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Is there a way to list all resources in AWS? For all regions, all resources.. Such as list all EC2 instances, all VPCs, all APIs in API Gateway, etc... I would like to list all resources for my account, since it's hard for me to find which resources I can relinquish now.

John Pick
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Lakin Lu
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    Have a look at my answer to this question - https://stackoverflow.com/questions/43984337/multiple-aws-reigon/43984651#43984651 Should be enough to get you started. – Colwin Jun 06 '17 at 13:55
  • Possibly useful: https://aws.amazon.com/config/, https://github.com/lebinh/aq, https://github.com/scopely-devops/skew. – jarmod Jun 06 '17 at 14:48
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    You can create a Resource Group for all region and for all services you need to see . Resource Group will show you all these resources at one place . you can use aws cli for this as well . https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/resource-groups-and-tagging/ – Ashwini Jun 07 '17 at 06:57

20 Answers20

287

Yes. Use the Tag Editor.

Set "Regions" to "All Regions", "Resource Types" to "All supported resource types" and then click on "Search Resources".

Steve Chambers
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schmmd
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    To list all resources using Tag Editor, you manually select all of the regions listed (15 total regions as of today's date), and select "All resource types", and do not specify a tag. Then click "Find resources" and this will show all resources that were created on your account. – Garrison Becker Apr 11 '18 at 10:12
  • Genius! Also make sure that you navigate through the pages if you have lots of resources. – famzah Apr 25 '18 at 17:55
  • @GarrisonBecker Thanks a ton! Exactly what I was looking for. – Nikhil Sharma Jun 05 '18 at 03:27
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    note this only will query supported resource types https://docs.aws.amazon.com/ARG/latest/userguide/supported-resources.html – ekcrisp Jul 06 '18 at 21:11
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    This is a genius idea but unfortunately lots of important resource types are not yet supported as of today September 2018. I didn't find my DynamoDB tables, API Gateway, Lambda, IAM roles, etc.... – Bing Ren Sep 27 '18 at 06:12
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    Unfortunately the "Tag Editor" link is now 404. – wool.in.silver Jun 28 '19 at 12:20
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    The old tag editor and links above are gone. You can use the new tag editor, but I do not see a way to save multi-region results. See console.aws.amazon.com/resource-groups and the doc at https://docs.aws.amazon.com/ARG/latest/userguide/tag-editor.html – AstroTom Jul 03 '19 at 10:33
  • For me. IoT Core's thing or principal's certificates are not shown in Tag Editor. – Andrew Chong Dec 06 '20 at 04:23
  • I think this only works per account. – Jack Marchetti Mar 01 '21 at 16:59
  • Ok, so I select all regions, all resource types then search, I get back over 200 results, all I created was one EC2 instance, how can this be possible, am I missing something here. With Azure all you do is click all resources and that is it, why is AWS is great, but trying to find your resources is a nightmare. – MaxPower May 01 '21 at 00:39
87

You can use the Tag Editor.

  1. Go to AWS Console
  2. In the TOP Navigation Pane, click Resource Groups Dropdown
  3. Click Tag Editor AWS list all resources across all regions

Here we can select either a particular region in which we want to search or select all regions from the dropdown. Then we can select actual resources which we want to search or we can also click on individual resources.

enter image description here

Raman Sahasi
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9

I'd go with the "tag editor" in "resource groups" for this, as suggested by Ashwini.

You can easily list all resources in all regions without any setup etc.
And although this does include all the default VPCs + security groups etc (so you'll get ~140 items even if your account is empty), you can still fairly easily filter this, either within tag editor, or export to csv and filter in Excel, for example.

Dylan
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7

Use PacBot (Policy as Code Bot) - An Open Source project which is a platform for continuous compliance monitoring, compliance reporting and security automation for the cloud. All resources across all accounts and all regions are discovered by PacBot are evaluated against these policies to gauge policy conformance. Omni Search features are also available giving ability to search all discovered resources. Even you can terminated/deleted resource details through PacBot.

Omni Search

Omni Search

Search Results Page With Results filtering

Search Results Page With Results filtering

Asset 360 / Asset Details Page

Asset 360 / Asset Details Page

Following are the key PacBot capabilities

  • Continuous compliance assessment.
  • Detailed compliance reporting.
  • Auto-Fix for policy violations.
  • Omni Search - Ability to search all discovered resources.
  • Simplified policy violation tracking.
  • Self-Service portal.
  • Custom policies and custom auto-fix actions.
  • Dynamic asset grouping to view compliance.
  • Ability to create multiple compliance domains.
  • Exception management.
  • Email Digests.
  • Supports multiple AWS accounts.
  • Completely automated installer.
  • Customizable dashboards.
  • OAuth2 Support.
  • Azure AD integration for login.
  • Role-based access control.
  • Asset 360 degree.
Der Hochstapler
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Nidhish Krishnan
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6

The AWS-provided tools are not useful because they are not comprehensive.

In my own quest to mitigate this problem and pull a list of all of my AWS resources, I found this: https://github.com/JohannesEbke/aws_list_all

I have not tested it yet, but it looks legit.

Luke Chavers
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I think this may help! Here, you need to enter the region name and you have to configure AWS CLI before try this.

aws resourcegroupstaggingapi get-resources --region region_name

It will list all the recourses in the region by the following format.

- ResourceARN: arn:aws:cloudformation:eu-west-1:5524534535:stack/auction-services-dev/*******************************
  Tags:
  - Key: STAGE
    Value: dev
- ResourceARN: arn:aws:cloudformation:eu-west-1:********************
Tags:
-- More  --
Ransaka Ravihara
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    This is better than using the API for each service, because it significantly reduces the number of API calls, lowering the risk of throttling. You may still need to use individual APIs for edge cases where resources are not covered by the Resource Groups service. – jonatan Sep 02 '20 at 16:21
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    It only lists "all the tagged or previously tagged resources". So untagged will be missed. – Alexander Shmidt Dec 23 '20 at 10:40
4

The AWS Billing Management Console will give you a Month-to-Date Spend by Service rundown.

dbkaplun
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    It takes ~24hours for the Cost Explorer to populate but I like this answer :) – f01 May 21 '19 at 00:33
4

I know it is old question but I would like to help too.

Actually, we have AWS Config, which help us to search for all resources in our cloud. You can perform SQL queries too.

I really encourage you all to know this awesome service.

Brenno Leal
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2

Yes.

I had the same issue, trying to figure out what exactly is going on in my AWS account.

Eventually, I ended up writing AWSRetriver, a desktop tool to list AWS resources on all regions.

It is a simple and straight-forward tool that lists everything... (hopefully) AWS Resources

1

It's way late but you should look at this. Not CLI I know but still worth just knocking out a little shell script to do what you need:

https://pypi.org/project/aws-list-all/

It's a python library that in it's own words:

"Project description List all resources in an AWS account, all regions, all services(*). Writes JSON files for further processing.

(*) No guarantees for completeness. Use billing alerts if you are worried about costs."

Surj
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0

Edit: This answer is deprecated and is incorrect. There are several ways to list AWS resources (the AWS Tag Editor, etc.). Check the other answers for more details.


No.

Each AWS Service (eg Amazon EC2, Amazon S3) have their own set of API calls. Also, each Region is independent.

To obtain a list of all resources, you would have to make API calls to every service in every region.

You might want to activate AWS Config:

AWS Config provides a detailed view of the configuration of AWS resources in your AWS account. This includes how the resources are related to one another and how they were configured in the past so that you can see how the configurations and relationships change over time.

However, AWS Config only collects information about EC2/VPC-related resources, not everything in your AWS account.

Raman Sahasi
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John Rotenstein
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    This answer is wrong. You can indeed list all services across all regions using the Cost Explorer. – Carles Alcolea Jun 12 '19 at 03:37
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    This answer is most likely obsolete. Now, as mentioned by a few people here, you can use either the [Tag Manager](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/awsconsolehelpdocs/latest/gsg/find-resources-to-tag.html) or the _'Monthly cost by service'_ in [Cost Explorer](https://aws.amazon.com/aws-cost-management/aws-cost-explorer/). – maximpa Jul 28 '19 at 01:46
  • AWS Config seemed to work for me. I wanted to find a snapshot i'd taken in another reason and forgot about, and apparently deleted the EC2 instance for it. getting the full AWS Config list and then searching for 'snap' hepled me find it. – Peter Smith Jan 19 '20 at 04:58
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    That smells. That really smells – user1325696 Sep 21 '20 at 08:35
  • AWS Config only supports limited set of resources. Large, but still limited. Like, no ECS, no ElastiCache – kikap Feb 09 '21 at 02:06
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    This is still the most correct answer. Cost Explorer can't list resources, just services in use per region. Tag Manager only supports a subset of resources, noticeably missing things like all IAM entities and "sub resources" like lambda layers. Depending on your specific need, either the cost explorer or the tag manager or even AWS Config may be enough but still today there is no single pane of glass for all resources in an account. – ThePorkchopExpress Mar 10 '21 at 00:33
0

I am also looking for similar feature "list all resources" in AWS but could not find anything good enough.

"Resource Groups" does not help because it only list resources which have been tagged and user have to specify the tag. If you miss to tag a resource, that won't appear in "Resource Groups" .

UI of "Create a resource group"

A more suitable feature is "Resource Groups"->"Tag Editor" as already mentioned in the previous post. Select region(s) and resource type(s) to see listing of resources in Tag editor. This serves the purpose but not very user-friendly because I have to enter region and resource type every time I want to use it. I am still looking for easy to use UI.

UI of "Find resource" under "Tag Editor"

  • Actually, this was a genuine lifesaver for me! Just open Tag Editor, select all regions one by one (there aren't that many of them) and "All resource types" and hit "Find resources". Then you can download the whole list as CSV. – Tero Tilus Dec 01 '17 at 13:43
0

Try this

For only ec2:

from skew import scan

    arn = scan('arn:aws:ec2:us-west-2:123456789012:instance/i-12345678')
    for resource in arn:
        print(resource.data)

For all resources:

arn = scan('arn:aws:*:*:<<youraccountId>>:instance*')
for resource in arn:
    print(resource.data)

Reference : https://github.com/scopely-devops/skew

STang
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You can use a query in the AWS Config Console here. (Region may change for you) https://console.aws.amazon.com/config/home?region=us-east-1#/resources/query

the query will look like.

SELECT
  resourceId,
  resourceName,
  resourceType,
  relationships
WHERE
relationships.resourceId = 'vpc-#######'
Josh Beauregard
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0

You can run advanced queries via AWS Config (and from the CLI for Config), that will list all resources. If you define an aggregator that covers all reasons (and perhaps multiple accounts), you can get a very comprehensive view . . . As simple as "SELECT *"

DWright
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0

Another open source tool for this is Cloud Query https://docs.cloudquery.io/

AhmedRana
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0

There's a cloud management platform that does this. It enables users to manage multiple AWS accounts from a single dashboard as well as providing AWS Inventory management. It's free: https://cloudplexo.com.

Richardsop
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-1

EDIT: This answer is deprecated. Check the other answers.

No,
There is no way to get all resources within your account in one go. Each region is independent and for some services like IAM concept of a region does not exist at all. Although there are API calls available to list down resources and services.
For example:

  • To get list of all available regions for your account:
    output, err := client.DescribeRegions(&ec2.DescribeRegionsInput{})
    

  • To get list of IAM users, roles or group you can use:

    client.GetAccountAuthorizationDetails(&iam.GetAccountAuthorizationDetailsInput{})

    You can find more detail about API calls and their use at: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-go/api/service/iam/

    Above link is only for IAM. Similarly, you can find API for all other resources and services.

  • Carles Alcolea
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    Abhishek Soni
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    -1

    Another option is use this script that execute "aws configservice list-discovered-resources --resource-type" for every resource

    for i in  AWS::EC2::CustomerGateway AWS::EC2::EIP AWS::EC2::Host AWS::EC2::Instance AWS::EC2::InternetGateway AWS::EC2::NetworkAcl AWS::EC2::NetworkInterface AWS::EC2::RouteTable AWS::EC2::SecurityGroup AWS::EC2::Subnet AWS::CloudTrail::Trail AWS::EC2::Volume AWS::EC2::VPC AWS::EC2::VPNConnection AWS::EC2::VPNGateway AWS::IAM::Group AWS::IAM::Policy AWS::IAM::Role AWS::IAM::User AWS::ACM::Certificate AWS::RDS::DBInstance AWS::RDS::DBSubnetGroup AWS::RDS::DBSecurityGroup AWS::RDS::DBSnapshot AWS::RDS::EventSubscription AWS::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::LoadBalancer AWS::S3::Bucket AWS::SSM::ManagedInstanceInventory AWS::Redshift::Cluster AWS::Redshift::ClusterSnapshot AWS::Redshift::ClusterParameterGroup AWS::Redshift::ClusterSecurityGroup  AWS::Redshift::ClusterSubnetGroup AWS::Redshift::EventSubscription AWS::CloudWatch::Alarm AWS::CloudFormation::Stack AWS::DynamoDB::Table AWS::AutoScaling::AutoScalingGroup AWS::AutoScaling::LaunchConfiguration AWS::AutoScaling::ScalingPolicy AWS::AutoScaling::ScheduledAction AWS::CodeBuild::Project AWS::WAF::RateBasedRule AWS::WAF::Rule AWS::WAF::WebACL AWS::WAFRegional::RateBasedRule AWS::WAFRegional::Rule AWS::WAFRegional::WebACL AWS::CloudFront::Distribution  AWS::CloudFront::StreamingDistribution AWS::WAF::RuleGroup AWS::WAFRegional::RuleGroup AWS::Lambda::Function AWS::ElasticBeanstalk::Application AWS::ElasticBeanstalk::ApplicationVersion AWS::ElasticBeanstalk::Environment AWS::ElasticLoadBalancing::LoadBalancer AWS::XRay::EncryptionConfig AWS::SSM::AssociationCompliance AWS::SSM::PatchCompliance AWS::Shield::Protection AWS::ShieldRegional::Protection AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance AWS::CodePipeline::Pipeline; do aws configservice list-discovered-resources --resource-type $i; done
    
    user2738882
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    Luis
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    Amazon is continuously trying to improve user experience. However, there are other multiple ways to check Resources you are using in AWS. I believe this New EC2 dashboard is quite cool. Clicking on link will directly navigate you to particular resource control panel.

    enter image description here

    Manjeet
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