TLDR: Think of aws "trusted relations" / "trusted entities" as which aws service principal can implement (assume role) the permissions you giving.
Quick example: If I've created a role which contains permissions to read bucket from s3 and ec2 is trusted relations in this role, only ec2 instances can implement this role and can have access to this s3 bucket. rds for example can't assume this role and therefore can't. You grant permissions x that only aws service y can use them.
Let me explain it with some easy use case:
I want to be able to download some configuration file from s3
bucket into my web application, the web application runs on ec2
instance and the s3 bucket name is "configuration-for-app"
I'm creating a role named "my-app-role" which contains several policies ,one of them is s3 policy that can access my s3 amazon resource "configuration-for-app" and has explicit permission to get it only (not delete i, not changing it - just get it). Since the app runs on ec2 - the trusted relations in this requirements between these services would be <ec2> -> <s3>
,my application that runs on ec2 can assume that role (my-app-role) and accessing (with the correct policy in it) to s3 and get the configuration file.
The role contains this policy:
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": "s3:GetObject",
"Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::configuration-for-app/*"
}
]
}
The trusted policy would be:
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Principal": {
"Service": "ec2.amazonaws.com"
},
"Action": "sts:AssumeRole"
}
]
}
I grant permissions (assume-role of "my-app-role") <x>
to service principal <y>
(my ec2 principal ( ec2.amazonaws.com
) which runs applications) in order to accomplish operation<z>
(get the s3 configuration file from bucket "configuration-for-app" the role contains this specific s3 policy).
Important - If different service in aws ( like rds / elasticsearch / amplify etc ...) wants assume this role and get the configuration file of this app it's impossible because only ec2 instances on this example has the right trusted policy.