct answer. Good Luck
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Hammer,
Pls. help me to get latest dumps. I have CertLeader latest one, but not sure its enough to pass the exam. Thanks.
[email protected]
Hammer can you help me with latest Dumps [email protected]
A
Hammer can you help me with latest Dumps
My address is [email protected]
A.
user
A.
IAM FAQ
Q: Can I enable and disable user access?
Yes. You can enable and disable an IAM user’s access keys via the IAM APIs, AWS CLI, or IAM console. If you disable the access keys, the user cannot programmatically access AWS services. So it says user can’t programmatically access AWS service if we disable the access key, so in the normal situation a user can access the AWS services programmatically
btw, passed with 89%, I collect my personal answers here if could help anyone: http://aws.tuongminh.pro
Okie,
Pls. help me to get latest dumps. I have CertLeader latest one, but not sure its enough to pass the exam. Thanks.
[email protected]
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Q: What is a user?
A user is a unique identity recognized by AWS services and applications. Similar to a login user in an operating system like Windows or UNIX, a user has a unique name and can identify itself using familiar security credentials such as a password or access key. A user can be an individual, system, or application requiring access to AWS services. IAM supports users (referred to as “IAM users”) managed in AWS’s identity management system, and it also enables you to grant access to AWS resources for users managed outside of AWS in your corporate directory (referred to as “federated users”).
https://aws.amazon.com/iam/faqs/