I sat by mistake a boundary permission for the only admin account. how can I tackle this?

0

Route 53 couldn’t update the page Route 53 encountered an unknown error and couldn't update your page. Try refreshing the page. User: arn:aws:iam::053225546799:user/erefat is not authorized to perform: route53:GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCount because no permissions boundary allows the route53:GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCount action

User: arn:aws:iam::053225546799:user/erefat is not authorized to perform: route53:GetHostedZoneCount because no permissions boundary allows the route53:GetHostedZoneCount action

User: arn:aws:iam::053225546799:user/erefat is not authorized to perform: route53domains:ListOperations on resource: * because no permissions boundary allows the route53domains:ListOperations action

User: arn:aws:iam::053225546799:user/erefat is not authorized to perform: route53:GetHealthCheckCount because no permissions boundary allows the route53:GetHealthCheckCount action

User: arn:aws:iam::053225546799:user/erefat is not authorized to perform: route53domains:ListDomains on resource: * because no permissions boundary allows the route53domains:ListDomains action

ESAM
asked 8 months ago227 views
1 Answer
1

Hello.

If you are unable to operate AdministratorAccess on AWS, there is a way to correct the permissions by logging in as the root user of the account.
To sign in as a root user, please follow the steps in the document below.
The AWS root user can perform all operations on the account, so we generally recommend that you use it only in emergencies.
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/signin/latest/userguide/introduction-to-root-user-sign-in-tutorial.html

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EXPERT
answered 8 months ago
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EXPERT
reviewed 8 months ago

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