I would like to deploy to a website to a S3 bucket and use static website hosting. However, I have some strict security restrictions:
- HTTPS must be used
- Access to the website must be restricted to a specific IP range
Here is my plan:
- Use AWS WAF to restrict the IPs that can access the website
- Use CloudFront to leverage HTTPS
- Format the CloudFront distribution to forward a custom header that will act like an access key to S3
- Restrict the S3 bucket security policy to only allow traffic that includes the custom header from CloudFront mentioned above.
Here is a diagram:
I have one big concern though: Is forwarding a custom header between CloudFront really the best way to do this? AWS docs say that an Origin Access Identity can't be used for S3 buckets that act as a website (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonCloudFront/latest/DeveloperGuide/private-content-restricting-access-to-s3.html). The custom header seems less secure than an Origin Access Identity and much harder to maintain. It makes me uncomfortable using a random string as the only security preventing someone from bypassing my CloudFront distribution and directly accessing the S3 bucket. If a malicious party guesses the
My other option here is to just bite the bullet and move to servers where I have more control over a lot of the security but I would like to leverage the convenience of an S3 website.