2023/07/19 - 3 updated api methods
Changes This release adds support for securely sharing with AWS service principals.
2023/04/19 - 9 new 7 updated api methods
Changes This release adds support for customer managed permissions. Customer managed permissions enable customers to author and manage tailored permissions for resources shared using RAM.
2022/01/14 - 1 new api methods
Changes This release adds the ListPermissionVersions API which lists the versions for a given permission.
2021/12/02 - 3 updated api methods
Changes This release adds the ability to use the new ResourceRegionScope parameter on List operations that return lists of resources or resource types. This new parameter filters the results by letting you differentiate between global or regional resource types.
2021/06/10 - 8 updated api methods
Changes AWS Resource Access Manager (RAM) is releasing new field isResourceTypeDefault in ListPermissions and GetPermission response, and adding permissionArn parameter to GetResourceShare request to filter by permission attached
2020/04/23 - 1 new api methods
Changes AWS Resource Access Manager (RAM) provides a new ListResourceTypes action. This action lets you list the resource types that can be shared using AWS RAM.
2019/11/25 - 6 new 5 updated api methods
Changes AWS RAM provides new APIs to view the permissions granted to principals in a resource share. This release also creates corresponding resource shares for supported services that use resource policies, as well as an API to promote them to standard shares that can be managed in RAM.
2019/09/18 - 1 new 7 updated api methods
Changes AWS RAM provides a new ListPendingInvitationResources API action that lists the resources in a resource share that is shared with you but that the invitation is still pending for
2018/11/16 - 16 new api methods
Changes This is the initial release of AWS Resource Access Manager (RAM) which provides you the ability to share your resources across AWS accounts or within your AWS Organization. You can now create resources centrally and use AWS RAM to share those resources with other accounts, eliminating the need to provision and manage resources in every account. When you share a resource with another account, that account is granted access. Any policies and permissions in that account apply to the shared resource.