IAM Advanced: Get account authorization details from the CLI
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Part 127 of AWS from Zero. This is lesson 2 in the IAM Advanced track.
What we are learning
Use get-account-authorization-details to read or inventory account authorization details in IAM Advanced. This lesson identifies the required input shape, saves the raw response, and keeps inspection separate from execution.
The AWS CLI operation is aws iam get-account-authorization-details. Required operation inputs: none. The modeled top-level response contains UserDetailList, GroupDetailList, RoleDetailList, Policies, IsTruncated, Marker.
Before you run it
aws sts get-caller-identity
REGION="${AWS_REGION:-ap-south-1}"
aws iam get-account-authorization-details helpUse a sandbox account or an approved learning environment. Read the operation help before supplying identifiers, ARNs, network ranges, policy documents, or customer data.
Cost note: IAM itself has no additional charge, but identities can authorize billable services.
The command
aws iam get-account-authorization-details \
--region "$REGION" \
--output json > part-127-response.jsonThe response is saved to part-127-response.json so inspection is separate from execution. The explicit variables above keep required identifiers visible before the API call.
Inspect the result
node -e "const r=require('./part-127-response.json'); console.log(Object.keys(r))"
node -e "const r=require('./part-127-response.json'); console.log(JSON.stringify(r, null, 2))"Compare the returned identifiers and status fields with the account, Region, and resource you intended to target. For asynchronous operations, continue with the service's matching get, list, or describe command until it reaches a terminal state.
One tiny variation
node -e "const r=require('./part-127-response.json'); console.log(JSON.stringify(r["UserDetailList"], null, 2))"This variation changes output inspection rather than adding another infrastructure concept. Keep the raw JSON while developing a query so a narrow projection does not hide an error or unexpected field.
Common mistake
An empty response does not always mean the resource is absent. Confirm the account, Region, pagination behavior, filters, and caller permissions before concluding that nothing exists.
Cleanup
# This operation is read-only, operational, or needs resource-specific rollback.
# Re-read the command output before changing shared infrastructure.
rm -f part-127-request.json part-127-response.json part-127-payload.bin part-127-debug.logLocal request and response files may contain account IDs, ARNs, names, or service configuration. Remove them when the lab is complete and follow dependency-aware cleanup for any AWS resource you created.
Next, we will learn IAM Advanced: Get account password policy from the CLI.