Critical Operation Protection

Only an administrator can configure critical operation protection, and IAM users can only view the configurations. If an IAM user needs to modify the configurations, the user can request the administrator to perform the modification or grant the required permissions.

Note

Federated users do not need to verify their identity when performing critical operations.

Virtual MFA Device

An MFA device generates 6-digit verification codes in compliance with the Time-based One-time Password Algorithm (TOTP). MFA devices can be hardware- or software-based. Currently, only software-based virtual MFA devices are supported, and they are application programs running on smart devices such as mobile phones.

This section describes how to bind a virtual MFA device. If you have installed another MFA application, add a user by following the on-screen prompts. For details about how to bind or remove a virtual MFA device, see MFA Authentication and Virtual MFA Device.

Note

Before binding a virtual MFA device, ensure that you have installed an MFA application on your mobile device.

  1. Go to the Security Settings page.

  2. Click the Critical Operations tab, and click Bind in the Virtual MFA Device row.

  3. Set up the MFA application by scanning the QR code or manually entering the secret key.

    You can bind a virtual MFA device to your account by scanning the QR code or entering the secret key.

    • Scanning the QR code

      Open the MFA application on your mobile phone, and use the application to scan the QR code displayed on the Bind Virtual MFA Device page. Your account or IAM user is then added to the application.

    • Manually entering the secret key

      Open the MFA application on your mobile phone, and enter the secret key.

      Note

      The user can be manually added only using time-based one-time passwords (TOTP). You are advised to enable automatic time setting on your mobile phone.

  4. View the verification codes on the MFA application. The code is automatically updated every 30 seconds.

  5. On the Bind Virtual MFA Device page, enter two consecutive verification codes and click OK.

Login Protection

After login protection is enabled, you and IAM users created using your account will need to enter a verification code in addition to the username and password during login. Enable this function for account security.

For the account, only the account administrator can enable login protection for it. For IAM users, both the account administrator and other administrators can enable this feature for the users.

  • (Administrator) Enabling login protection for an IAM user

    To enable login protection for an IAM user, go to the Users page and choose More > Security Settings in the row that contains the IAM user. In the Login Protection area on the displayed Security Settings tab, click image1 next to Verification Method, and select a verification method from SMS, email, or virtual MFA device.

  • Enabling login protection for your account

    To enable login protection, click the Critical Operations tab on the Security Settings page, click Enable next to Login Protection, select a verification method, enter the verification code, and click OK.

Operation Protection

  • Enabling operation protection

    After operation protection is enabled, you and IAM users created using your account need to enter a verification code when performing a critical operation, such as deleting an ECS. This function is enabled by default. To ensure resource security, keep it enabled.

    The verification is valid for 15 minutes and you do not need to be verified again when performing critical operations within the validity period.

  1. Go to the Security Settings page.

  2. On the Critical Operations tab, locate the Operation Protection row and click Enable.

  3. Select Enable and then select Self-verification or Verification by another person.

    If you select Verification by another person, an identity verification is required to ensure that this verification method is available.

    • Self-verification: You or IAM users themselves perform verification when performing a critical operation.

    • Verification by another person: The specified person completes verification when you or IAM users perform a critical operation. Only SMS and email verification are supported.

  4. Click OK.

  • Disabling operation protection

If operation protection is disabled, you and IAM users created using your account do not need to enter a verification code when performing a critical operation.

  1. Go to the Security Settings page.

  2. On the Critical Operations tab, locate the Operation Protection row and click Change.

  3. Select Disable and click OK.

  4. Enter a verification code.

    • Self-verification: The administrator who wants to disable operation protection completes the verification. SMS, email, and virtual MFA verification are supported.

    • Verification by another person: The specified person completes the verification. Only SMS and email verification are supported.

  5. Click OK.

Note

  • Each cloud service defines its own critical operations.

  • When IAM users created using your account perform a critical operation, they will be prompted to choose a verification method from email, SMS, and virtual MFA device.

    • If a user is only associated with a mobile number, only SMS verification is available.

    • If a user is only associated with an email address, only email verification is available.

    • If a user is not associated with an email address, mobile number, or virtual MFA device, the user will need to associate at least one of them before they can perform any critical operations.

  • You may not be able to receive email or SMS verification codes due to communication errors. In this case, you are advised to use a virtual MFA device for verification.

  • If operation protection is enabled, IAM users need to enter verification codes when performing a critical operation. The verification codes are sent to the mobile number or email address bound to the IAM users.

Access Key Management

  • Enabling access key management

    After access key management is enabled, only the administrator can create, enable, disable, or delete access keys of IAM users. This function is disabled by default. To ensure resource security, enable this function.

    To enable access key management, click the Critical Operations tab on the Security Settings page, and click image2 in the Access Key Management row.

  • Disabling access key management

    After access key management is disabled, all IAM users can create, enable, disable, or delete their own access keys.

    To enable access key management, click the Critical Operations tab on the Security Settings page, and click image3 in the Access Key Management row.

Information Self-Management

  • Enabling information self-management

    By default, information self-management is enabled, indicating that all IAM users can manage their own basic information (login password, mobile number, and email address). Determine whether to allow IAM users to manage their own information and what information they can modify.

    To enable information self-management, click the Critical Operations tab on the Security Settings page, and click Enable in the Information Self-Management row. Select Enable, select the information types that IAM users can modify, and click OK.

  • Disabling information self-management

    After you disable information self-management, only administrators can manage their own basic information. If IAM users need to modify their login password, mobile number, or email address, they can contact the administrator. For details, see Viewing and Modifying User Group Information.

    To disable information self-management, click the Critical Operations tab on the Security Settings page, and click Change in the Information Self-Management row. In the displayed pane, select Disable and click OK.

Critical Operations

The following tables list the critical operations defined by each cloud service.

Table 1 Critical operations defined by cloud services

Service Category

Service

Critical Operation

Compute

Elastic Cloud Server (ECS)

  • Stopping, restarting, or deleting an ECS

  • Resetting the password for logging in to an ECS

  • Detaching a disk

  • Unbinding an EIP

Bare Metal Server (BMS)

  • Stopping or restarting a BMS

  • Resetting the BMS password

  • Detaching a disk

  • Unbinding an EIP

Auto Scaling (AS)

Deleting an AS group

Storage

Object Storage Service (OBS)

  • Deleting a bucket

  • Creating, editing, or deleting a bucket policy

  • Configuring an object policy

  • Creating, editing, or deleting a bucket ACL

  • Configuring access logging

  • Configuring URL validation

  • Creating or editing a bucket inventory

Elastic Volume Service (EVS)

Deleting an EVS disk

Cloud Backup and Recovery (CBR)

  • Deleting a vault

  • Deleting a backup

  • Restoring a backup

  • Deleting a policy

  • Dissociating a resource

  • Accepting a backup

Networking

Domain Name Service (DNS)

  • Modifying, disabling, or deleting a record set

Virtual Private Cloud (VPC)

  • Releasing or unbinding an EIP

  • Deleting a VPC peering connection

  • Security group operations

    • Deleting an inbound or outbound rule

    • Modifying an inbound or outbound rule

    • Batch deleting inbound or outbound rules

Elastic Load Balance (ELB)

  • Shared load balancers

    • Deleting a load balancer

    • Deleting a listener

    • Deleting a certificate

    • Removing a backend server

    • Unbinding an EIP

    • Unbind a public or private IPv4 address

  • Dedicated load balancers

    • Deleting a load balancer

    • Deleting a listener

    • Deleting a certificate

    • Removing a backend server

    • Unbinding an EIP

    • Unbind a public or private IPv4 address

    • Unbinding an IPv6 address

    • Removing from IPv6 shared bandwidth

Elastic IP (EIP)

  • Deleting a shared bandwidth

  • Releasing or unbinding an EIP

  • Batch releasing or unbinding EIPs

Management & Deployment

Identity and Access Management (IAM)

  • Disabling operation protection

  • Disabling login protection

  • Changing the mobile number

  • Changing the email address

  • Changing the login password

  • Changing the login authentication method

  • Deleting an IAM user

  • Disabling an IAM user

  • Deleting an agency

  • Deleting a user group

  • Deleting a policy

  • Deleting permissions

  • Creating an access key

  • Deleting an access key

  • Disabling an access key

  • Deleting a project

  • Modifying the status of access key management

Application

Distributed Cache Service (DCS)

  • Resetting the password of a DCS instance

  • Deleting a DCS instance

  • Clearing DCS instance data

Database

RDS for MySQL

  • Resetting the administrator password

  • Deleting a DB instance

  • Deleting a database backup

  • Switching between primary and standby DB instances

  • Changing the database port

  • Deleting a database account

  • Deleting a database

  • Unbinding an EIP

  • Downloading a full backup

Database

Document Database Service (DDS)

  • Resetting the password

  • Restarting or deleting a DB instance

  • Restarting a node

  • Switching the primary and secondary nodes of a replica set

  • Deleting a security group rule

  • Enabling IP addresses of shard and config nodes

  • Restoring the current DB instance from a backup

  • Restoring an existing DB instance from a backup