Difference between AWS Elastic Container Service's (ECS) ExecutionRole and TaskRole

johnklawlor picture johnklawlor · Feb 27, 2018 · Viewed 11.1k times · Source

I'm using AWS's CloudFormation, and I recently spent quite a bit of time trying to figure out why the role I had created and attached policies to was not enabling my ECS task to send a message to a Simple Queue Service (SQS) queue.

I realized that I was incorrectly attaching the SQS permissions policy to the Execution Role when I should have been attaching the policy to the Task Role. I cannot find good documentation that explains the difference between the two roles. CloudFormation documentation for the two of them are here: ExecutionRole and TaskRole

Answer

mehtunguh picture mehtunguh · Apr 20, 2018

Referring to the documentation you can see that the execution role is the IAM role that executes ECS actions such as pulling the image and storing the application logs in cloudwatch.

The TaskRole then, is the IAM role used by the task itself. For example, if your container wants to call other AWS services like S3, SQS, etc then those permissions would need to be covered by the TaskRole.

Using a TaskRole is functionally the same as using access keys in a config file on the container instance. Using access keys in this way is not secure and is considered very bad practice. I include this in the answer because many people reading this already understand access keys.