@cdklabs/cdk-ecs-codedeploy 0.0.7 → 0.0.9

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Files changed (38) hide show
  1. package/.jsii +3 -3
  2. package/lib/ecs-appspec/index.js +1 -1
  3. package/lib/ecs-deployment/index.js +1 -1
  4. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/CHANGELOG.md +19 -1
  5. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/README.md +1 -1
  6. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/appflow-2020-08-23.min.json +7 -2
  7. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/backup-gateway-2021-01-01.min.json +211 -9
  8. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/datasync-2018-11-09.min.json +3 -0
  9. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ecs-2014-11-13.min.json +5 -2
  10. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/glue-2017-03-31.min.json +3 -0
  11. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kinesis-2013-12-02.min.json +304 -51
  12. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kinesis-2013-12-02.paginators.json +6 -3
  13. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/m2-2021-04-28.min.json +4 -0
  14. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/sagemaker-2017-07-24.min.json +593 -573
  15. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/securityhub-2018-10-26.min.json +796 -160
  16. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/appflow.d.ts +13 -0
  17. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/backupgateway.d.ts +258 -0
  18. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/cloudfront.d.ts +283 -283
  19. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/connect.d.ts +7 -7
  20. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/datasync.d.ts +64 -60
  21. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/ecs.d.ts +15 -3
  22. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/efs.d.ts +2 -2
  23. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/eks.d.ts +21 -21
  24. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/glue.d.ts +4 -0
  25. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/guardduty.d.ts +4 -4
  26. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/kinesis.d.ts +180 -60
  27. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/location.d.ts +2 -2
  28. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/m2.d.ts +81 -65
  29. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/sagemaker.d.ts +76 -53
  30. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/securityhub.d.ts +971 -0
  31. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/translate.d.ts +10 -9
  32. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/dist/aws-sdk-core-react-native.js +1 -1
  33. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/dist/aws-sdk-react-native.js +11 -11
  34. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/dist/aws-sdk.js +318 -59
  35. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/dist/aws-sdk.min.js +58 -58
  36. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/lib/core.js +1 -1
  37. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/package.json +1 -1
  38. package/package.json +6 -6
@@ -14,27 +14,27 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
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  constructor(options?: CloudFront.Types.ClientConfiguration)
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  config: Config & CloudFront.Types.ClientConfiguration;
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  /**
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- * Associates an alias (also known as a CNAME or an alternate domain name) with a CloudFront distribution. With this operation you can move an alias thats already in use on a CloudFront distribution to a different distribution in one step. This prevents the downtime that could occur if you first remove the alias from one distribution and then separately add the alias to another distribution. To use this operation to associate an alias with a distribution, you provide the alias and the ID of the target distribution for the alias. For more information, including how to set up the target distribution, prerequisites that you must complete, and other restrictions, see Moving an alternate domain name to a different distribution in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
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+ * Associates an alias (also known as a CNAME or an alternate domain name) with a CloudFront distribution. With this operation you can move an alias that's already in use on a CloudFront distribution to a different distribution in one step. This prevents the downtime that could occur if you first remove the alias from one distribution and then separately add the alias to another distribution. To use this operation to associate an alias with a distribution, you provide the alias and the ID of the target distribution for the alias. For more information, including how to set up the target distribution, prerequisites that you must complete, and other restrictions, see Moving an alternate domain name to a different distribution in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
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  */
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  associateAlias(params: CloudFront.Types.AssociateAliasRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Associates an alias (also known as a CNAME or an alternate domain name) with a CloudFront distribution. With this operation you can move an alias thats already in use on a CloudFront distribution to a different distribution in one step. This prevents the downtime that could occur if you first remove the alias from one distribution and then separately add the alias to another distribution. To use this operation to associate an alias with a distribution, you provide the alias and the ID of the target distribution for the alias. For more information, including how to set up the target distribution, prerequisites that you must complete, and other restrictions, see Moving an alternate domain name to a different distribution in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
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+ * Associates an alias (also known as a CNAME or an alternate domain name) with a CloudFront distribution. With this operation you can move an alias that's already in use on a CloudFront distribution to a different distribution in one step. This prevents the downtime that could occur if you first remove the alias from one distribution and then separately add the alias to another distribution. To use this operation to associate an alias with a distribution, you provide the alias and the ID of the target distribution for the alias. For more information, including how to set up the target distribution, prerequisites that you must complete, and other restrictions, see Moving an alternate domain name to a different distribution in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
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  */
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  associateAlias(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a staging distribution using the configuration of the provided primary distribution. A staging distribution is a copy of an existing distribution (called the primary distribution) that you can use in a continuous deployment workflow. After you create a staging distribution, you can use UpdateDistribution to modify the staging distributions configuration. Then you can use CreateContinuousDeploymentPolicy to incrementally move traffic to the staging distribution.
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+ * Creates a staging distribution using the configuration of the provided primary distribution. A staging distribution is a copy of an existing distribution (called the primary distribution) that you can use in a continuous deployment workflow. After you create a staging distribution, you can use UpdateDistribution to modify the staging distribution's configuration. Then you can use CreateContinuousDeploymentPolicy to incrementally move traffic to the staging distribution.
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  */
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  copyDistribution(params: CloudFront.Types.CopyDistributionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CopyDistributionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CopyDistributionResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a staging distribution using the configuration of the provided primary distribution. A staging distribution is a copy of an existing distribution (called the primary distribution) that you can use in a continuous deployment workflow. After you create a staging distribution, you can use UpdateDistribution to modify the staging distributions configuration. Then you can use CreateContinuousDeploymentPolicy to incrementally move traffic to the staging distribution.
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+ * Creates a staging distribution using the configuration of the provided primary distribution. A staging distribution is a copy of an existing distribution (called the primary distribution) that you can use in a continuous deployment workflow. After you create a staging distribution, you can use UpdateDistribution to modify the staging distribution's configuration. Then you can use CreateContinuousDeploymentPolicy to incrementally move traffic to the staging distribution.
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  */
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  copyDistribution(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CopyDistributionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CopyDistributionResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a cache policy. After you create a cache policy, you can attach it to one or more cache behaviors. When its attached to a cache behavior, the cache policy determines the following: The values that CloudFront includes in the cache key. These values can include HTTP headers, cookies, and URL query strings. CloudFront uses the cache key to find an object in its cache that it can return to the viewer. The default, minimum, and maximum time to live (TTL) values that you want objects to stay in the CloudFront cache. The headers, cookies, and query strings that are included in the cache key are automatically included in requests that CloudFront sends to the origin. CloudFront sends a request when it cant find an object in its cache that matches the requests cache key. If you want to send values to the origin but not include them in the cache key, use OriginRequestPolicy. For more information about cache policies, see Controlling the cache key in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
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+ * Creates a cache policy. After you create a cache policy, you can attach it to one or more cache behaviors. When it's attached to a cache behavior, the cache policy determines the following: The values that CloudFront includes in the cache key. These values can include HTTP headers, cookies, and URL query strings. CloudFront uses the cache key to find an object in its cache that it can return to the viewer. The default, minimum, and maximum time to live (TTL) values that you want objects to stay in the CloudFront cache. The headers, cookies, and query strings that are included in the cache key are automatically included in requests that CloudFront sends to the origin. CloudFront sends a request when it can't find an object in its cache that matches the request's cache key. If you want to send values to the origin but not include them in the cache key, use OriginRequestPolicy. For more information about cache policies, see Controlling the cache key in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
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  */
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  createCachePolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.CreateCachePolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateCachePolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateCachePolicyResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a cache policy. After you create a cache policy, you can attach it to one or more cache behaviors. When its attached to a cache behavior, the cache policy determines the following: The values that CloudFront includes in the cache key. These values can include HTTP headers, cookies, and URL query strings. CloudFront uses the cache key to find an object in its cache that it can return to the viewer. The default, minimum, and maximum time to live (TTL) values that you want objects to stay in the CloudFront cache. The headers, cookies, and query strings that are included in the cache key are automatically included in requests that CloudFront sends to the origin. CloudFront sends a request when it cant find an object in its cache that matches the requests cache key. If you want to send values to the origin but not include them in the cache key, use OriginRequestPolicy. For more information about cache policies, see Controlling the cache key in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
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+ * Creates a cache policy. After you create a cache policy, you can attach it to one or more cache behaviors. When it's attached to a cache behavior, the cache policy determines the following: The values that CloudFront includes in the cache key. These values can include HTTP headers, cookies, and URL query strings. CloudFront uses the cache key to find an object in its cache that it can return to the viewer. The default, minimum, and maximum time to live (TTL) values that you want objects to stay in the CloudFront cache. The headers, cookies, and query strings that are included in the cache key are automatically included in requests that CloudFront sends to the origin. CloudFront sends a request when it can't find an object in its cache that matches the request's cache key. If you want to send values to the origin but not include them in the cache key, use OriginRequestPolicy. For more information about cache policies, see Controlling the cache key in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
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  */
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  createCachePolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateCachePolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateCachePolicyResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -46,11 +46,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
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  */
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  createCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentity(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a continuous deployment policy that distributes traffic for a custom domain name to two different CloudFront distributions. To use a continuous deployment policy, first use CopyDistribution to create a staging distribution, then use UpdateDistribution to modify the staging distributions configuration. After you create and update a staging distribution, you can use a continuous deployment policy to incrementally move traffic to the staging distribution. This workflow enables you to test changes to a distributions configuration before moving all of your domains production traffic to the new configuration.
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+ * Creates a continuous deployment policy that distributes traffic for a custom domain name to two different CloudFront distributions. To use a continuous deployment policy, first use CopyDistribution to create a staging distribution, then use UpdateDistribution to modify the staging distribution's configuration. After you create and update a staging distribution, you can use a continuous deployment policy to incrementally move traffic to the staging distribution. This workflow enables you to test changes to a distribution's configuration before moving all of your domain's production traffic to the new configuration.
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  */
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  createContinuousDeploymentPolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.CreateContinuousDeploymentPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateContinuousDeploymentPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateContinuousDeploymentPolicyResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a continuous deployment policy that distributes traffic for a custom domain name to two different CloudFront distributions. To use a continuous deployment policy, first use CopyDistribution to create a staging distribution, then use UpdateDistribution to modify the staging distributions configuration. After you create and update a staging distribution, you can use a continuous deployment policy to incrementally move traffic to the staging distribution. This workflow enables you to test changes to a distributions configuration before moving all of your domains production traffic to the new configuration.
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+ * Creates a continuous deployment policy that distributes traffic for a custom domain name to two different CloudFront distributions. To use a continuous deployment policy, first use CopyDistribution to create a staging distribution, then use UpdateDistribution to modify the staging distribution's configuration. After you create and update a staging distribution, you can use a continuous deployment policy to incrementally move traffic to the staging distribution. This workflow enables you to test changes to a distribution's configuration before moving all of your domain's production traffic to the new configuration.
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  */
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  createContinuousDeploymentPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateContinuousDeploymentPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateContinuousDeploymentPolicyResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -86,19 +86,19 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
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  */
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  createFieldLevelEncryptionProfile(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateFieldLevelEncryptionProfileResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateFieldLevelEncryptionProfileResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a CloudFront function. To create a function, you provide the function code and some configuration information about the function. The response contains an Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that uniquely identifies the function. When you create a function, its in the DEVELOPMENT stage. In this stage, you can test the function with TestFunction, and update it with UpdateFunction. When youre ready to use your function with a CloudFront distribution, use PublishFunction to copy the function from the DEVELOPMENT stage to LIVE. When its live, you can attach the function to a distributions cache behavior, using the functions ARN.
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+ * Creates a CloudFront function. To create a function, you provide the function code and some configuration information about the function. The response contains an Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that uniquely identifies the function. When you create a function, it's in the DEVELOPMENT stage. In this stage, you can test the function with TestFunction, and update it with UpdateFunction. When you're ready to use your function with a CloudFront distribution, use PublishFunction to copy the function from the DEVELOPMENT stage to LIVE. When it's live, you can attach the function to a distribution's cache behavior, using the function's ARN.
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  */
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  createFunction(params: CloudFront.Types.CreateFunctionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateFunctionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateFunctionResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a CloudFront function. To create a function, you provide the function code and some configuration information about the function. The response contains an Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that uniquely identifies the function. When you create a function, its in the DEVELOPMENT stage. In this stage, you can test the function with TestFunction, and update it with UpdateFunction. When youre ready to use your function with a CloudFront distribution, use PublishFunction to copy the function from the DEVELOPMENT stage to LIVE. When its live, you can attach the function to a distributions cache behavior, using the functions ARN.
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+ * Creates a CloudFront function. To create a function, you provide the function code and some configuration information about the function. The response contains an Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that uniquely identifies the function. When you create a function, it's in the DEVELOPMENT stage. In this stage, you can test the function with TestFunction, and update it with UpdateFunction. When you're ready to use your function with a CloudFront distribution, use PublishFunction to copy the function from the DEVELOPMENT stage to LIVE. When it's live, you can attach the function to a distribution's cache behavior, using the function's ARN.
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  */
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  createFunction(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateFunctionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateFunctionResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Create a new invalidation.
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+ * Create a new invalidation.
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  */
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  createInvalidation(params: CloudFront.Types.CreateInvalidationRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateInvalidationResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateInvalidationResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Create a new invalidation.
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+ * Create a new invalidation.
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  */
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  createInvalidation(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateInvalidationResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateInvalidationResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -126,11 +126,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
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  */
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  createOriginAccessControl(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateOriginAccessControlResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateOriginAccessControlResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates an origin request policy. After you create an origin request policy, you can attach it to one or more cache behaviors. When its attached to a cache behavior, the origin request policy determines the values that CloudFront includes in requests that it sends to the origin. Each request that CloudFront sends to the origin includes the following: The request body and the URL path (without the domain name) from the viewer request. The headers that CloudFront automatically includes in every origin request, including Host, User-Agent, and X-Amz-Cf-Id. All HTTP headers, cookies, and URL query strings that are specified in the cache policy or the origin request policy. These can include items from the viewer request and, in the case of headers, additional ones that are added by CloudFront. CloudFront sends a request when it cant find a valid object in its cache that matches the request. If you want to send values to the origin and also include them in the cache key, use CachePolicy. For more information about origin request policies, see Controlling origin requests in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
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+ * Creates an origin request policy. After you create an origin request policy, you can attach it to one or more cache behaviors. When it's attached to a cache behavior, the origin request policy determines the values that CloudFront includes in requests that it sends to the origin. Each request that CloudFront sends to the origin includes the following: The request body and the URL path (without the domain name) from the viewer request. The headers that CloudFront automatically includes in every origin request, including Host, User-Agent, and X-Amz-Cf-Id. All HTTP headers, cookies, and URL query strings that are specified in the cache policy or the origin request policy. These can include items from the viewer request and, in the case of headers, additional ones that are added by CloudFront. CloudFront sends a request when it can't find a valid object in its cache that matches the request. If you want to send values to the origin and also include them in the cache key, use CachePolicy. For more information about origin request policies, see Controlling origin requests in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
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  */
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  createOriginRequestPolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.CreateOriginRequestPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateOriginRequestPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateOriginRequestPolicyResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates an origin request policy. After you create an origin request policy, you can attach it to one or more cache behaviors. When its attached to a cache behavior, the origin request policy determines the values that CloudFront includes in requests that it sends to the origin. Each request that CloudFront sends to the origin includes the following: The request body and the URL path (without the domain name) from the viewer request. The headers that CloudFront automatically includes in every origin request, including Host, User-Agent, and X-Amz-Cf-Id. All HTTP headers, cookies, and URL query strings that are specified in the cache policy or the origin request policy. These can include items from the viewer request and, in the case of headers, additional ones that are added by CloudFront. CloudFront sends a request when it cant find a valid object in its cache that matches the request. If you want to send values to the origin and also include them in the cache key, use CachePolicy. For more information about origin request policies, see Controlling origin requests in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
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+ * Creates an origin request policy. After you create an origin request policy, you can attach it to one or more cache behaviors. When it's attached to a cache behavior, the origin request policy determines the values that CloudFront includes in requests that it sends to the origin. Each request that CloudFront sends to the origin includes the following: The request body and the URL path (without the domain name) from the viewer request. The headers that CloudFront automatically includes in every origin request, including Host, User-Agent, and X-Amz-Cf-Id. All HTTP headers, cookies, and URL query strings that are specified in the cache policy or the origin request policy. These can include items from the viewer request and, in the case of headers, additional ones that are added by CloudFront. CloudFront sends a request when it can't find a valid object in its cache that matches the request. If you want to send values to the origin and also include them in the cache key, use CachePolicy. For more information about origin request policies, see Controlling origin requests in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
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  */
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  createOriginRequestPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateOriginRequestPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateOriginRequestPolicyResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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  */
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  createRealtimeLogConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateRealtimeLogConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateRealtimeLogConfigResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a response headers policy. A response headers policy contains information about a set of HTTP response headers and their values. To create a response headers policy, you provide some metadata about the policy, and a set of configurations that specify the response headers. After you create a response headers policy, you can use its ID to attach it to one or more cache behaviors in a CloudFront distribution. When its attached to a cache behavior, CloudFront adds the headers in the policy to HTTP responses that it sends for requests that match the cache behavior.
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+ * Creates a response headers policy. A response headers policy contains information about a set of HTTP response headers and their values. To create a response headers policy, you provide some metadata about the policy, and a set of configurations that specify the response headers. After you create a response headers policy, you can use its ID to attach it to one or more cache behaviors in a CloudFront distribution. When it's attached to a cache behavior, CloudFront adds the headers in the policy to HTTP responses that it sends for requests that match the cache behavior.
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  */
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  createResponseHeadersPolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.CreateResponseHeadersPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateResponseHeadersPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateResponseHeadersPolicyResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a response headers policy. A response headers policy contains information about a set of HTTP response headers and their values. To create a response headers policy, you provide some metadata about the policy, and a set of configurations that specify the response headers. After you create a response headers policy, you can use its ID to attach it to one or more cache behaviors in a CloudFront distribution. When its attached to a cache behavior, CloudFront adds the headers in the policy to HTTP responses that it sends for requests that match the cache behavior.
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+ * Creates a response headers policy. A response headers policy contains information about a set of HTTP response headers and their values. To create a response headers policy, you provide some metadata about the policy, and a set of configurations that specify the response headers. After you create a response headers policy, you can use its ID to attach it to one or more cache behaviors in a CloudFront distribution. When it's attached to a cache behavior, CloudFront adds the headers in the policy to HTTP responses that it sends for requests that match the cache behavior.
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  createResponseHeadersPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateResponseHeadersPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateResponseHeadersPolicyResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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  */
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  createStreamingDistributionWithTags(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.CreateStreamingDistributionWithTagsResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.CreateStreamingDistributionWithTagsResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deletes a cache policy. You cannot delete a cache policy if its attached to a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the cache policy from all cache behaviors, then delete the cache policy. To delete a cache policy, you must provide the policys identifier and version. To get these values, you can use ListCachePolicies or GetCachePolicy.
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+ * Deletes a cache policy. You cannot delete a cache policy if it's attached to a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the cache policy from all cache behaviors, then delete the cache policy. To delete a cache policy, you must provide the policy's identifier and version. To get these values, you can use ListCachePolicies or GetCachePolicy.
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  deleteCachePolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.DeleteCachePolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deletes a cache policy. You cannot delete a cache policy if its attached to a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the cache policy from all cache behaviors, then delete the cache policy. To delete a cache policy, you must provide the policys identifier and version. To get these values, you can use ListCachePolicies or GetCachePolicy.
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+ * Deletes a cache policy. You cannot delete a cache policy if it's attached to a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the cache policy from all cache behaviors, then delete the cache policy. To delete a cache policy, you must provide the policy's identifier and version. To get these values, you can use ListCachePolicies or GetCachePolicy.
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  */
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  deleteCachePolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Delete an origin access identity.
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+ * Delete an origin access identity.
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  deleteCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentity(params: CloudFront.Types.DeleteCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Delete an origin access identity.
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+ * Delete an origin access identity.
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  deleteCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentity(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deletes a continuous deployment policy. You cannot delete a continuous deployment policy thats attached to a primary distribution. First update your distribution to remove the continuous deployment policy, then you can delete the policy.
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+ * Deletes a continuous deployment policy. You cannot delete a continuous deployment policy that's attached to a primary distribution. First update your distribution to remove the continuous deployment policy, then you can delete the policy.
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  */
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  deleteContinuousDeploymentPolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.DeleteContinuousDeploymentPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deletes a continuous deployment policy. You cannot delete a continuous deployment policy thats attached to a primary distribution. First update your distribution to remove the continuous deployment policy, then you can delete the policy.
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+ * Deletes a continuous deployment policy. You cannot delete a continuous deployment policy that's attached to a primary distribution. First update your distribution to remove the continuous deployment policy, then you can delete the policy.
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  */
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  deleteContinuousDeploymentPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Delete a distribution.
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+ * Delete a distribution.
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  */
203
203
  deleteDistribution(params: CloudFront.Types.DeleteDistributionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
204
204
  /**
205
- * Delete a distribution.
205
+ * Delete a distribution.
206
206
  */
207
207
  deleteDistribution(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
208
208
  /**
@@ -222,19 +222,19 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
222
222
  */
223
223
  deleteFieldLevelEncryptionProfile(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
224
224
  /**
225
- * Deletes a CloudFront function. You cannot delete a function if its associated with a cache behavior. First, update your distributions to remove the function association from all cache behaviors, then delete the function. To delete a function, you must provide the functions name and version (ETag value). To get these values, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
225
+ * Deletes a CloudFront function. You cannot delete a function if it's associated with a cache behavior. First, update your distributions to remove the function association from all cache behaviors, then delete the function. To delete a function, you must provide the function's name and version (ETag value). To get these values, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
226
226
  */
227
227
  deleteFunction(params: CloudFront.Types.DeleteFunctionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
228
228
  /**
229
- * Deletes a CloudFront function. You cannot delete a function if its associated with a cache behavior. First, update your distributions to remove the function association from all cache behaviors, then delete the function. To delete a function, you must provide the functions name and version (ETag value). To get these values, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
229
+ * Deletes a CloudFront function. You cannot delete a function if it's associated with a cache behavior. First, update your distributions to remove the function association from all cache behaviors, then delete the function. To delete a function, you must provide the function's name and version (ETag value). To get these values, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
230
230
  */
231
231
  deleteFunction(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
232
232
  /**
233
- * Deletes a key group. You cannot delete a key group that is referenced in a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the key group from all cache behaviors, then delete the key group. To delete a key group, you must provide the key groups identifier and version. To get these values, use ListKeyGroups followed by GetKeyGroup or GetKeyGroupConfig.
233
+ * Deletes a key group. You cannot delete a key group that is referenced in a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the key group from all cache behaviors, then delete the key group. To delete a key group, you must provide the key group's identifier and version. To get these values, use ListKeyGroups followed by GetKeyGroup or GetKeyGroupConfig.
234
234
  */
235
235
  deleteKeyGroup(params: CloudFront.Types.DeleteKeyGroupRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
236
236
  /**
237
- * Deletes a key group. You cannot delete a key group that is referenced in a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the key group from all cache behaviors, then delete the key group. To delete a key group, you must provide the key groups identifier and version. To get these values, use ListKeyGroups followed by GetKeyGroup or GetKeyGroupConfig.
237
+ * Deletes a key group. You cannot delete a key group that is referenced in a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the key group from all cache behaviors, then delete the key group. To delete a key group, you must provide the key group's identifier and version. To get these values, use ListKeyGroups followed by GetKeyGroup or GetKeyGroupConfig.
238
238
  */
239
239
  deleteKeyGroup(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
240
240
  /**
@@ -254,11 +254,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
254
254
  */
255
255
  deleteOriginAccessControl(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
256
256
  /**
257
- * Deletes an origin request policy. You cannot delete an origin request policy if its attached to any cache behaviors. First update your distributions to remove the origin request policy from all cache behaviors, then delete the origin request policy. To delete an origin request policy, you must provide the policys identifier and version. To get the identifier, you can use ListOriginRequestPolicies or GetOriginRequestPolicy.
257
+ * Deletes an origin request policy. You cannot delete an origin request policy if it's attached to any cache behaviors. First update your distributions to remove the origin request policy from all cache behaviors, then delete the origin request policy. To delete an origin request policy, you must provide the policy's identifier and version. To get the identifier, you can use ListOriginRequestPolicies or GetOriginRequestPolicy.
258
258
  */
259
259
  deleteOriginRequestPolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.DeleteOriginRequestPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
260
260
  /**
261
- * Deletes an origin request policy. You cannot delete an origin request policy if its attached to any cache behaviors. First update your distributions to remove the origin request policy from all cache behaviors, then delete the origin request policy. To delete an origin request policy, you must provide the policys identifier and version. To get the identifier, you can use ListOriginRequestPolicies or GetOriginRequestPolicy.
261
+ * Deletes an origin request policy. You cannot delete an origin request policy if it's attached to any cache behaviors. First update your distributions to remove the origin request policy from all cache behaviors, then delete the origin request policy. To delete an origin request policy, you must provide the policy's identifier and version. To get the identifier, you can use ListOriginRequestPolicies or GetOriginRequestPolicy.
262
262
  */
263
263
  deleteOriginRequestPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
264
264
  /**
@@ -270,19 +270,19 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
270
270
  */
271
271
  deletePublicKey(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
272
272
  /**
273
- * Deletes a real-time log configuration. You cannot delete a real-time log configuration if its attached to a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the real-time log configuration from all cache behaviors, then delete the real-time log configuration. To delete a real-time log configuration, you can provide the configurations name or its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You must provide at least one. If you provide both, CloudFront uses the name to identify the real-time log configuration to delete.
273
+ * Deletes a real-time log configuration. You cannot delete a real-time log configuration if it's attached to a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the real-time log configuration from all cache behaviors, then delete the real-time log configuration. To delete a real-time log configuration, you can provide the configuration's name or its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You must provide at least one. If you provide both, CloudFront uses the name to identify the real-time log configuration to delete.
274
274
  */
275
275
  deleteRealtimeLogConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.DeleteRealtimeLogConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
276
276
  /**
277
- * Deletes a real-time log configuration. You cannot delete a real-time log configuration if its attached to a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the real-time log configuration from all cache behaviors, then delete the real-time log configuration. To delete a real-time log configuration, you can provide the configurations name or its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You must provide at least one. If you provide both, CloudFront uses the name to identify the real-time log configuration to delete.
277
+ * Deletes a real-time log configuration. You cannot delete a real-time log configuration if it's attached to a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the real-time log configuration from all cache behaviors, then delete the real-time log configuration. To delete a real-time log configuration, you can provide the configuration's name or its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You must provide at least one. If you provide both, CloudFront uses the name to identify the real-time log configuration to delete.
278
278
  */
279
279
  deleteRealtimeLogConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
280
280
  /**
281
- * Deletes a response headers policy. You cannot delete a response headers policy if its attached to a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the response headers policy from all cache behaviors, then delete the response headers policy. To delete a response headers policy, you must provide the policys identifier and version. To get these values, you can use ListResponseHeadersPolicies or GetResponseHeadersPolicy.
281
+ * Deletes a response headers policy. You cannot delete a response headers policy if it's attached to a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the response headers policy from all cache behaviors, then delete the response headers policy. To delete a response headers policy, you must provide the policy's identifier and version. To get these values, you can use ListResponseHeadersPolicies or GetResponseHeadersPolicy.
282
282
  */
283
283
  deleteResponseHeadersPolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.DeleteResponseHeadersPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
284
284
  /**
285
- * Deletes a response headers policy. You cannot delete a response headers policy if its attached to a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the response headers policy from all cache behaviors, then delete the response headers policy. To delete a response headers policy, you must provide the policys identifier and version. To get these values, you can use ListResponseHeadersPolicies or GetResponseHeadersPolicy.
285
+ * Deletes a response headers policy. You cannot delete a response headers policy if it's attached to a cache behavior. First update your distributions to remove the response headers policy from all cache behaviors, then delete the response headers policy. To delete a response headers policy, you must provide the policy's identifier and version. To get these values, you can use ListResponseHeadersPolicies or GetResponseHeadersPolicy.
286
286
  */
287
287
  deleteResponseHeadersPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
288
288
  /**
@@ -294,51 +294,51 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
294
294
  */
295
295
  deleteStreamingDistribution(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
296
296
  /**
297
- * Gets configuration information and metadata about a CloudFront function, but not the functions code. To get a functions code, use GetFunction. To get configuration information and metadata about a function, you must provide the functions name and stage. To get these values, you can use ListFunctions.
297
+ * Gets configuration information and metadata about a CloudFront function, but not the function's code. To get a function's code, use GetFunction. To get configuration information and metadata about a function, you must provide the function's name and stage. To get these values, you can use ListFunctions.
298
298
  */
299
299
  describeFunction(params: CloudFront.Types.DescribeFunctionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.DescribeFunctionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.DescribeFunctionResult, AWSError>;
300
300
  /**
301
- * Gets configuration information and metadata about a CloudFront function, but not the functions code. To get a functions code, use GetFunction. To get configuration information and metadata about a function, you must provide the functions name and stage. To get these values, you can use ListFunctions.
301
+ * Gets configuration information and metadata about a CloudFront function, but not the function's code. To get a function's code, use GetFunction. To get configuration information and metadata about a function, you must provide the function's name and stage. To get these values, you can use ListFunctions.
302
302
  */
303
303
  describeFunction(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.DescribeFunctionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.DescribeFunctionResult, AWSError>;
304
304
  /**
305
- * Gets a cache policy, including the following metadata: The policys identifier. The date and time when the policy was last modified. To get a cache policy, you must provide the policys identifier. If the cache policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the cache policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListCachePolicies.
305
+ * Gets a cache policy, including the following metadata: The policy's identifier. The date and time when the policy was last modified. To get a cache policy, you must provide the policy's identifier. If the cache policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the cache policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListCachePolicies.
306
306
  */
307
307
  getCachePolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.GetCachePolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetCachePolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetCachePolicyResult, AWSError>;
308
308
  /**
309
- * Gets a cache policy, including the following metadata: The policys identifier. The date and time when the policy was last modified. To get a cache policy, you must provide the policys identifier. If the cache policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the cache policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListCachePolicies.
309
+ * Gets a cache policy, including the following metadata: The policy's identifier. The date and time when the policy was last modified. To get a cache policy, you must provide the policy's identifier. If the cache policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the cache policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListCachePolicies.
310
310
  */
311
311
  getCachePolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetCachePolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetCachePolicyResult, AWSError>;
312
312
  /**
313
- * Gets a cache policy configuration. To get a cache policy configuration, you must provide the policys identifier. If the cache policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the cache policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListCachePolicies.
313
+ * Gets a cache policy configuration. To get a cache policy configuration, you must provide the policy's identifier. If the cache policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the cache policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListCachePolicies.
314
314
  */
315
315
  getCachePolicyConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.GetCachePolicyConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetCachePolicyConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetCachePolicyConfigResult, AWSError>;
316
316
  /**
317
- * Gets a cache policy configuration. To get a cache policy configuration, you must provide the policys identifier. If the cache policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the cache policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListCachePolicies.
317
+ * Gets a cache policy configuration. To get a cache policy configuration, you must provide the policy's identifier. If the cache policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the cache policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListCachePolicies.
318
318
  */
319
319
  getCachePolicyConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetCachePolicyConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetCachePolicyConfigResult, AWSError>;
320
320
  /**
321
- * Get the information about an origin access identity.
321
+ * Get the information about an origin access identity.
322
322
  */
323
323
  getCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentity(params: CloudFront.Types.GetCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityResult, AWSError>;
324
324
  /**
325
- * Get the information about an origin access identity.
325
+ * Get the information about an origin access identity.
326
326
  */
327
327
  getCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentity(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityResult, AWSError>;
328
328
  /**
329
- * Get the configuration information about an origin access identity.
329
+ * Get the configuration information about an origin access identity.
330
330
  */
331
331
  getCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.GetCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfigResult, AWSError>;
332
332
  /**
333
- * Get the configuration information about an origin access identity.
333
+ * Get the configuration information about an origin access identity.
334
334
  */
335
335
  getCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfigResult, AWSError>;
336
336
  /**
337
- * Gets a continuous deployment policy, including metadata (the policys identifier and the date and time when the policy was last modified).
337
+ * Gets a continuous deployment policy, including metadata (the policy's identifier and the date and time when the policy was last modified).
338
338
  */
339
339
  getContinuousDeploymentPolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.GetContinuousDeploymentPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetContinuousDeploymentPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetContinuousDeploymentPolicyResult, AWSError>;
340
340
  /**
341
- * Gets a continuous deployment policy, including metadata (the policys identifier and the date and time when the policy was last modified).
341
+ * Gets a continuous deployment policy, including metadata (the policy's identifier and the date and time when the policy was last modified).
342
342
  */
343
343
  getContinuousDeploymentPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetContinuousDeploymentPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetContinuousDeploymentPolicyResult, AWSError>;
344
344
  /**
@@ -358,11 +358,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
358
358
  */
359
359
  getDistribution(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetDistributionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetDistributionResult, AWSError>;
360
360
  /**
361
- * Get the configuration information about a distribution.
361
+ * Get the configuration information about a distribution.
362
362
  */
363
363
  getDistributionConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.GetDistributionConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetDistributionConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetDistributionConfigResult, AWSError>;
364
364
  /**
365
- * Get the configuration information about a distribution.
365
+ * Get the configuration information about a distribution.
366
366
  */
367
367
  getDistributionConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetDistributionConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetDistributionConfigResult, AWSError>;
368
368
  /**
@@ -398,35 +398,35 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
398
398
  */
399
399
  getFieldLevelEncryptionProfileConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetFieldLevelEncryptionProfileConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetFieldLevelEncryptionProfileConfigResult, AWSError>;
400
400
  /**
401
- * Gets the code of a CloudFront function. To get configuration information and metadata about a function, use DescribeFunction. To get a functions code, you must provide the functions name and stage. To get these values, you can use ListFunctions.
401
+ * Gets the code of a CloudFront function. To get configuration information and metadata about a function, use DescribeFunction. To get a function's code, you must provide the function's name and stage. To get these values, you can use ListFunctions.
402
402
  */
403
403
  getFunction(params: CloudFront.Types.GetFunctionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetFunctionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetFunctionResult, AWSError>;
404
404
  /**
405
- * Gets the code of a CloudFront function. To get configuration information and metadata about a function, use DescribeFunction. To get a functions code, you must provide the functions name and stage. To get these values, you can use ListFunctions.
405
+ * Gets the code of a CloudFront function. To get configuration information and metadata about a function, use DescribeFunction. To get a function's code, you must provide the function's name and stage. To get these values, you can use ListFunctions.
406
406
  */
407
407
  getFunction(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetFunctionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetFunctionResult, AWSError>;
408
408
  /**
409
- * Get the information about an invalidation.
409
+ * Get the information about an invalidation.
410
410
  */
411
411
  getInvalidation(params: CloudFront.Types.GetInvalidationRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetInvalidationResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetInvalidationResult, AWSError>;
412
412
  /**
413
- * Get the information about an invalidation.
413
+ * Get the information about an invalidation.
414
414
  */
415
415
  getInvalidation(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetInvalidationResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetInvalidationResult, AWSError>;
416
416
  /**
417
- * Gets a key group, including the date and time when the key group was last modified. To get a key group, you must provide the key groups identifier. If the key group is referenced in a distributions cache behavior, you can get the key groups identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the key group is not referenced in a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListKeyGroups.
417
+ * Gets a key group, including the date and time when the key group was last modified. To get a key group, you must provide the key group's identifier. If the key group is referenced in a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the key group's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the key group is not referenced in a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListKeyGroups.
418
418
  */
419
419
  getKeyGroup(params: CloudFront.Types.GetKeyGroupRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetKeyGroupResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetKeyGroupResult, AWSError>;
420
420
  /**
421
- * Gets a key group, including the date and time when the key group was last modified. To get a key group, you must provide the key groups identifier. If the key group is referenced in a distributions cache behavior, you can get the key groups identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the key group is not referenced in a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListKeyGroups.
421
+ * Gets a key group, including the date and time when the key group was last modified. To get a key group, you must provide the key group's identifier. If the key group is referenced in a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the key group's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the key group is not referenced in a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListKeyGroups.
422
422
  */
423
423
  getKeyGroup(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetKeyGroupResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetKeyGroupResult, AWSError>;
424
424
  /**
425
- * Gets a key group configuration. To get a key group configuration, you must provide the key groups identifier. If the key group is referenced in a distributions cache behavior, you can get the key groups identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the key group is not referenced in a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListKeyGroups.
425
+ * Gets a key group configuration. To get a key group configuration, you must provide the key group's identifier. If the key group is referenced in a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the key group's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the key group is not referenced in a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListKeyGroups.
426
426
  */
427
427
  getKeyGroupConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.GetKeyGroupConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetKeyGroupConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetKeyGroupConfigResult, AWSError>;
428
428
  /**
429
- * Gets a key group configuration. To get a key group configuration, you must provide the key groups identifier. If the key group is referenced in a distributions cache behavior, you can get the key groups identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the key group is not referenced in a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListKeyGroups.
429
+ * Gets a key group configuration. To get a key group configuration, you must provide the key group's identifier. If the key group is referenced in a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the key group's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the key group is not referenced in a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListKeyGroups.
430
430
  */
431
431
  getKeyGroupConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetKeyGroupConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetKeyGroupConfigResult, AWSError>;
432
432
  /**
@@ -454,19 +454,19 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
454
454
  */
455
455
  getOriginAccessControlConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetOriginAccessControlConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetOriginAccessControlConfigResult, AWSError>;
456
456
  /**
457
- * Gets an origin request policy, including the following metadata: The policys identifier. The date and time when the policy was last modified. To get an origin request policy, you must provide the policys identifier. If the origin request policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the origin request policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListOriginRequestPolicies.
457
+ * Gets an origin request policy, including the following metadata: The policy's identifier. The date and time when the policy was last modified. To get an origin request policy, you must provide the policy's identifier. If the origin request policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the origin request policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListOriginRequestPolicies.
458
458
  */
459
459
  getOriginRequestPolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.GetOriginRequestPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetOriginRequestPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetOriginRequestPolicyResult, AWSError>;
460
460
  /**
461
- * Gets an origin request policy, including the following metadata: The policys identifier. The date and time when the policy was last modified. To get an origin request policy, you must provide the policys identifier. If the origin request policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the origin request policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListOriginRequestPolicies.
461
+ * Gets an origin request policy, including the following metadata: The policy's identifier. The date and time when the policy was last modified. To get an origin request policy, you must provide the policy's identifier. If the origin request policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the origin request policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListOriginRequestPolicies.
462
462
  */
463
463
  getOriginRequestPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetOriginRequestPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetOriginRequestPolicyResult, AWSError>;
464
464
  /**
465
- * Gets an origin request policy configuration. To get an origin request policy configuration, you must provide the policys identifier. If the origin request policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the origin request policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListOriginRequestPolicies.
465
+ * Gets an origin request policy configuration. To get an origin request policy configuration, you must provide the policy's identifier. If the origin request policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the origin request policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListOriginRequestPolicies.
466
466
  */
467
467
  getOriginRequestPolicyConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.GetOriginRequestPolicyConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetOriginRequestPolicyConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetOriginRequestPolicyConfigResult, AWSError>;
468
468
  /**
469
- * Gets an origin request policy configuration. To get an origin request policy configuration, you must provide the policys identifier. If the origin request policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the origin request policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListOriginRequestPolicies.
469
+ * Gets an origin request policy configuration. To get an origin request policy configuration, you must provide the policy's identifier. If the origin request policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the origin request policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListOriginRequestPolicies.
470
470
  */
471
471
  getOriginRequestPolicyConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetOriginRequestPolicyConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetOriginRequestPolicyConfigResult, AWSError>;
472
472
  /**
@@ -486,27 +486,27 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
486
486
  */
487
487
  getPublicKeyConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetPublicKeyConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetPublicKeyConfigResult, AWSError>;
488
488
  /**
489
- * Gets a real-time log configuration. To get a real-time log configuration, you can provide the configurations name or its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You must provide at least one. If you provide both, CloudFront uses the name to identify the real-time log configuration to get.
489
+ * Gets a real-time log configuration. To get a real-time log configuration, you can provide the configuration's name or its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You must provide at least one. If you provide both, CloudFront uses the name to identify the real-time log configuration to get.
490
490
  */
491
491
  getRealtimeLogConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.GetRealtimeLogConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetRealtimeLogConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetRealtimeLogConfigResult, AWSError>;
492
492
  /**
493
- * Gets a real-time log configuration. To get a real-time log configuration, you can provide the configurations name or its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You must provide at least one. If you provide both, CloudFront uses the name to identify the real-time log configuration to get.
493
+ * Gets a real-time log configuration. To get a real-time log configuration, you can provide the configuration's name or its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You must provide at least one. If you provide both, CloudFront uses the name to identify the real-time log configuration to get.
494
494
  */
495
495
  getRealtimeLogConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetRealtimeLogConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetRealtimeLogConfigResult, AWSError>;
496
496
  /**
497
- * Gets a response headers policy, including metadata (the policys identifier and the date and time when the policy was last modified). To get a response headers policy, you must provide the policys identifier. If the response headers policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the response headers policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListResponseHeadersPolicies.
497
+ * Gets a response headers policy, including metadata (the policy's identifier and the date and time when the policy was last modified). To get a response headers policy, you must provide the policy's identifier. If the response headers policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the response headers policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListResponseHeadersPolicies.
498
498
  */
499
499
  getResponseHeadersPolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.GetResponseHeadersPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetResponseHeadersPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetResponseHeadersPolicyResult, AWSError>;
500
500
  /**
501
- * Gets a response headers policy, including metadata (the policys identifier and the date and time when the policy was last modified). To get a response headers policy, you must provide the policys identifier. If the response headers policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the response headers policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListResponseHeadersPolicies.
501
+ * Gets a response headers policy, including metadata (the policy's identifier and the date and time when the policy was last modified). To get a response headers policy, you must provide the policy's identifier. If the response headers policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the response headers policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListResponseHeadersPolicies.
502
502
  */
503
503
  getResponseHeadersPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetResponseHeadersPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetResponseHeadersPolicyResult, AWSError>;
504
504
  /**
505
- * Gets a response headers policy configuration. To get a response headers policy configuration, you must provide the policys identifier. If the response headers policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the response headers policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListResponseHeadersPolicies.
505
+ * Gets a response headers policy configuration. To get a response headers policy configuration, you must provide the policy's identifier. If the response headers policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the response headers policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListResponseHeadersPolicies.
506
506
  */
507
507
  getResponseHeadersPolicyConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfigResult, AWSError>;
508
508
  /**
509
- * Gets a response headers policy configuration. To get a response headers policy configuration, you must provide the policys identifier. If the response headers policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the response headers policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListResponseHeadersPolicies.
509
+ * Gets a response headers policy configuration. To get a response headers policy configuration, you must provide the policy's identifier. If the response headers policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the response headers policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListResponseHeadersPolicies.
510
510
  */
511
511
  getResponseHeadersPolicyConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfigResult, AWSError>;
512
512
  /**
@@ -518,11 +518,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
518
518
  */
519
519
  getStreamingDistribution(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetStreamingDistributionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetStreamingDistributionResult, AWSError>;
520
520
  /**
521
- * Get the configuration information about a streaming distribution.
521
+ * Get the configuration information about a streaming distribution.
522
522
  */
523
523
  getStreamingDistributionConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.GetStreamingDistributionConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetStreamingDistributionConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetStreamingDistributionConfigResult, AWSError>;
524
524
  /**
525
- * Get the configuration information about a streaming distribution.
525
+ * Get the configuration information about a streaming distribution.
526
526
  */
527
527
  getStreamingDistributionConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.GetStreamingDistributionConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.GetStreamingDistributionConfigResult, AWSError>;
528
528
  /**
@@ -542,11 +542,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
542
542
  */
543
543
  listCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentities(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentitiesResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentitiesResult, AWSError>;
544
544
  /**
545
- * Gets a list of aliases (also called CNAMEs or alternate domain names) that conflict or overlap with the provided alias, and the associated CloudFront distributions and Amazon Web Services accounts for each conflicting alias. In the returned list, the distribution and account IDs are partially hidden, which allows you to identify the distributions and accounts that you own, but helps to protect the information of ones that you dont own. Use this operation to find aliases that are in use in CloudFront that conflict or overlap with the provided alias. For example, if you provide www.example.com as input, the returned list can include www.example.com and the overlapping wildcard alternate domain name (*.example.com), if they exist. If you provide *.example.com as input, the returned list can include *.example.com and any alternate domain names covered by that wildcard (for example, www.example.com, test.example.com, dev.example.com, and so on), if they exist. To list conflicting aliases, you provide the alias to search and the ID of a distribution in your account that has an attached SSL/TLS certificate that includes the provided alias. For more information, including how to set up the distribution and certificate, see Moving an alternate domain name to a different distribution in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
545
+ * Gets a list of aliases (also called CNAMEs or alternate domain names) that conflict or overlap with the provided alias, and the associated CloudFront distributions and Amazon Web Services accounts for each conflicting alias. In the returned list, the distribution and account IDs are partially hidden, which allows you to identify the distributions and accounts that you own, but helps to protect the information of ones that you don't own. Use this operation to find aliases that are in use in CloudFront that conflict or overlap with the provided alias. For example, if you provide www.example.com as input, the returned list can include www.example.com and the overlapping wildcard alternate domain name (*.example.com), if they exist. If you provide *.example.com as input, the returned list can include *.example.com and any alternate domain names covered by that wildcard (for example, www.example.com, test.example.com, dev.example.com, and so on), if they exist. To list conflicting aliases, you provide the alias to search and the ID of a distribution in your account that has an attached SSL/TLS certificate that includes the provided alias. For more information, including how to set up the distribution and certificate, see Moving an alternate domain name to a different distribution in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
546
546
  */
547
547
  listConflictingAliases(params: CloudFront.Types.ListConflictingAliasesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListConflictingAliasesResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListConflictingAliasesResult, AWSError>;
548
548
  /**
549
- * Gets a list of aliases (also called CNAMEs or alternate domain names) that conflict or overlap with the provided alias, and the associated CloudFront distributions and Amazon Web Services accounts for each conflicting alias. In the returned list, the distribution and account IDs are partially hidden, which allows you to identify the distributions and accounts that you own, but helps to protect the information of ones that you dont own. Use this operation to find aliases that are in use in CloudFront that conflict or overlap with the provided alias. For example, if you provide www.example.com as input, the returned list can include www.example.com and the overlapping wildcard alternate domain name (*.example.com), if they exist. If you provide *.example.com as input, the returned list can include *.example.com and any alternate domain names covered by that wildcard (for example, www.example.com, test.example.com, dev.example.com, and so on), if they exist. To list conflicting aliases, you provide the alias to search and the ID of a distribution in your account that has an attached SSL/TLS certificate that includes the provided alias. For more information, including how to set up the distribution and certificate, see Moving an alternate domain name to a different distribution in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
549
+ * Gets a list of aliases (also called CNAMEs or alternate domain names) that conflict or overlap with the provided alias, and the associated CloudFront distributions and Amazon Web Services accounts for each conflicting alias. In the returned list, the distribution and account IDs are partially hidden, which allows you to identify the distributions and accounts that you own, but helps to protect the information of ones that you don't own. Use this operation to find aliases that are in use in CloudFront that conflict or overlap with the provided alias. For example, if you provide www.example.com as input, the returned list can include www.example.com and the overlapping wildcard alternate domain name (*.example.com), if they exist. If you provide *.example.com as input, the returned list can include *.example.com and any alternate domain names covered by that wildcard (for example, www.example.com, test.example.com, dev.example.com, and so on), if they exist. To list conflicting aliases, you provide the alias to search and the ID of a distribution in your account that has an attached SSL/TLS certificate that includes the provided alias. For more information, including how to set up the distribution and certificate, see Moving an alternate domain name to a different distribution in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
550
550
  */
551
551
  listConflictingAliases(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListConflictingAliasesResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListConflictingAliasesResult, AWSError>;
552
552
  /**
@@ -566,11 +566,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
566
566
  */
567
567
  listDistributions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsResult, AWSError>;
568
568
  /**
569
- * Gets a list of distribution IDs for distributions that have a cache behavior thats associated with the specified cache policy. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
569
+ * Gets a list of distribution IDs for distributions that have a cache behavior that's associated with the specified cache policy. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
570
570
  */
571
571
  listDistributionsByCachePolicyId(params: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByCachePolicyIdRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByCachePolicyIdResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByCachePolicyIdResult, AWSError>;
572
572
  /**
573
- * Gets a list of distribution IDs for distributions that have a cache behavior thats associated with the specified cache policy. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
573
+ * Gets a list of distribution IDs for distributions that have a cache behavior that's associated with the specified cache policy. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
574
574
  */
575
575
  listDistributionsByCachePolicyId(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByCachePolicyIdResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByCachePolicyIdResult, AWSError>;
576
576
  /**
@@ -582,27 +582,27 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
582
582
  */
583
583
  listDistributionsByKeyGroup(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByKeyGroupResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByKeyGroupResult, AWSError>;
584
584
  /**
585
- * Gets a list of distribution IDs for distributions that have a cache behavior thats associated with the specified origin request policy. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
585
+ * Gets a list of distribution IDs for distributions that have a cache behavior that's associated with the specified origin request policy. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
586
586
  */
587
587
  listDistributionsByOriginRequestPolicyId(params: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByOriginRequestPolicyIdRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByOriginRequestPolicyIdResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByOriginRequestPolicyIdResult, AWSError>;
588
588
  /**
589
- * Gets a list of distribution IDs for distributions that have a cache behavior thats associated with the specified origin request policy. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
589
+ * Gets a list of distribution IDs for distributions that have a cache behavior that's associated with the specified origin request policy. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
590
590
  */
591
591
  listDistributionsByOriginRequestPolicyId(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByOriginRequestPolicyIdResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByOriginRequestPolicyIdResult, AWSError>;
592
592
  /**
593
- * Gets a list of distributions that have a cache behavior thats associated with the specified real-time log configuration. You can specify the real-time log configuration by its name or its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You must provide at least one. If you provide both, CloudFront uses the name to identify the real-time log configuration to list distributions for. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
593
+ * Gets a list of distributions that have a cache behavior that's associated with the specified real-time log configuration. You can specify the real-time log configuration by its name or its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You must provide at least one. If you provide both, CloudFront uses the name to identify the real-time log configuration to list distributions for. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
594
594
  */
595
595
  listDistributionsByRealtimeLogConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByRealtimeLogConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByRealtimeLogConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByRealtimeLogConfigResult, AWSError>;
596
596
  /**
597
- * Gets a list of distributions that have a cache behavior thats associated with the specified real-time log configuration. You can specify the real-time log configuration by its name or its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You must provide at least one. If you provide both, CloudFront uses the name to identify the real-time log configuration to list distributions for. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
597
+ * Gets a list of distributions that have a cache behavior that's associated with the specified real-time log configuration. You can specify the real-time log configuration by its name or its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You must provide at least one. If you provide both, CloudFront uses the name to identify the real-time log configuration to list distributions for. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
598
598
  */
599
599
  listDistributionsByRealtimeLogConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByRealtimeLogConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByRealtimeLogConfigResult, AWSError>;
600
600
  /**
601
- * Gets a list of distribution IDs for distributions that have a cache behavior thats associated with the specified response headers policy. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
601
+ * Gets a list of distribution IDs for distributions that have a cache behavior that's associated with the specified response headers policy. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
602
602
  */
603
603
  listDistributionsByResponseHeadersPolicyId(params: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByResponseHeadersPolicyIdRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByResponseHeadersPolicyIdResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByResponseHeadersPolicyIdResult, AWSError>;
604
604
  /**
605
- * Gets a list of distribution IDs for distributions that have a cache behavior thats associated with the specified response headers policy. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
605
+ * Gets a list of distribution IDs for distributions that have a cache behavior that's associated with the specified response headers policy. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
606
606
  */
607
607
  listDistributionsByResponseHeadersPolicyId(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByResponseHeadersPolicyIdResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListDistributionsByResponseHeadersPolicyIdResult, AWSError>;
608
608
  /**
@@ -638,11 +638,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
638
638
  */
639
639
  listFunctions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListFunctionsResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListFunctionsResult, AWSError>;
640
640
  /**
641
- * Lists invalidation batches.
641
+ * Lists invalidation batches.
642
642
  */
643
643
  listInvalidations(params: CloudFront.Types.ListInvalidationsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListInvalidationsResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListInvalidationsResult, AWSError>;
644
644
  /**
645
- * Lists invalidation batches.
645
+ * Lists invalidation batches.
646
646
  */
647
647
  listInvalidations(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListInvalidationsResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListInvalidationsResult, AWSError>;
648
648
  /**
@@ -678,11 +678,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
678
678
  */
679
679
  listPublicKeys(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListPublicKeysResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListPublicKeysResult, AWSError>;
680
680
  /**
681
- * Gets a list of real-time log configurations. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
681
+ * Gets a list of real-time log configurations. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
682
682
  */
683
683
  listRealtimeLogConfigs(params: CloudFront.Types.ListRealtimeLogConfigsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListRealtimeLogConfigsResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListRealtimeLogConfigsResult, AWSError>;
684
684
  /**
685
- * Gets a list of real-time log configurations. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
685
+ * Gets a list of real-time log configurations. You can optionally specify the maximum number of items to receive in the response. If the total number of items in the list exceeds the maximum that you specify, or the default maximum, the response is paginated. To get the next page of items, send a subsequent request that specifies the NextMarker value from the current response as the Marker value in the subsequent request.
686
686
  */
687
687
  listRealtimeLogConfigs(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListRealtimeLogConfigsResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListRealtimeLogConfigsResult, AWSError>;
688
688
  /**
@@ -694,11 +694,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
694
694
  */
695
695
  listResponseHeadersPolicies(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListResponseHeadersPoliciesResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListResponseHeadersPoliciesResult, AWSError>;
696
696
  /**
697
- * List streaming distributions.
697
+ * List streaming distributions.
698
698
  */
699
699
  listStreamingDistributions(params: CloudFront.Types.ListStreamingDistributionsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListStreamingDistributionsResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListStreamingDistributionsResult, AWSError>;
700
700
  /**
701
- * List streaming distributions.
701
+ * List streaming distributions.
702
702
  */
703
703
  listStreamingDistributions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListStreamingDistributionsResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListStreamingDistributionsResult, AWSError>;
704
704
  /**
@@ -710,11 +710,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
710
710
  */
711
711
  listTagsForResource(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.ListTagsForResourceResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.ListTagsForResourceResult, AWSError>;
712
712
  /**
713
- * Publishes a CloudFront function by copying the function code from the DEVELOPMENT stage to LIVE. This automatically updates all cache behaviors that are using this function to use the newly published copy in the LIVE stage. When a function is published to the LIVE stage, you can attach the function to a distributions cache behavior, using the functions Amazon Resource Name (ARN). To publish a function, you must provide the functions name and version (ETag value). To get these values, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
713
+ * Publishes a CloudFront function by copying the function code from the DEVELOPMENT stage to LIVE. This automatically updates all cache behaviors that are using this function to use the newly published copy in the LIVE stage. When a function is published to the LIVE stage, you can attach the function to a distribution's cache behavior, using the function's Amazon Resource Name (ARN). To publish a function, you must provide the function's name and version (ETag value). To get these values, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
714
714
  */
715
715
  publishFunction(params: CloudFront.Types.PublishFunctionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.PublishFunctionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.PublishFunctionResult, AWSError>;
716
716
  /**
717
- * Publishes a CloudFront function by copying the function code from the DEVELOPMENT stage to LIVE. This automatically updates all cache behaviors that are using this function to use the newly published copy in the LIVE stage. When a function is published to the LIVE stage, you can attach the function to a distributions cache behavior, using the functions Amazon Resource Name (ARN). To publish a function, you must provide the functions name and version (ETag value). To get these values, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
717
+ * Publishes a CloudFront function by copying the function code from the DEVELOPMENT stage to LIVE. This automatically updates all cache behaviors that are using this function to use the newly published copy in the LIVE stage. When a function is published to the LIVE stage, you can attach the function to a distribution's cache behavior, using the function's Amazon Resource Name (ARN). To publish a function, you must provide the function's name and version (ETag value). To get these values, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
718
718
  */
719
719
  publishFunction(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.PublishFunctionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.PublishFunctionResult, AWSError>;
720
720
  /**
@@ -726,11 +726,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
726
726
  */
727
727
  tagResource(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
728
728
  /**
729
- * Tests a CloudFront function. To test a function, you provide an event object that represents an HTTP request or response that your CloudFront distribution could receive in production. CloudFront runs the function, passing it the event object that you provided, and returns the functions result (the modified event object) in the response. The response also contains function logs and error messages, if any exist. For more information about testing functions, see Testing functions in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. To test a function, you provide the functions name and version (ETag value) along with the event object. To get the functions name and version, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
729
+ * Tests a CloudFront function. To test a function, you provide an event object that represents an HTTP request or response that your CloudFront distribution could receive in production. CloudFront runs the function, passing it the event object that you provided, and returns the function's result (the modified event object) in the response. The response also contains function logs and error messages, if any exist. For more information about testing functions, see Testing functions in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. To test a function, you provide the function's name and version (ETag value) along with the event object. To get the function's name and version, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
730
730
  */
731
731
  testFunction(params: CloudFront.Types.TestFunctionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.TestFunctionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.TestFunctionResult, AWSError>;
732
732
  /**
733
- * Tests a CloudFront function. To test a function, you provide an event object that represents an HTTP request or response that your CloudFront distribution could receive in production. CloudFront runs the function, passing it the event object that you provided, and returns the functions result (the modified event object) in the response. The response also contains function logs and error messages, if any exist. For more information about testing functions, see Testing functions in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. To test a function, you provide the functions name and version (ETag value) along with the event object. To get the functions name and version, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
733
+ * Tests a CloudFront function. To test a function, you provide an event object that represents an HTTP request or response that your CloudFront distribution could receive in production. CloudFront runs the function, passing it the event object that you provided, and returns the function's result (the modified event object) in the response. The response also contains function logs and error messages, if any exist. For more information about testing functions, see Testing functions in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. To test a function, you provide the function's name and version (ETag value) along with the event object. To get the function's name and version, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
734
734
  */
735
735
  testFunction(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.TestFunctionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.TestFunctionResult, AWSError>;
736
736
  /**
@@ -742,75 +742,75 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
742
742
  */
743
743
  untagResource(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
744
744
  /**
745
- * Updates a cache policy configuration. When you update a cache policy configuration, all the fields are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update a cache policy configuration: Use GetCachePolicyConfig to get the current configuration. Locally modify the fields in the cache policy configuration that you want to update. Call UpdateCachePolicy by providing the entire cache policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didnt.
745
+ * Updates a cache policy configuration. When you update a cache policy configuration, all the fields are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update a cache policy configuration: Use GetCachePolicyConfig to get the current configuration. Locally modify the fields in the cache policy configuration that you want to update. Call UpdateCachePolicy by providing the entire cache policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didn't.
746
746
  */
747
747
  updateCachePolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateCachePolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateCachePolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateCachePolicyResult, AWSError>;
748
748
  /**
749
- * Updates a cache policy configuration. When you update a cache policy configuration, all the fields are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update a cache policy configuration: Use GetCachePolicyConfig to get the current configuration. Locally modify the fields in the cache policy configuration that you want to update. Call UpdateCachePolicy by providing the entire cache policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didnt.
749
+ * Updates a cache policy configuration. When you update a cache policy configuration, all the fields are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update a cache policy configuration: Use GetCachePolicyConfig to get the current configuration. Locally modify the fields in the cache policy configuration that you want to update. Call UpdateCachePolicy by providing the entire cache policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didn't.
750
750
  */
751
751
  updateCachePolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateCachePolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateCachePolicyResult, AWSError>;
752
752
  /**
753
- * Update an origin access identity.
753
+ * Update an origin access identity.
754
754
  */
755
755
  updateCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentity(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityResult, AWSError>;
756
756
  /**
757
- * Update an origin access identity.
757
+ * Update an origin access identity.
758
758
  */
759
759
  updateCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentity(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityResult, AWSError>;
760
760
  /**
761
- * Updates a continuous deployment policy. You can update a continuous deployment policy to enable or disable it, to change the percentage of traffic that it sends to the staging distribution, or to change the staging distribution that it sends traffic to. When you update a continuous deployment policy configuration, all the fields are updated with the values that are provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update a continuous deployment policy configuration: Use GetContinuousDeploymentPolicyConfig to get the current configuration. Locally modify the fields in the continuous deployment policy configuration that you want to update. Use UpdateContinuousDeploymentPolicy, providing the entire continuous deployment policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didnt.
761
+ * Updates a continuous deployment policy. You can update a continuous deployment policy to enable or disable it, to change the percentage of traffic that it sends to the staging distribution, or to change the staging distribution that it sends traffic to. When you update a continuous deployment policy configuration, all the fields are updated with the values that are provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update a continuous deployment policy configuration: Use GetContinuousDeploymentPolicyConfig to get the current configuration. Locally modify the fields in the continuous deployment policy configuration that you want to update. Use UpdateContinuousDeploymentPolicy, providing the entire continuous deployment policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didn't.
762
762
  */
763
763
  updateContinuousDeploymentPolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateContinuousDeploymentPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateContinuousDeploymentPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateContinuousDeploymentPolicyResult, AWSError>;
764
764
  /**
765
- * Updates a continuous deployment policy. You can update a continuous deployment policy to enable or disable it, to change the percentage of traffic that it sends to the staging distribution, or to change the staging distribution that it sends traffic to. When you update a continuous deployment policy configuration, all the fields are updated with the values that are provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update a continuous deployment policy configuration: Use GetContinuousDeploymentPolicyConfig to get the current configuration. Locally modify the fields in the continuous deployment policy configuration that you want to update. Use UpdateContinuousDeploymentPolicy, providing the entire continuous deployment policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didnt.
765
+ * Updates a continuous deployment policy. You can update a continuous deployment policy to enable or disable it, to change the percentage of traffic that it sends to the staging distribution, or to change the staging distribution that it sends traffic to. When you update a continuous deployment policy configuration, all the fields are updated with the values that are provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update a continuous deployment policy configuration: Use GetContinuousDeploymentPolicyConfig to get the current configuration. Locally modify the fields in the continuous deployment policy configuration that you want to update. Use UpdateContinuousDeploymentPolicy, providing the entire continuous deployment policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didn't.
766
766
  */
767
767
  updateContinuousDeploymentPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateContinuousDeploymentPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateContinuousDeploymentPolicyResult, AWSError>;
768
768
  /**
769
- * Updates the configuration for a CloudFront distribution. The update process includes getting the current distribution configuration, updating it to make your changes, and then submitting an UpdateDistribution request to make the updates. To update a web distribution using the CloudFront API Use GetDistributionConfig to get the current configuration, including the version identifier (ETag). Update the distribution configuration that was returned in the response. Note the following important requirements and restrictions: You must rename the ETag field to IfMatch, leaving the value unchanged. (Set the value of IfMatch to the value of ETag, then remove the ETag field.) You cant change the value of CallerReference. Submit an UpdateDistribution request, providing the distribution configuration. The new configuration replaces the existing configuration. The values that you specify in an UpdateDistribution request are not merged into your existing configuration. Make sure to include all fields: the ones that you modified and also the ones that you didnt.
769
+ * Updates the configuration for a CloudFront distribution. The update process includes getting the current distribution configuration, updating it to make your changes, and then submitting an UpdateDistribution request to make the updates. To update a web distribution using the CloudFront API Use GetDistributionConfig to get the current configuration, including the version identifier (ETag). Update the distribution configuration that was returned in the response. Note the following important requirements and restrictions: You must rename the ETag field to IfMatch, leaving the value unchanged. (Set the value of IfMatch to the value of ETag, then remove the ETag field.) You can't change the value of CallerReference. Submit an UpdateDistribution request, providing the distribution configuration. The new configuration replaces the existing configuration. The values that you specify in an UpdateDistribution request are not merged into your existing configuration. Make sure to include all fields: the ones that you modified and also the ones that you didn't.
770
770
  */
771
771
  updateDistribution(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateDistributionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateDistributionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateDistributionResult, AWSError>;
772
772
  /**
773
- * Updates the configuration for a CloudFront distribution. The update process includes getting the current distribution configuration, updating it to make your changes, and then submitting an UpdateDistribution request to make the updates. To update a web distribution using the CloudFront API Use GetDistributionConfig to get the current configuration, including the version identifier (ETag). Update the distribution configuration that was returned in the response. Note the following important requirements and restrictions: You must rename the ETag field to IfMatch, leaving the value unchanged. (Set the value of IfMatch to the value of ETag, then remove the ETag field.) You cant change the value of CallerReference. Submit an UpdateDistribution request, providing the distribution configuration. The new configuration replaces the existing configuration. The values that you specify in an UpdateDistribution request are not merged into your existing configuration. Make sure to include all fields: the ones that you modified and also the ones that you didnt.
773
+ * Updates the configuration for a CloudFront distribution. The update process includes getting the current distribution configuration, updating it to make your changes, and then submitting an UpdateDistribution request to make the updates. To update a web distribution using the CloudFront API Use GetDistributionConfig to get the current configuration, including the version identifier (ETag). Update the distribution configuration that was returned in the response. Note the following important requirements and restrictions: You must rename the ETag field to IfMatch, leaving the value unchanged. (Set the value of IfMatch to the value of ETag, then remove the ETag field.) You can't change the value of CallerReference. Submit an UpdateDistribution request, providing the distribution configuration. The new configuration replaces the existing configuration. The values that you specify in an UpdateDistribution request are not merged into your existing configuration. Make sure to include all fields: the ones that you modified and also the ones that you didn't.
774
774
  */
775
775
  updateDistribution(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateDistributionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateDistributionResult, AWSError>;
776
776
  /**
777
- * Copies the staging distribution's configuration to its corresponding primary distribution. The primary distribution retains its Aliases (also known as alternate domain names or CNAMEs) and ContinuousDeploymentPolicyId value, but otherwise its configuration is overwritten to match the staging distribution. You can use this operation in a continuous deployment workflow after you have tested configuration changes on the staging distribution. After using a continuous deployment policy to move a portion of your domain names traffic to the staging distribution and verifying that it works as intended, you can use this operation to copy the staging distributions configuration to the primary distribution. This action will disable the continuous deployment policy and move your domains traffic back to the primary distribution.
777
+ * Copies the staging distribution's configuration to its corresponding primary distribution. The primary distribution retains its Aliases (also known as alternate domain names or CNAMEs) and ContinuousDeploymentPolicyId value, but otherwise its configuration is overwritten to match the staging distribution. You can use this operation in a continuous deployment workflow after you have tested configuration changes on the staging distribution. After using a continuous deployment policy to move a portion of your domain name's traffic to the staging distribution and verifying that it works as intended, you can use this operation to copy the staging distribution's configuration to the primary distribution. This action will disable the continuous deployment policy and move your domain's traffic back to the primary distribution.
778
778
  */
779
779
  updateDistributionWithStagingConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateDistributionWithStagingConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateDistributionWithStagingConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateDistributionWithStagingConfigResult, AWSError>;
780
780
  /**
781
- * Copies the staging distribution's configuration to its corresponding primary distribution. The primary distribution retains its Aliases (also known as alternate domain names or CNAMEs) and ContinuousDeploymentPolicyId value, but otherwise its configuration is overwritten to match the staging distribution. You can use this operation in a continuous deployment workflow after you have tested configuration changes on the staging distribution. After using a continuous deployment policy to move a portion of your domain names traffic to the staging distribution and verifying that it works as intended, you can use this operation to copy the staging distributions configuration to the primary distribution. This action will disable the continuous deployment policy and move your domains traffic back to the primary distribution.
781
+ * Copies the staging distribution's configuration to its corresponding primary distribution. The primary distribution retains its Aliases (also known as alternate domain names or CNAMEs) and ContinuousDeploymentPolicyId value, but otherwise its configuration is overwritten to match the staging distribution. You can use this operation in a continuous deployment workflow after you have tested configuration changes on the staging distribution. After using a continuous deployment policy to move a portion of your domain name's traffic to the staging distribution and verifying that it works as intended, you can use this operation to copy the staging distribution's configuration to the primary distribution. This action will disable the continuous deployment policy and move your domain's traffic back to the primary distribution.
782
782
  */
783
783
  updateDistributionWithStagingConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateDistributionWithStagingConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateDistributionWithStagingConfigResult, AWSError>;
784
784
  /**
785
- * Update a field-level encryption configuration.
785
+ * Update a field-level encryption configuration.
786
786
  */
787
787
  updateFieldLevelEncryptionConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateFieldLevelEncryptionConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateFieldLevelEncryptionConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateFieldLevelEncryptionConfigResult, AWSError>;
788
788
  /**
789
- * Update a field-level encryption configuration.
789
+ * Update a field-level encryption configuration.
790
790
  */
791
791
  updateFieldLevelEncryptionConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateFieldLevelEncryptionConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateFieldLevelEncryptionConfigResult, AWSError>;
792
792
  /**
793
- * Update a field-level encryption profile.
793
+ * Update a field-level encryption profile.
794
794
  */
795
795
  updateFieldLevelEncryptionProfile(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateFieldLevelEncryptionProfileRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateFieldLevelEncryptionProfileResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateFieldLevelEncryptionProfileResult, AWSError>;
796
796
  /**
797
- * Update a field-level encryption profile.
797
+ * Update a field-level encryption profile.
798
798
  */
799
799
  updateFieldLevelEncryptionProfile(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateFieldLevelEncryptionProfileResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateFieldLevelEncryptionProfileResult, AWSError>;
800
800
  /**
801
- * Updates a CloudFront function. You can update a functions code or the comment that describes the function. You cannot update a functions name. To update a function, you provide the functions name and version (ETag value) along with the updated function code. To get the name and version, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
801
+ * Updates a CloudFront function. You can update a function's code or the comment that describes the function. You cannot update a function's name. To update a function, you provide the function's name and version (ETag value) along with the updated function code. To get the name and version, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
802
802
  */
803
803
  updateFunction(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateFunctionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateFunctionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateFunctionResult, AWSError>;
804
804
  /**
805
- * Updates a CloudFront function. You can update a functions code or the comment that describes the function. You cannot update a functions name. To update a function, you provide the functions name and version (ETag value) along with the updated function code. To get the name and version, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
805
+ * Updates a CloudFront function. You can update a function's code or the comment that describes the function. You cannot update a function's name. To update a function, you provide the function's name and version (ETag value) along with the updated function code. To get the name and version, you can use ListFunctions and DescribeFunction.
806
806
  */
807
807
  updateFunction(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateFunctionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateFunctionResult, AWSError>;
808
808
  /**
809
- * Updates a key group. When you update a key group, all the fields are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update a key group: Get the current key group with GetKeyGroup or GetKeyGroupConfig. Locally modify the fields in the key group that you want to update. For example, add or remove public key IDs. Call UpdateKeyGroup with the entire key group object, including the fields that you modified and those that you didnt.
809
+ * Updates a key group. When you update a key group, all the fields are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update a key group: Get the current key group with GetKeyGroup or GetKeyGroupConfig. Locally modify the fields in the key group that you want to update. For example, add or remove public key IDs. Call UpdateKeyGroup with the entire key group object, including the fields that you modified and those that you didn't.
810
810
  */
811
811
  updateKeyGroup(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateKeyGroupRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateKeyGroupResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateKeyGroupResult, AWSError>;
812
812
  /**
813
- * Updates a key group. When you update a key group, all the fields are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update a key group: Get the current key group with GetKeyGroup or GetKeyGroupConfig. Locally modify the fields in the key group that you want to update. For example, add or remove public key IDs. Call UpdateKeyGroup with the entire key group object, including the fields that you modified and those that you didnt.
813
+ * Updates a key group. When you update a key group, all the fields are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update a key group: Get the current key group with GetKeyGroup or GetKeyGroupConfig. Locally modify the fields in the key group that you want to update. For example, add or remove public key IDs. Call UpdateKeyGroup with the entire key group object, including the fields that you modified and those that you didn't.
814
814
  */
815
815
  updateKeyGroup(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateKeyGroupResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateKeyGroupResult, AWSError>;
816
816
  /**
@@ -822,11 +822,11 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
822
822
  */
823
823
  updateOriginAccessControl(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateOriginAccessControlResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateOriginAccessControlResult, AWSError>;
824
824
  /**
825
- * Updates an origin request policy configuration. When you update an origin request policy configuration, all the fields are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update an origin request policy configuration: Use GetOriginRequestPolicyConfig to get the current configuration. Locally modify the fields in the origin request policy configuration that you want to update. Call UpdateOriginRequestPolicy by providing the entire origin request policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didnt.
825
+ * Updates an origin request policy configuration. When you update an origin request policy configuration, all the fields are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update an origin request policy configuration: Use GetOriginRequestPolicyConfig to get the current configuration. Locally modify the fields in the origin request policy configuration that you want to update. Call UpdateOriginRequestPolicy by providing the entire origin request policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didn't.
826
826
  */
827
827
  updateOriginRequestPolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateOriginRequestPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateOriginRequestPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateOriginRequestPolicyResult, AWSError>;
828
828
  /**
829
- * Updates an origin request policy configuration. When you update an origin request policy configuration, all the fields are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update an origin request policy configuration: Use GetOriginRequestPolicyConfig to get the current configuration. Locally modify the fields in the origin request policy configuration that you want to update. Call UpdateOriginRequestPolicy by providing the entire origin request policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didnt.
829
+ * Updates an origin request policy configuration. When you update an origin request policy configuration, all the fields are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some fields independent of others. To update an origin request policy configuration: Use GetOriginRequestPolicyConfig to get the current configuration. Locally modify the fields in the origin request policy configuration that you want to update. Call UpdateOriginRequestPolicy by providing the entire origin request policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didn't.
830
830
  */
831
831
  updateOriginRequestPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateOriginRequestPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateOriginRequestPolicyResult, AWSError>;
832
832
  /**
@@ -838,27 +838,27 @@ declare class CloudFront extends CloudFrontCustomizations {
838
838
  */
839
839
  updatePublicKey(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdatePublicKeyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdatePublicKeyResult, AWSError>;
840
840
  /**
841
- * Updates a real-time log configuration. When you update a real-time log configuration, all the parameters are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some parameters independent of others. To update a real-time log configuration: Call GetRealtimeLogConfig to get the current real-time log configuration. Locally modify the parameters in the real-time log configuration that you want to update. Call this API (UpdateRealtimeLogConfig) by providing the entire real-time log configuration, including the parameters that you modified and those that you didnt. You cannot update a real-time log configurations Name or ARN.
841
+ * Updates a real-time log configuration. When you update a real-time log configuration, all the parameters are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some parameters independent of others. To update a real-time log configuration: Call GetRealtimeLogConfig to get the current real-time log configuration. Locally modify the parameters in the real-time log configuration that you want to update. Call this API (UpdateRealtimeLogConfig) by providing the entire real-time log configuration, including the parameters that you modified and those that you didn't. You cannot update a real-time log configuration's Name or ARN.
842
842
  */
843
843
  updateRealtimeLogConfig(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateRealtimeLogConfigRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateRealtimeLogConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateRealtimeLogConfigResult, AWSError>;
844
844
  /**
845
- * Updates a real-time log configuration. When you update a real-time log configuration, all the parameters are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some parameters independent of others. To update a real-time log configuration: Call GetRealtimeLogConfig to get the current real-time log configuration. Locally modify the parameters in the real-time log configuration that you want to update. Call this API (UpdateRealtimeLogConfig) by providing the entire real-time log configuration, including the parameters that you modified and those that you didnt. You cannot update a real-time log configurations Name or ARN.
845
+ * Updates a real-time log configuration. When you update a real-time log configuration, all the parameters are updated with the values provided in the request. You cannot update some parameters independent of others. To update a real-time log configuration: Call GetRealtimeLogConfig to get the current real-time log configuration. Locally modify the parameters in the real-time log configuration that you want to update. Call this API (UpdateRealtimeLogConfig) by providing the entire real-time log configuration, including the parameters that you modified and those that you didn't. You cannot update a real-time log configuration's Name or ARN.
846
846
  */
847
847
  updateRealtimeLogConfig(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateRealtimeLogConfigResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateRealtimeLogConfigResult, AWSError>;
848
848
  /**
849
- * Updates a response headers policy. When you update a response headers policy, the entire policy is replaced. You cannot update some policy fields independent of others. To update a response headers policy configuration: Use GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfig to get the current policys configuration. Modify the fields in the response headers policy configuration that you want to update. Call UpdateResponseHeadersPolicy, providing the entire response headers policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didnt.
849
+ * Updates a response headers policy. When you update a response headers policy, the entire policy is replaced. You cannot update some policy fields independent of others. To update a response headers policy configuration: Use GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfig to get the current policy's configuration. Modify the fields in the response headers policy configuration that you want to update. Call UpdateResponseHeadersPolicy, providing the entire response headers policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didn't.
850
850
  */
851
851
  updateResponseHeadersPolicy(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateResponseHeadersPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateResponseHeadersPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateResponseHeadersPolicyResult, AWSError>;
852
852
  /**
853
- * Updates a response headers policy. When you update a response headers policy, the entire policy is replaced. You cannot update some policy fields independent of others. To update a response headers policy configuration: Use GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfig to get the current policys configuration. Modify the fields in the response headers policy configuration that you want to update. Call UpdateResponseHeadersPolicy, providing the entire response headers policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didnt.
853
+ * Updates a response headers policy. When you update a response headers policy, the entire policy is replaced. You cannot update some policy fields independent of others. To update a response headers policy configuration: Use GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfig to get the current policy's configuration. Modify the fields in the response headers policy configuration that you want to update. Call UpdateResponseHeadersPolicy, providing the entire response headers policy configuration, including the fields that you modified and those that you didn't.
854
854
  */
855
855
  updateResponseHeadersPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateResponseHeadersPolicyResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateResponseHeadersPolicyResult, AWSError>;
856
856
  /**
857
- * Update a streaming distribution.
857
+ * Update a streaming distribution.
858
858
  */
859
859
  updateStreamingDistribution(params: CloudFront.Types.UpdateStreamingDistributionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateStreamingDistributionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateStreamingDistributionResult, AWSError>;
860
860
  /**
861
- * Update a streaming distribution.
861
+ * Update a streaming distribution.
862
862
  */
863
863
  updateStreamingDistribution(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: CloudFront.Types.UpdateStreamingDistributionResult) => void): Request<CloudFront.Types.UpdateStreamingDistributionResult, AWSError>;
864
864
  /**
@@ -924,11 +924,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
924
924
  }
925
925
  export interface AliasICPRecordal {
926
926
  /**
927
- * A domain name associated with a distribution.
927
+ * A domain name associated with a distribution.
928
928
  */
929
929
  CNAME?: string;
930
930
  /**
931
- * The Internet Content Provider (ICP) recordal status for a CNAME. The ICPRecordalStatus is set to APPROVED for all CNAMEs (aliases) in regions outside of China. The status values returned are the following: APPROVED indicates that the associated CNAME has a valid ICP recordal number. Multiple CNAMEs can be associated with a distribution, and CNAMEs can correspond to different ICP recordals. To be marked as APPROVED, that is, valid to use with China region, a CNAME must have one ICP recordal number associated with it. SUSPENDED indicates that the associated CNAME does not have a valid ICP recordal number. PENDING indicates that CloudFront can't determine the ICP recordal status of the CNAME associated with the distribution because there was an error in trying to determine the status. You can try again to see if the error is resolved in which case CloudFront returns an APPROVED or SUSPENDED status.
931
+ * The Internet Content Provider (ICP) recordal status for a CNAME. The ICPRecordalStatus is set to APPROVED for all CNAMEs (aliases) in regions outside of China. The status values returned are the following: APPROVED indicates that the associated CNAME has a valid ICP recordal number. Multiple CNAMEs can be associated with a distribution, and CNAMEs can correspond to different ICP recordals. To be marked as APPROVED, that is, valid to use with China region, a CNAME must have one ICP recordal number associated with it. SUSPENDED indicates that the associated CNAME does not have a valid ICP recordal number. PENDING indicates that CloudFront can't determine the ICP recordal status of the CNAME associated with the distribution because there was an error in trying to determine the status. You can try again to see if the error is resolved in which case CloudFront returns an APPROVED or SUSPENDED status.
932
932
  */
933
933
  ICPRecordalStatus?: ICPRecordalStatus;
934
934
  }
@@ -957,7 +957,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
957
957
  }
958
958
  export interface AssociateAliasRequest {
959
959
  /**
960
- * The ID of the distribution that youre associating the alias with.
960
+ * The ID of the distribution that you're associating the alias with.
961
961
  */
962
962
  TargetDistributionId: string;
963
963
  /**
@@ -976,7 +976,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
976
976
  */
977
977
  TargetOriginId: string;
978
978
  /**
979
- * We recommend using TrustedKeyGroups instead of TrustedSigners. A list of Amazon Web Services account IDs whose public keys CloudFront can use to validate signed URLs or signed cookies. When a cache behavior contains trusted signers, CloudFront requires signed URLs or signed cookies for all requests that match the cache behavior. The URLs or cookies must be signed with the private key of a CloudFront key pair in the trusted signers Amazon Web Services account. The signed URL or cookie contains information about which public key CloudFront should use to verify the signature. For more information, see Serving private content in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
979
+ * We recommend using TrustedKeyGroups instead of TrustedSigners. A list of Amazon Web Services account IDs whose public keys CloudFront can use to validate signed URLs or signed cookies. When a cache behavior contains trusted signers, CloudFront requires signed URLs or signed cookies for all requests that match the cache behavior. The URLs or cookies must be signed with the private key of a CloudFront key pair in the trusted signer's Amazon Web Services account. The signed URL or cookie contains information about which public key CloudFront should use to verify the signature. For more information, see Serving private content in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
980
980
  */
981
981
  TrustedSigners?: TrustedSigners;
982
982
  /**
@@ -984,12 +984,12 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
984
984
  */
985
985
  TrustedKeyGroups?: TrustedKeyGroups;
986
986
  /**
987
- * The protocol that viewers can use to access the files in the origin specified by TargetOriginId when a request matches the path pattern in PathPattern. You can specify the following options: allow-all: Viewers can use HTTP or HTTPS. redirect-to-https: If a viewer submits an HTTP request, CloudFront returns an HTTP status code of 301 (Moved Permanently) to the viewer along with the HTTPS URL. The viewer then resubmits the request using the new URL. https-only: If a viewer sends an HTTP request, CloudFront returns an HTTP status code of 403 (Forbidden). For more information about requiring the HTTPS protocol, see Requiring HTTPS Between Viewers and CloudFront in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. The only way to guarantee that viewers retrieve an object that was fetched from the origin using HTTPS is never to use any other protocol to fetch the object. If you have recently changed from HTTP to HTTPS, we recommend that you clear your objects cache because cached objects are protocol agnostic. That means that an edge location will return an object from the cache regardless of whether the current request protocol matches the protocol used previously. For more information, see Managing Cache Expiration in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
987
+ * The protocol that viewers can use to access the files in the origin specified by TargetOriginId when a request matches the path pattern in PathPattern. You can specify the following options: allow-all: Viewers can use HTTP or HTTPS. redirect-to-https: If a viewer submits an HTTP request, CloudFront returns an HTTP status code of 301 (Moved Permanently) to the viewer along with the HTTPS URL. The viewer then resubmits the request using the new URL. https-only: If a viewer sends an HTTP request, CloudFront returns an HTTP status code of 403 (Forbidden). For more information about requiring the HTTPS protocol, see Requiring HTTPS Between Viewers and CloudFront in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. The only way to guarantee that viewers retrieve an object that was fetched from the origin using HTTPS is never to use any other protocol to fetch the object. If you have recently changed from HTTP to HTTPS, we recommend that you clear your objects' cache because cached objects are protocol agnostic. That means that an edge location will return an object from the cache regardless of whether the current request protocol matches the protocol used previously. For more information, see Managing Cache Expiration in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
988
988
  */
989
989
  ViewerProtocolPolicy: ViewerProtocolPolicy;
990
990
  AllowedMethods?: AllowedMethods;
991
991
  /**
992
- * Indicates whether you want to distribute media files in the Microsoft Smooth Streaming format using the origin that is associated with this cache behavior. If so, specify true; if not, specify false. If you specify true for SmoothStreaming, you can still distribute other content using this cache behavior if the content matches the value of PathPattern.
992
+ * Indicates whether you want to distribute media files in the Microsoft Smooth Streaming format using the origin that is associated with this cache behavior. If so, specify true; if not, specify false. If you specify true for SmoothStreaming, you can still distribute other content using this cache behavior if the content matches the value of PathPattern.
993
993
  */
994
994
  SmoothStreaming?: boolean;
995
995
  /**
@@ -1044,7 +1044,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1044
1044
  export type CacheBehaviorList = CacheBehavior[];
1045
1045
  export interface CacheBehaviors {
1046
1046
  /**
1047
- * The number of cache behaviors for this distribution.
1047
+ * The number of cache behaviors for this distribution.
1048
1048
  */
1049
1049
  Quantity: integer;
1050
1050
  /**
@@ -1076,7 +1076,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1076
1076
  */
1077
1077
  Name: string;
1078
1078
  /**
1079
- * The default amount of time, in seconds, that you want objects to stay in the CloudFront cache before CloudFront sends another request to the origin to see if the object has been updated. CloudFront uses this value as the objects time to live (TTL) only when the origin does not send Cache-Control or Expires headers with the object. For more information, see Managing How Long Content Stays in an Edge Cache (Expiration) in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. The default value for this field is 86400 seconds (one day). If the value of MinTTL is more than 86400 seconds, then the default value for this field is the same as the value of MinTTL.
1079
+ * The default amount of time, in seconds, that you want objects to stay in the CloudFront cache before CloudFront sends another request to the origin to see if the object has been updated. CloudFront uses this value as the object's time to live (TTL) only when the origin does not send Cache-Control or Expires headers with the object. For more information, see Managing How Long Content Stays in an Edge Cache (Expiration) in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. The default value for this field is 86400 seconds (one day). If the value of MinTTL is more than 86400 seconds, then the default value for this field is the same as the value of MinTTL.
1080
1080
  */
1081
1081
  DefaultTTL?: long;
1082
1082
  /**
@@ -1166,17 +1166,17 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1166
1166
  */
1167
1167
  Id: string;
1168
1168
  /**
1169
- * The Amazon S3 canonical user ID for the origin access identity, used when giving the origin access identity read permission to an object in Amazon S3.
1169
+ * The Amazon S3 canonical user ID for the origin access identity, used when giving the origin access identity read permission to an object in Amazon S3.
1170
1170
  */
1171
1171
  S3CanonicalUserId: string;
1172
1172
  /**
1173
- * The current configuration information for the identity.
1173
+ * The current configuration information for the identity.
1174
1174
  */
1175
1175
  CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig?: CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig;
1176
1176
  }
1177
1177
  export interface CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig {
1178
1178
  /**
1179
- * A unique value (for example, a date-time stamp) that ensures that the request can't be replayed. If the value of CallerReference is new (regardless of the content of the CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig object), a new origin access identity is created. If the CallerReference is a value already sent in a previous identity request, and the content of the CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig is identical to the original request (ignoring white space), the response includes the same information returned to the original request. If the CallerReference is a value you already sent in a previous request to create an identity, but the content of the CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig is different from the original request, CloudFront returns a CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityAlreadyExists error.
1179
+ * A unique value (for example, a date-time stamp) that ensures that the request can't be replayed. If the value of CallerReference is new (regardless of the content of the CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig object), a new origin access identity is created. If the CallerReference is a value already sent in a previous identity request, and the content of the CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig is identical to the original request (ignoring white space), the response includes the same information returned to the original request. If the CallerReference is a value you already sent in a previous request to create an identity, but the content of the CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig is different from the original request, CloudFront returns a CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityAlreadyExists error.
1180
1180
  */
1181
1181
  CallerReference: string;
1182
1182
  /**
@@ -1186,15 +1186,15 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1186
1186
  }
1187
1187
  export interface CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityList {
1188
1188
  /**
1189
- * Use this when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of origin access identities. The results include identities in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of results, set the Marker to the value of the NextMarker from the current page's response (which is also the ID of the last identity on that page).
1189
+ * Use this when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of origin access identities. The results include identities in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of results, set the Marker to the value of the NextMarker from the current page's response (which is also the ID of the last identity on that page).
1190
1190
  */
1191
1191
  Marker: string;
1192
1192
  /**
1193
- * If IsTruncated is true, this element is present and contains the value you can use for the Marker request parameter to continue listing your origin access identities where they left off.
1193
+ * If IsTruncated is true, this element is present and contains the value you can use for the Marker request parameter to continue listing your origin access identities where they left off.
1194
1194
  */
1195
1195
  NextMarker?: string;
1196
1196
  /**
1197
- * The maximum number of origin access identities you want in the response body.
1197
+ * The maximum number of origin access identities you want in the response body.
1198
1198
  */
1199
1199
  MaxItems: integer;
1200
1200
  /**
@@ -1236,7 +1236,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1236
1236
  */
1237
1237
  DistributionId?: string;
1238
1238
  /**
1239
- * The (partially hidden) ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the distribution thats associated with the alias.
1239
+ * The (partially hidden) ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the distribution that's associated with the alias.
1240
1240
  */
1241
1241
  AccountId?: string;
1242
1242
  }
@@ -1261,36 +1261,36 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1261
1261
  }
1262
1262
  export interface ContentTypeProfile {
1263
1263
  /**
1264
- * The format for a field-level encryption content type-profile mapping.
1264
+ * The format for a field-level encryption content type-profile mapping.
1265
1265
  */
1266
1266
  Format: Format;
1267
1267
  /**
1268
- * The profile ID for a field-level encryption content type-profile mapping.
1268
+ * The profile ID for a field-level encryption content type-profile mapping.
1269
1269
  */
1270
1270
  ProfileId?: string;
1271
1271
  /**
1272
- * The content type for a field-level encryption content type-profile mapping.
1272
+ * The content type for a field-level encryption content type-profile mapping.
1273
1273
  */
1274
1274
  ContentType: string;
1275
1275
  }
1276
1276
  export interface ContentTypeProfileConfig {
1277
1277
  /**
1278
- * The setting in a field-level encryption content type-profile mapping that specifies what to do when an unknown content type is provided for the profile. If true, content is forwarded without being encrypted when the content type is unknown. If false (the default), an error is returned when the content type is unknown.
1278
+ * The setting in a field-level encryption content type-profile mapping that specifies what to do when an unknown content type is provided for the profile. If true, content is forwarded without being encrypted when the content type is unknown. If false (the default), an error is returned when the content type is unknown.
1279
1279
  */
1280
1280
  ForwardWhenContentTypeIsUnknown: boolean;
1281
1281
  /**
1282
- * The configuration for a field-level encryption content type-profile.
1282
+ * The configuration for a field-level encryption content type-profile.
1283
1283
  */
1284
1284
  ContentTypeProfiles?: ContentTypeProfiles;
1285
1285
  }
1286
1286
  export type ContentTypeProfileList = ContentTypeProfile[];
1287
1287
  export interface ContentTypeProfiles {
1288
1288
  /**
1289
- * The number of field-level encryption content type-profile mappings.
1289
+ * The number of field-level encryption content type-profile mappings.
1290
1290
  */
1291
1291
  Quantity: integer;
1292
1292
  /**
1293
- * Items in a field-level encryption content type-profile mapping.
1293
+ * Items in a field-level encryption content type-profile mapping.
1294
1294
  */
1295
1295
  Items?: ContentTypeProfileList;
1296
1296
  }
@@ -1347,7 +1347,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1347
1347
  export type ContinuousDeploymentPolicyType = "SingleWeight"|"SingleHeader"|string;
1348
1348
  export interface ContinuousDeploymentSingleHeaderConfig {
1349
1349
  /**
1350
- * The request header name that you want CloudFront to send to your staging distribution.
1350
+ * The request header name that you want CloudFront to send to your staging distribution. The header must contain the prefix aws-cf-cd-.
1351
1351
  */
1352
1352
  Header: string;
1353
1353
  /**
@@ -1494,13 +1494,13 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1494
1494
  }
1495
1495
  export interface CreateDistributionWithTagsRequest {
1496
1496
  /**
1497
- * The distribution's configuration information.
1497
+ * The distribution's configuration information.
1498
1498
  */
1499
1499
  DistributionConfigWithTags: DistributionConfigWithTags;
1500
1500
  }
1501
1501
  export interface CreateDistributionWithTagsResult {
1502
1502
  /**
1503
- * The distribution's information.
1503
+ * The distribution's information.
1504
1504
  */
1505
1505
  Distribution?: Distribution;
1506
1506
  /**
@@ -1558,7 +1558,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1558
1558
  */
1559
1559
  Name: FunctionName;
1560
1560
  /**
1561
- * Configuration information about the function, including an optional comment and the functions runtime.
1561
+ * Configuration information about the function, including an optional comment and the function's runtime.
1562
1562
  */
1563
1563
  FunctionConfig: FunctionConfig;
1564
1564
  /**
@@ -1762,13 +1762,13 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1762
1762
  }
1763
1763
  export interface CreateStreamingDistributionWithTagsRequest {
1764
1764
  /**
1765
- * The streaming distribution's configuration information.
1765
+ * The streaming distribution's configuration information.
1766
1766
  */
1767
1767
  StreamingDistributionConfigWithTags: StreamingDistributionConfigWithTags;
1768
1768
  }
1769
1769
  export interface CreateStreamingDistributionWithTagsResult {
1770
1770
  /**
1771
- * The streaming distribution's information.
1771
+ * The streaming distribution's information.
1772
1772
  */
1773
1773
  StreamingDistribution?: StreamingDistribution;
1774
1774
  /**
@@ -1786,7 +1786,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1786
1786
  */
1787
1787
  ErrorCode: integer;
1788
1788
  /**
1789
- * The path to the custom error page that you want CloudFront to return to a viewer when your origin returns the HTTP status code specified by ErrorCode, for example, /4xx-errors/403-forbidden.html. If you want to store your objects and your custom error pages in different locations, your distribution must include a cache behavior for which the following is true: The value of PathPattern matches the path to your custom error messages. For example, suppose you saved custom error pages for 4xx errors in an Amazon S3 bucket in a directory named /4xx-errors. Your distribution must include a cache behavior for which the path pattern routes requests for your custom error pages to that location, for example, /4xx-errors/*. The value of TargetOriginId specifies the value of the ID element for the origin that contains your custom error pages. If you specify a value for ResponsePagePath, you must also specify a value for ResponseCode. We recommend that you store custom error pages in an Amazon S3 bucket. If you store custom error pages on an HTTP server and the server starts to return 5xx errors, CloudFront can't get the files that you want to return to viewers because the origin server is unavailable.
1789
+ * The path to the custom error page that you want CloudFront to return to a viewer when your origin returns the HTTP status code specified by ErrorCode, for example, /4xx-errors/403-forbidden.html. If you want to store your objects and your custom error pages in different locations, your distribution must include a cache behavior for which the following is true: The value of PathPattern matches the path to your custom error messages. For example, suppose you saved custom error pages for 4xx errors in an Amazon S3 bucket in a directory named /4xx-errors. Your distribution must include a cache behavior for which the path pattern routes requests for your custom error pages to that location, for example, /4xx-errors/*. The value of TargetOriginId specifies the value of the ID element for the origin that contains your custom error pages. If you specify a value for ResponsePagePath, you must also specify a value for ResponseCode. We recommend that you store custom error pages in an Amazon S3 bucket. If you store custom error pages on an HTTP server and the server starts to return 5xx errors, CloudFront can't get the files that you want to return to viewers because the origin server is unavailable.
1790
1790
  */
1791
1791
  ResponsePagePath?: string;
1792
1792
  /**
@@ -1837,11 +1837,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1837
1837
  */
1838
1838
  OriginSslProtocols?: OriginSslProtocols;
1839
1839
  /**
1840
- * Specifies how long, in seconds, CloudFront waits for a response from the origin. This is also known as the origin response timeout. The minimum timeout is 1 second, the maximum is 60 seconds, and the default (if you dont specify otherwise) is 30 seconds. For more information, see Origin Response Timeout in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
1840
+ * Specifies how long, in seconds, CloudFront waits for a response from the origin. This is also known as the origin response timeout. The minimum timeout is 1 second, the maximum is 60 seconds, and the default (if you don't specify otherwise) is 30 seconds. For more information, see Origin Response Timeout in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
1841
1841
  */
1842
1842
  OriginReadTimeout?: integer;
1843
1843
  /**
1844
- * Specifies how long, in seconds, CloudFront persists its connection to the origin. The minimum timeout is 1 second, the maximum is 60 seconds, and the default (if you dont specify otherwise) is 5 seconds. For more information, see Origin Keep-alive Timeout in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
1844
+ * Specifies how long, in seconds, CloudFront persists its connection to the origin. The minimum timeout is 1 second, the maximum is 60 seconds, and the default (if you don't specify otherwise) is 5 seconds. For more information, see Origin Keep-alive Timeout in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
1845
1845
  */
1846
1846
  OriginKeepaliveTimeout?: integer;
1847
1847
  }
@@ -1851,7 +1851,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1851
1851
  */
1852
1852
  TargetOriginId: string;
1853
1853
  /**
1854
- * We recommend using TrustedKeyGroups instead of TrustedSigners. A list of Amazon Web Services account IDs whose public keys CloudFront can use to validate signed URLs or signed cookies. When a cache behavior contains trusted signers, CloudFront requires signed URLs or signed cookies for all requests that match the cache behavior. The URLs or cookies must be signed with the private key of a CloudFront key pair in a trusted signers Amazon Web Services account. The signed URL or cookie contains information about which public key CloudFront should use to verify the signature. For more information, see Serving private content in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
1854
+ * We recommend using TrustedKeyGroups instead of TrustedSigners. A list of Amazon Web Services account IDs whose public keys CloudFront can use to validate signed URLs or signed cookies. When a cache behavior contains trusted signers, CloudFront requires signed URLs or signed cookies for all requests that match the cache behavior. The URLs or cookies must be signed with the private key of a CloudFront key pair in a trusted signer's Amazon Web Services account. The signed URL or cookie contains information about which public key CloudFront should use to verify the signature. For more information, see Serving private content in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
1855
1855
  */
1856
1856
  TrustedSigners?: TrustedSigners;
1857
1857
  /**
@@ -1859,12 +1859,12 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1859
1859
  */
1860
1860
  TrustedKeyGroups?: TrustedKeyGroups;
1861
1861
  /**
1862
- * The protocol that viewers can use to access the files in the origin specified by TargetOriginId when a request matches the path pattern in PathPattern. You can specify the following options: allow-all: Viewers can use HTTP or HTTPS. redirect-to-https: If a viewer submits an HTTP request, CloudFront returns an HTTP status code of 301 (Moved Permanently) to the viewer along with the HTTPS URL. The viewer then resubmits the request using the new URL. https-only: If a viewer sends an HTTP request, CloudFront returns an HTTP status code of 403 (Forbidden). For more information about requiring the HTTPS protocol, see Requiring HTTPS Between Viewers and CloudFront in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. The only way to guarantee that viewers retrieve an object that was fetched from the origin using HTTPS is never to use any other protocol to fetch the object. If you have recently changed from HTTP to HTTPS, we recommend that you clear your objects cache because cached objects are protocol agnostic. That means that an edge location will return an object from the cache regardless of whether the current request protocol matches the protocol used previously. For more information, see Managing Cache Expiration in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
1862
+ * The protocol that viewers can use to access the files in the origin specified by TargetOriginId when a request matches the path pattern in PathPattern. You can specify the following options: allow-all: Viewers can use HTTP or HTTPS. redirect-to-https: If a viewer submits an HTTP request, CloudFront returns an HTTP status code of 301 (Moved Permanently) to the viewer along with the HTTPS URL. The viewer then resubmits the request using the new URL. https-only: If a viewer sends an HTTP request, CloudFront returns an HTTP status code of 403 (Forbidden). For more information about requiring the HTTPS protocol, see Requiring HTTPS Between Viewers and CloudFront in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. The only way to guarantee that viewers retrieve an object that was fetched from the origin using HTTPS is never to use any other protocol to fetch the object. If you have recently changed from HTTP to HTTPS, we recommend that you clear your objects' cache because cached objects are protocol agnostic. That means that an edge location will return an object from the cache regardless of whether the current request protocol matches the protocol used previously. For more information, see Managing Cache Expiration in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
1863
1863
  */
1864
1864
  ViewerProtocolPolicy: ViewerProtocolPolicy;
1865
1865
  AllowedMethods?: AllowedMethods;
1866
1866
  /**
1867
- * Indicates whether you want to distribute media files in the Microsoft Smooth Streaming format using the origin that is associated with this cache behavior. If so, specify true; if not, specify false. If you specify true for SmoothStreaming, you can still distribute other content using this cache behavior if the content matches the value of PathPattern.
1867
+ * Indicates whether you want to distribute media files in the Microsoft Smooth Streaming format using the origin that is associated with this cache behavior. If so, specify true; if not, specify false. If you specify true for SmoothStreaming, you can still distribute other content using this cache behavior if the content matches the value of PathPattern.
1868
1868
  */
1869
1869
  SmoothStreaming?: boolean;
1870
1870
  /**
@@ -1922,7 +1922,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1922
1922
  */
1923
1923
  Id: string;
1924
1924
  /**
1925
- * The version of the cache policy that you are deleting. The version is the cache policys ETag value, which you can get using ListCachePolicies, GetCachePolicy, or GetCachePolicyConfig.
1925
+ * The version of the cache policy that you are deleting. The version is the cache policy's ETag value, which you can get using ListCachePolicies, GetCachePolicy, or GetCachePolicyConfig.
1926
1926
  */
1927
1927
  IfMatch?: string;
1928
1928
  }
@@ -1948,11 +1948,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1948
1948
  }
1949
1949
  export interface DeleteDistributionRequest {
1950
1950
  /**
1951
- * The distribution ID.
1951
+ * The distribution ID.
1952
1952
  */
1953
1953
  Id: string;
1954
1954
  /**
1955
- * The value of the ETag header that you received when you disabled the distribution. For example: E2QWRUHAPOMQZL.
1955
+ * The value of the ETag header that you received when you disabled the distribution. For example: E2QWRUHAPOMQZL.
1956
1956
  */
1957
1957
  IfMatch?: string;
1958
1958
  }
@@ -1992,7 +1992,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
1992
1992
  */
1993
1993
  Id: string;
1994
1994
  /**
1995
- * The version of the key group that you are deleting. The version is the key groups ETag value. To get the ETag, use GetKeyGroup or GetKeyGroupConfig.
1995
+ * The version of the key group that you are deleting. The version is the key group's ETag value. To get the ETag, use GetKeyGroup or GetKeyGroupConfig.
1996
1996
  */
1997
1997
  IfMatch?: string;
1998
1998
  }
@@ -2020,7 +2020,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2020
2020
  */
2021
2021
  Id: string;
2022
2022
  /**
2023
- * The version of the origin request policy that you are deleting. The version is the origin request policys ETag value, which you can get using ListOriginRequestPolicies, GetOriginRequestPolicy, or GetOriginRequestPolicyConfig.
2023
+ * The version of the origin request policy that you are deleting. The version is the origin request policy's ETag value, which you can get using ListOriginRequestPolicies, GetOriginRequestPolicy, or GetOriginRequestPolicyConfig.
2024
2024
  */
2025
2025
  IfMatch?: string;
2026
2026
  }
@@ -2050,13 +2050,13 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2050
2050
  */
2051
2051
  Id: string;
2052
2052
  /**
2053
- * The version of the response headers policy that you are deleting. The version is the response headers policys ETag value, which you can get using ListResponseHeadersPolicies, GetResponseHeadersPolicy, or GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfig.
2053
+ * The version of the response headers policy that you are deleting. The version is the response headers policy's ETag value, which you can get using ListResponseHeadersPolicies, GetResponseHeadersPolicy, or GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfig.
2054
2054
  */
2055
2055
  IfMatch?: string;
2056
2056
  }
2057
2057
  export interface DeleteStreamingDistributionRequest {
2058
2058
  /**
2059
- * The distribution ID.
2059
+ * The distribution ID.
2060
2060
  */
2061
2061
  Id: string;
2062
2062
  /**
@@ -2070,7 +2070,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2070
2070
  */
2071
2071
  Name: string;
2072
2072
  /**
2073
- * The functions stage, either DEVELOPMENT or LIVE.
2073
+ * The function's stage, either DEVELOPMENT or LIVE.
2074
2074
  */
2075
2075
  Stage?: FunctionStage;
2076
2076
  }
@@ -2086,15 +2086,15 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2086
2086
  }
2087
2087
  export interface Distribution {
2088
2088
  /**
2089
- * The distributions identifier. For example: E1U5RQF7T870K0.
2089
+ * The distribution's identifier. For example: E1U5RQF7T870K0.
2090
2090
  */
2091
2091
  Id: string;
2092
2092
  /**
2093
- * The distributions Amazon Resource Name (ARN).
2093
+ * The distribution's Amazon Resource Name (ARN).
2094
2094
  */
2095
2095
  ARN: string;
2096
2096
  /**
2097
- * The distributions status. When the status is Deployed, the distributions information is fully propagated to all CloudFront edge locations.
2097
+ * The distribution's status. When the status is Deployed, the distribution's information is fully propagated to all CloudFront edge locations.
2098
2098
  */
2099
2099
  Status: string;
2100
2100
  /**
@@ -2102,23 +2102,23 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2102
2102
  */
2103
2103
  LastModifiedTime: timestamp;
2104
2104
  /**
2105
- * The number of invalidation batches currently in progress.
2105
+ * The number of invalidation batches currently in progress.
2106
2106
  */
2107
2107
  InProgressInvalidationBatches: integer;
2108
2108
  /**
2109
- * The distributions CloudFront domain name. For example: d111111abcdef8.cloudfront.net.
2109
+ * The distribution's CloudFront domain name. For example: d111111abcdef8.cloudfront.net.
2110
2110
  */
2111
2111
  DomainName: string;
2112
2112
  /**
2113
- * We recommend using TrustedKeyGroups instead of TrustedSigners. CloudFront automatically adds this field to the response if you’ve configured a cache behavior in this distribution to serve private content using trusted signers. This field contains a list of Amazon Web Services account IDs and the active CloudFront key pairs in each account that CloudFront can use to verify the signatures of signed URLs or signed cookies.
2113
+ * We recommend using TrustedKeyGroups instead of TrustedSigners. This field contains a list of Amazon Web Services account IDs and the active CloudFront key pairs in each account that CloudFront can use to verify the signatures of signed URLs or signed cookies.
2114
2114
  */
2115
2115
  ActiveTrustedSigners?: ActiveTrustedSigners;
2116
2116
  /**
2117
- * CloudFront automatically adds this field to the response if you’ve configured a cache behavior in this distribution to serve private content using key groups. This field contains a list of key groups and the public keys in each key group that CloudFront can use to verify the signatures of signed URLs or signed cookies.
2117
+ * This field contains a list of key groups and the public keys in each key group that CloudFront can use to verify the signatures of signed URLs or signed cookies.
2118
2118
  */
2119
2119
  ActiveTrustedKeyGroups?: ActiveTrustedKeyGroups;
2120
2120
  /**
2121
- * The distributions configuration.
2121
+ * The distribution's configuration.
2122
2122
  */
2123
2123
  DistributionConfig: DistributionConfig;
2124
2124
  /**
@@ -2140,11 +2140,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2140
2140
  */
2141
2141
  DefaultRootObject?: string;
2142
2142
  /**
2143
- * A complex type that contains information about origins for this distribution.
2143
+ * A complex type that contains information about origins for this distribution.
2144
2144
  */
2145
2145
  Origins: Origins;
2146
2146
  /**
2147
- * A complex type that contains information about origin groups for this distribution.
2147
+ * A complex type that contains information about origin groups for this distribution.
2148
2148
  */
2149
2149
  OriginGroups?: OriginGroups;
2150
2150
  /**
@@ -2152,7 +2152,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2152
2152
  */
2153
2153
  DefaultCacheBehavior: DefaultCacheBehavior;
2154
2154
  /**
2155
- * A complex type that contains zero or more CacheBehavior elements.
2155
+ * A complex type that contains zero or more CacheBehavior elements.
2156
2156
  */
2157
2157
  CacheBehaviors?: CacheBehaviors;
2158
2158
  /**
@@ -2160,7 +2160,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2160
2160
  */
2161
2161
  CustomErrorResponses?: CustomErrorResponses;
2162
2162
  /**
2163
- * An optional comment to describe the distribution. The comment cannot be longer than 128 characters.
2163
+ * A comment to describe the distribution. The comment cannot be longer than 128 characters.
2164
2164
  */
2165
2165
  Comment: CommentType;
2166
2166
  /**
@@ -2176,7 +2176,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2176
2176
  */
2177
2177
  Enabled: boolean;
2178
2178
  /**
2179
- * A complex type that determines the distributions SSL/TLS configuration for communicating with viewers.
2179
+ * A complex type that determines the distribution's SSL/TLS configuration for communicating with viewers.
2180
2180
  */
2181
2181
  ViewerCertificate?: ViewerCertificate;
2182
2182
  /**
@@ -2184,7 +2184,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2184
2184
  */
2185
2185
  Restrictions?: Restrictions;
2186
2186
  /**
2187
- * A unique identifier that specifies the WAF web ACL, if any, to associate with this distribution. To specify a web ACL created using the latest version of WAF, use the ACL ARN, for example arn:aws:wafv2:us-east-1:123456789012:global/webacl/ExampleWebACL/473e64fd-f30b-4765-81a0-62ad96dd167a. To specify a web ACL created using WAF Classic, use the ACL ID, for example 473e64fd-f30b-4765-81a0-62ad96dd167a. WAF is a web application firewall that lets you monitor the HTTP and HTTPS requests that are forwarded to CloudFront, and lets you control access to your content. Based on conditions that you specify, such as the IP addresses that requests originate from or the values of query strings, CloudFront responds to requests either with the requested content or with an HTTP 403 status code (Forbidden). You can also configure CloudFront to return a custom error page when a request is blocked. For more information about WAF, see the WAF Developer Guide.
2187
+ * A unique identifier that specifies the WAF web ACL, if any, to associate with this distribution. To specify a web ACL created using the latest version of WAF, use the ACL ARN, for example arn:aws:wafv2:us-east-1:123456789012:global/webacl/ExampleWebACL/473e64fd-f30b-4765-81a0-62ad96dd167a. To specify a web ACL created using WAF Classic, use the ACL ID, for example 473e64fd-f30b-4765-81a0-62ad96dd167a. WAF is a web application firewall that lets you monitor the HTTP and HTTPS requests that are forwarded to CloudFront, and lets you control access to your content. Based on conditions that you specify, such as the IP addresses that requests originate from or the values of query strings, CloudFront responds to requests either with the requested content or with an HTTP 403 status code (Forbidden). You can also configure CloudFront to return a custom error page when a request is blocked. For more information about WAF, see the WAF Developer Guide.
2188
2188
  */
2189
2189
  WebACLId?: string;
2190
2190
  /**
@@ -2192,7 +2192,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2192
2192
  */
2193
2193
  HttpVersion?: HttpVersion;
2194
2194
  /**
2195
- * If you want CloudFront to respond to IPv6 DNS requests with an IPv6 address for your distribution, specify true. If you specify false, CloudFront responds to IPv6 DNS requests with the DNS response code NOERROR and with no IP addresses. This allows viewers to submit a second request, for an IPv4 address for your distribution. In general, you should enable IPv6 if you have users on IPv6 networks who want to access your content. However, if you're using signed URLs or signed cookies to restrict access to your content, and if you're using a custom policy that includes the IpAddress parameter to restrict the IP addresses that can access your content, don't enable IPv6. If you want to restrict access to some content by IP address and not restrict access to other content (or restrict access but not by IP address), you can create two distributions. For more information, see Creating a Signed URL Using a Custom Policy in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. If you're using an Route 53 Amazon Web Services Integration alias resource record set to route traffic to your CloudFront distribution, you need to create a second alias resource record set when both of the following are true: You enable IPv6 for the distribution You're using alternate domain names in the URLs for your objects For more information, see Routing Traffic to an Amazon CloudFront Web Distribution by Using Your Domain Name in the Route 53 Amazon Web Services Integration Developer Guide. If you created a CNAME resource record set, either with Route 53 Amazon Web Services Integration or with another DNS service, you don't need to make any changes. A CNAME record will route traffic to your distribution regardless of the IP address format of the viewer request.
2195
+ * If you want CloudFront to respond to IPv6 DNS requests with an IPv6 address for your distribution, specify true. If you specify false, CloudFront responds to IPv6 DNS requests with the DNS response code NOERROR and with no IP addresses. This allows viewers to submit a second request, for an IPv4 address for your distribution. In general, you should enable IPv6 if you have users on IPv6 networks who want to access your content. However, if you're using signed URLs or signed cookies to restrict access to your content, and if you're using a custom policy that includes the IpAddress parameter to restrict the IP addresses that can access your content, don't enable IPv6. If you want to restrict access to some content by IP address and not restrict access to other content (or restrict access but not by IP address), you can create two distributions. For more information, see Creating a Signed URL Using a Custom Policy in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. If you're using an Route 53 Amazon Web Services Integration alias resource record set to route traffic to your CloudFront distribution, you need to create a second alias resource record set when both of the following are true: You enable IPv6 for the distribution You're using alternate domain names in the URLs for your objects For more information, see Routing Traffic to an Amazon CloudFront Web Distribution by Using Your Domain Name in the Route 53 Amazon Web Services Integration Developer Guide. If you created a CNAME resource record set, either with Route 53 Amazon Web Services Integration or with another DNS service, you don't need to make any changes. A CNAME record will route traffic to your distribution regardless of the IP address format of the viewer request.
2196
2196
  */
2197
2197
  IsIPV6Enabled?: boolean;
2198
2198
  /**
@@ -2247,7 +2247,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2247
2247
  */
2248
2248
  Marker: string;
2249
2249
  /**
2250
- * If IsTruncated is true, this element is present and contains the value you can use for the Marker request parameter to continue listing your distributions where they left off.
2250
+ * If IsTruncated is true, this element is present and contains the value you can use for the Marker request parameter to continue listing your distributions where they left off.
2251
2251
  */
2252
2252
  NextMarker?: string;
2253
2253
  /**
@@ -2297,7 +2297,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2297
2297
  */
2298
2298
  Origins: Origins;
2299
2299
  /**
2300
- * A complex type that contains information about origin groups for this distribution.
2300
+ * A complex type that contains information about origin groups for this distribution.
2301
2301
  */
2302
2302
  OriginGroups?: OriginGroups;
2303
2303
  /**
@@ -2317,7 +2317,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2317
2317
  */
2318
2318
  Comment: string;
2319
2319
  /**
2320
- * A complex type that contains information about price class for this streaming distribution.
2320
+ * A complex type that contains information about price class for this streaming distribution.
2321
2321
  */
2322
2322
  PriceClass: PriceClass;
2323
2323
  /**
@@ -2325,7 +2325,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2325
2325
  */
2326
2326
  Enabled: boolean;
2327
2327
  /**
2328
- * A complex type that determines the distributions SSL/TLS configuration for communicating with viewers.
2328
+ * A complex type that determines the distribution's SSL/TLS configuration for communicating with viewers.
2329
2329
  */
2330
2330
  ViewerCertificate: ViewerCertificate;
2331
2331
  /**
@@ -2337,7 +2337,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2337
2337
  */
2338
2338
  WebACLId: string;
2339
2339
  /**
2340
- * Specify the maximum HTTP version that you want viewers to use to communicate with CloudFront. The default value for new web distributions is http2. Viewers that don't support HTTP/2 will automatically use an earlier version.
2340
+ * Specify the maximum HTTP version that you want viewers to use to communicate with CloudFront. The default value for new web distributions is http2. Viewers that don't support HTTP/2 will automatically use an earlier version.
2341
2341
  */
2342
2342
  HttpVersion: HttpVersion;
2343
2343
  /**
@@ -2356,7 +2356,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2356
2356
  export type DistributionSummaryList = DistributionSummary[];
2357
2357
  export interface EncryptionEntities {
2358
2358
  /**
2359
- * Number of field pattern items in a field-level encryption content type-profile mapping.
2359
+ * Number of field pattern items in a field-level encryption content type-profile mapping.
2360
2360
  */
2361
2361
  Quantity: integer;
2362
2362
  /**
@@ -2366,7 +2366,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2366
2366
  }
2367
2367
  export interface EncryptionEntity {
2368
2368
  /**
2369
- * The public key associated with a set of field-level encryption patterns, to be used when encrypting the fields that match the patterns.
2369
+ * The public key associated with a set of field-level encryption patterns, to be used when encrypting the fields that match the patterns.
2370
2370
  */
2371
2371
  PublicKeyId: string;
2372
2372
  /**
@@ -2374,7 +2374,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2374
2374
  */
2375
2375
  ProviderId: string;
2376
2376
  /**
2377
- * Field patterns in a field-level encryption content type profile specify the fields that you want to be encrypted. You can provide the full field name, or any beginning characters followed by a wildcard (*). You can't overlap field patterns. For example, you can't have both ABC* and AB*. Note that field patterns are case-sensitive.
2377
+ * Field patterns in a field-level encryption content type profile specify the fields that you want to be encrypted. You can provide the full field name, or any beginning characters followed by a wildcard (*). You can't overlap field patterns. For example, you can't have both ABC* and AB*. Note that field patterns are case-sensitive.
2378
2378
  */
2379
2379
  FieldPatterns: FieldPatterns;
2380
2380
  }
@@ -2397,11 +2397,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2397
2397
  */
2398
2398
  Id: string;
2399
2399
  /**
2400
- * The last time the field-level encryption configuration was changed.
2400
+ * The last time the field-level encryption configuration was changed.
2401
2401
  */
2402
2402
  LastModifiedTime: timestamp;
2403
2403
  /**
2404
- * A complex data type that includes the profile configurations specified for field-level encryption.
2404
+ * A complex data type that includes the profile configurations specified for field-level encryption.
2405
2405
  */
2406
2406
  FieldLevelEncryptionConfig: FieldLevelEncryptionConfig;
2407
2407
  }
@@ -2429,7 +2429,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2429
2429
  */
2430
2430
  NextMarker?: string;
2431
2431
  /**
2432
- * The maximum number of elements you want in the response body.
2432
+ * The maximum number of elements you want in the response body.
2433
2433
  */
2434
2434
  MaxItems: integer;
2435
2435
  /**
@@ -2528,11 +2528,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2528
2528
  */
2529
2529
  Comment?: string;
2530
2530
  /**
2531
- * A summary of a query argument-profile mapping.
2531
+ * A summary of a query argument-profile mapping.
2532
2532
  */
2533
2533
  QueryArgProfileConfig?: QueryArgProfileConfig;
2534
2534
  /**
2535
- * A summary of a content type-profile mapping.
2535
+ * A summary of a content type-profile mapping.
2536
2536
  */
2537
2537
  ContentTypeProfileConfig?: ContentTypeProfileConfig;
2538
2538
  }
@@ -2598,7 +2598,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2598
2598
  */
2599
2599
  Comment: string;
2600
2600
  /**
2601
- * The functions runtime environment. The only valid value is cloudfront-js-1.0.
2601
+ * The function's runtime environment. The only valid value is cloudfront-js-1.0.
2602
2602
  */
2603
2603
  Runtime: FunctionRuntime;
2604
2604
  }
@@ -2628,7 +2628,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2628
2628
  */
2629
2629
  FunctionARN: string;
2630
2630
  /**
2631
- * The stage that the function is in, either DEVELOPMENT or LIVE. When a function is in the DEVELOPMENT stage, you can test the function with TestFunction, and update it with UpdateFunction. When a function is in the LIVE stage, you can attach the function to a distributions cache behavior, using the functions ARN.
2631
+ * The stage that the function is in, either DEVELOPMENT or LIVE. When a function is in the DEVELOPMENT stage, you can test the function with TestFunction, and update it with UpdateFunction. When a function is in the LIVE stage, you can attach the function to a distribution's cache behavior, using the function's ARN.
2632
2632
  */
2633
2633
  Stage?: FunctionStage;
2634
2634
  /**
@@ -2672,14 +2672,14 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2672
2672
  */
2673
2673
  Quantity: integer;
2674
2674
  /**
2675
- * A complex type that contains a Location element for each country in which you want CloudFront either to distribute your content (whitelist) or not distribute your content (blacklist). The Location element is a two-letter, uppercase country code for a country that you want to include in your blacklist or whitelist. Include one Location element for each country. CloudFront and MaxMind both use ISO 3166 country codes. For the current list of countries and the corresponding codes, see ISO 3166-1-alpha-2 code on the International Organization for Standardization website. You can also refer to the country list on the CloudFront console, which includes both country names and codes.
2675
+ * A complex type that contains a Location element for each country in which you want CloudFront either to distribute your content (whitelist) or not distribute your content (blacklist). The Location element is a two-letter, uppercase country code for a country that you want to include in your blacklist or whitelist. Include one Location element for each country. CloudFront and MaxMind both use ISO 3166 country codes. For the current list of countries and the corresponding codes, see ISO 3166-1-alpha-2 code on the International Organization for Standardization website. You can also refer to the country list on the CloudFront console, which includes both country names and codes.
2676
2676
  */
2677
2677
  Items?: LocationList;
2678
2678
  }
2679
2679
  export type GeoRestrictionType = "blacklist"|"whitelist"|"none"|string;
2680
2680
  export interface GetCachePolicyConfigRequest {
2681
2681
  /**
2682
- * The unique identifier for the cache policy. If the cache policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the cache policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListCachePolicies.
2682
+ * The unique identifier for the cache policy. If the cache policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the cache policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListCachePolicies.
2683
2683
  */
2684
2684
  Id: string;
2685
2685
  }
@@ -2695,7 +2695,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2695
2695
  }
2696
2696
  export interface GetCachePolicyRequest {
2697
2697
  /**
2698
- * The unique identifier for the cache policy. If the cache policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the cache policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListCachePolicies.
2698
+ * The unique identifier for the cache policy. If the cache policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the cache policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListCachePolicies.
2699
2699
  */
2700
2700
  Id: string;
2701
2701
  }
@@ -2711,13 +2711,13 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2711
2711
  }
2712
2712
  export interface GetCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfigRequest {
2713
2713
  /**
2714
- * The identity's ID.
2714
+ * The identity's ID.
2715
2715
  */
2716
2716
  Id: string;
2717
2717
  }
2718
2718
  export interface GetCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfigResult {
2719
2719
  /**
2720
- * The origin access identity's configuration information.
2720
+ * The origin access identity's configuration information.
2721
2721
  */
2722
2722
  CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig?: CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityConfig;
2723
2723
  /**
@@ -2872,7 +2872,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2872
2872
  */
2873
2873
  Name: string;
2874
2874
  /**
2875
- * The functions stage, either DEVELOPMENT or LIVE.
2875
+ * The function's stage, either DEVELOPMENT or LIVE.
2876
2876
  */
2877
2877
  Stage?: FunctionStage;
2878
2878
  }
@@ -2902,7 +2902,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2902
2902
  }
2903
2903
  export interface GetInvalidationResult {
2904
2904
  /**
2905
- * The invalidation's information. For more information, see Invalidation Complex Type.
2905
+ * The invalidation's information. For more information, see Invalidation Complex Type.
2906
2906
  */
2907
2907
  Invalidation?: Invalidation;
2908
2908
  }
@@ -2984,7 +2984,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
2984
2984
  }
2985
2985
  export interface GetOriginRequestPolicyConfigRequest {
2986
2986
  /**
2987
- * The unique identifier for the origin request policy. If the origin request policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the origin request policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListOriginRequestPolicies.
2987
+ * The unique identifier for the origin request policy. If the origin request policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the origin request policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListOriginRequestPolicies.
2988
2988
  */
2989
2989
  Id: string;
2990
2990
  }
@@ -3000,7 +3000,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3000
3000
  }
3001
3001
  export interface GetOriginRequestPolicyRequest {
3002
3002
  /**
3003
- * The unique identifier for the origin request policy. If the origin request policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the origin request policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListOriginRequestPolicies.
3003
+ * The unique identifier for the origin request policy. If the origin request policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the origin request policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListOriginRequestPolicies.
3004
3004
  */
3005
3005
  Id: string;
3006
3006
  }
@@ -3064,7 +3064,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3064
3064
  }
3065
3065
  export interface GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfigRequest {
3066
3066
  /**
3067
- * The identifier for the response headers policy. If the response headers policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the response headers policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListResponseHeadersPolicies.
3067
+ * The identifier for the response headers policy. If the response headers policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the response headers policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListResponseHeadersPolicies.
3068
3068
  */
3069
3069
  Id: string;
3070
3070
  }
@@ -3080,7 +3080,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3080
3080
  }
3081
3081
  export interface GetResponseHeadersPolicyRequest {
3082
3082
  /**
3083
- * The identifier for the response headers policy. If the response headers policy is attached to a distributions cache behavior, you can get the policys identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the response headers policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListResponseHeadersPolicies.
3083
+ * The identifier for the response headers policy. If the response headers policy is attached to a distribution's cache behavior, you can get the policy's identifier using ListDistributions or GetDistribution. If the response headers policy is not attached to a cache behavior, you can get the identifier using ListResponseHeadersPolicies.
3084
3084
  */
3085
3085
  Id: string;
3086
3086
  }
@@ -3149,17 +3149,17 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3149
3149
  */
3150
3150
  Status: string;
3151
3151
  /**
3152
- * The date and time the invalidation request was first made.
3152
+ * The date and time the invalidation request was first made.
3153
3153
  */
3154
3154
  CreateTime: timestamp;
3155
3155
  /**
3156
- * The current invalidation information for the batch request.
3156
+ * The current invalidation information for the batch request.
3157
3157
  */
3158
3158
  InvalidationBatch: InvalidationBatch;
3159
3159
  }
3160
3160
  export interface InvalidationBatch {
3161
3161
  /**
3162
- * A complex type that contains information about the objects that you want to invalidate. For more information, see Specifying the Objects to Invalidate in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
3162
+ * A complex type that contains information about the objects that you want to invalidate. For more information, see Specifying the Objects to Invalidate in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
3163
3163
  */
3164
3164
  Paths: Paths;
3165
3165
  /**
@@ -3298,7 +3298,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3298
3298
  */
3299
3299
  LambdaFunctionARN: LambdaFunctionARN;
3300
3300
  /**
3301
- * Specifies the event type that triggers a Lambda@Edge function invocation. You can specify the following values: viewer-request: The function executes when CloudFront receives a request from a viewer and before it checks to see whether the requested object is in the edge cache. origin-request: The function executes only when CloudFront sends a request to your origin. When the requested object is in the edge cache, the function doesn't execute. origin-response: The function executes after CloudFront receives a response from the origin and before it caches the object in the response. When the requested object is in the edge cache, the function doesn't execute. viewer-response: The function executes before CloudFront returns the requested object to the viewer. The function executes regardless of whether the object was already in the edge cache. If the origin returns an HTTP status code other than HTTP 200 (OK), the function doesn't execute.
3301
+ * Specifies the event type that triggers a Lambda@Edge function invocation. You can specify the following values: viewer-request: The function executes when CloudFront receives a request from a viewer and before it checks to see whether the requested object is in the edge cache. origin-request: The function executes only when CloudFront sends a request to your origin. When the requested object is in the edge cache, the function doesn't execute. origin-response: The function executes after CloudFront receives a response from the origin and before it caches the object in the response. When the requested object is in the edge cache, the function doesn't execute. viewer-response: The function executes before CloudFront returns the requested object to the viewer. The function executes regardless of whether the object was already in the edge cache. If the origin returns an HTTP status code other than HTTP 200 (OK), the function doesn't execute.
3302
3302
  */
3303
3303
  EventType: EventType;
3304
3304
  /**
@@ -3323,7 +3323,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3323
3323
  */
3324
3324
  Type?: CachePolicyType;
3325
3325
  /**
3326
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of cache policies. The response includes cache policies in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3326
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of cache policies. The response includes cache policies in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3327
3327
  */
3328
3328
  Marker?: string;
3329
3329
  /**
@@ -3343,13 +3343,13 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3343
3343
  */
3344
3344
  Marker?: string;
3345
3345
  /**
3346
- * The maximum number of origin access identities you want in the response body.
3346
+ * The maximum number of origin access identities you want in the response body.
3347
3347
  */
3348
3348
  MaxItems?: string;
3349
3349
  }
3350
3350
  export interface ListCloudFrontOriginAccessIdentitiesResult {
3351
3351
  /**
3352
- * The CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityList type.
3352
+ * The CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityList type.
3353
3353
  */
3354
3354
  CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityList?: CloudFrontOriginAccessIdentityList;
3355
3355
  }
@@ -3363,7 +3363,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3363
3363
  */
3364
3364
  Alias: aliasString;
3365
3365
  /**
3366
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in the list of conflicting aliases. The response includes conflicting aliases in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3366
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in the list of conflicting aliases. The response includes conflicting aliases in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3367
3367
  */
3368
3368
  Marker?: string;
3369
3369
  /**
@@ -3379,7 +3379,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3379
3379
  }
3380
3380
  export interface ListContinuousDeploymentPoliciesRequest {
3381
3381
  /**
3382
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of continuous deployment policies. The response includes policies in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3382
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of continuous deployment policies. The response includes policies in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3383
3383
  */
3384
3384
  Marker?: string;
3385
3385
  /**
@@ -3395,7 +3395,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3395
3395
  }
3396
3396
  export interface ListDistributionsByCachePolicyIdRequest {
3397
3397
  /**
3398
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of distribution IDs. The response includes distribution IDs in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3398
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of distribution IDs. The response includes distribution IDs in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3399
3399
  */
3400
3400
  Marker?: string;
3401
3401
  /**
@@ -3415,7 +3415,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3415
3415
  }
3416
3416
  export interface ListDistributionsByKeyGroupRequest {
3417
3417
  /**
3418
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of distribution IDs. The response includes distribution IDs in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3418
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of distribution IDs. The response includes distribution IDs in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3419
3419
  */
3420
3420
  Marker?: string;
3421
3421
  /**
@@ -3432,7 +3432,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3432
3432
  }
3433
3433
  export interface ListDistributionsByOriginRequestPolicyIdRequest {
3434
3434
  /**
3435
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of distribution IDs. The response includes distribution IDs in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3435
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of distribution IDs. The response includes distribution IDs in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3436
3436
  */
3437
3437
  Marker?: string;
3438
3438
  /**
@@ -3452,7 +3452,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3452
3452
  }
3453
3453
  export interface ListDistributionsByRealtimeLogConfigRequest {
3454
3454
  /**
3455
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of distributions. The response includes distributions in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3455
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of distributions. The response includes distributions in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3456
3456
  */
3457
3457
  Marker?: string;
3458
3458
  /**
@@ -3473,7 +3473,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3473
3473
  }
3474
3474
  export interface ListDistributionsByResponseHeadersPolicyIdRequest {
3475
3475
  /**
3476
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of distribution IDs. The response includes distribution IDs in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3476
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of distribution IDs. The response includes distribution IDs in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3477
3477
  */
3478
3478
  Marker?: string;
3479
3479
  /**
@@ -3490,7 +3490,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3490
3490
  }
3491
3491
  export interface ListDistributionsByWebACLIdRequest {
3492
3492
  /**
3493
- * Use Marker and MaxItems to control pagination of results. If you have more than MaxItems distributions that satisfy the request, the response includes a NextMarker element. To get the next page of results, submit another request. For the value of Marker, specify the value of NextMarker from the last response. (For the first request, omit Marker.)
3493
+ * Use Marker and MaxItems to control pagination of results. If you have more than MaxItems distributions that satisfy the request, the response includes a NextMarker element. To get the next page of results, submit another request. For the value of Marker, specify the value of NextMarker from the last response. (For the first request, omit Marker.)
3494
3494
  */
3495
3495
  Marker?: string;
3496
3496
  /**
@@ -3504,7 +3504,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3504
3504
  }
3505
3505
  export interface ListDistributionsByWebACLIdResult {
3506
3506
  /**
3507
- * The DistributionList type.
3507
+ * The DistributionList type.
3508
3508
  */
3509
3509
  DistributionList?: DistributionList;
3510
3510
  }
@@ -3520,17 +3520,17 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3520
3520
  }
3521
3521
  export interface ListDistributionsResult {
3522
3522
  /**
3523
- * The DistributionList type.
3523
+ * The DistributionList type.
3524
3524
  */
3525
3525
  DistributionList?: DistributionList;
3526
3526
  }
3527
3527
  export interface ListFieldLevelEncryptionConfigsRequest {
3528
3528
  /**
3529
- * Use this when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of configurations. The results include configurations in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of results, set the Marker to the value of the NextMarker from the current page's response (which is also the ID of the last configuration on that page).
3529
+ * Use this when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of configurations. The results include configurations in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of results, set the Marker to the value of the NextMarker from the current page's response (which is also the ID of the last configuration on that page).
3530
3530
  */
3531
3531
  Marker?: string;
3532
3532
  /**
3533
- * The maximum number of field-level encryption configurations you want in the response body.
3533
+ * The maximum number of field-level encryption configurations you want in the response body.
3534
3534
  */
3535
3535
  MaxItems?: string;
3536
3536
  }
@@ -3542,7 +3542,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3542
3542
  }
3543
3543
  export interface ListFieldLevelEncryptionProfilesRequest {
3544
3544
  /**
3545
- * Use this when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of profiles. The results include profiles in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of results, set the Marker to the value of the NextMarker from the current page's response (which is also the ID of the last profile on that page).
3545
+ * Use this when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of profiles. The results include profiles in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of results, set the Marker to the value of the NextMarker from the current page's response (which is also the ID of the last profile on that page).
3546
3546
  */
3547
3547
  Marker?: string;
3548
3548
  /**
@@ -3558,7 +3558,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3558
3558
  }
3559
3559
  export interface ListFunctionsRequest {
3560
3560
  /**
3561
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of functions. The response includes functions in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3561
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of functions. The response includes functions in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3562
3562
  */
3563
3563
  Marker?: string;
3564
3564
  /**
@@ -3582,7 +3582,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3582
3582
  */
3583
3583
  DistributionId: string;
3584
3584
  /**
3585
- * Use this parameter when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of invalidation batches. Because the results are returned in decreasing order from most recent to oldest, the most recent results are on the first page, the second page will contain earlier results, and so on. To get the next page of results, set Marker to the value of the NextMarker from the current page's response. This value is the same as the ID of the last invalidation batch on that page.
3585
+ * Use this parameter when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of invalidation batches. Because the results are returned in decreasing order from most recent to oldest, the most recent results are on the first page, the second page will contain earlier results, and so on. To get the next page of results, set Marker to the value of the NextMarker from the current page's response. This value is the same as the ID of the last invalidation batch on that page.
3586
3586
  */
3587
3587
  Marker?: string;
3588
3588
  /**
@@ -3592,13 +3592,13 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3592
3592
  }
3593
3593
  export interface ListInvalidationsResult {
3594
3594
  /**
3595
- * Information about invalidation batches.
3595
+ * Information about invalidation batches.
3596
3596
  */
3597
3597
  InvalidationList?: InvalidationList;
3598
3598
  }
3599
3599
  export interface ListKeyGroupsRequest {
3600
3600
  /**
3601
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of key groups. The response includes key groups in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3601
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of key groups. The response includes key groups in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3602
3602
  */
3603
3603
  Marker?: string;
3604
3604
  /**
@@ -3634,7 +3634,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3634
3634
  */
3635
3635
  Type?: OriginRequestPolicyType;
3636
3636
  /**
3637
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of origin request policies. The response includes origin request policies in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3637
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of origin request policies. The response includes origin request policies in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3638
3638
  */
3639
3639
  Marker?: string;
3640
3640
  /**
@@ -3650,11 +3650,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3650
3650
  }
3651
3651
  export interface ListPublicKeysRequest {
3652
3652
  /**
3653
- * Use this when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of public keys. The results include public keys in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of results, set the Marker to the value of the NextMarker from the current page's response (which is also the ID of the last public key on that page).
3653
+ * Use this when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of public keys. The results include public keys in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of results, set the Marker to the value of the NextMarker from the current page's response (which is also the ID of the last public key on that page).
3654
3654
  */
3655
3655
  Marker?: string;
3656
3656
  /**
3657
- * The maximum number of public keys you want in the response body.
3657
+ * The maximum number of public keys you want in the response body.
3658
3658
  */
3659
3659
  MaxItems?: string;
3660
3660
  }
@@ -3670,7 +3670,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3670
3670
  */
3671
3671
  MaxItems?: string;
3672
3672
  /**
3673
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of real-time log configurations. The response includes real-time log configurations in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3673
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of real-time log configurations. The response includes real-time log configurations in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3674
3674
  */
3675
3675
  Marker?: string;
3676
3676
  }
@@ -3686,7 +3686,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3686
3686
  */
3687
3687
  Type?: ResponseHeadersPolicyType;
3688
3688
  /**
3689
- * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of response headers policies. The response includes response headers policies in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this fields value to the value of NextMarker from the current pages response.
3689
+ * Use this field when paginating results to indicate where to begin in your list of response headers policies. The response includes response headers policies in the list that occur after the marker. To get the next page of the list, set this field's value to the value of NextMarker from the current page's response.
3690
3690
  */
3691
3691
  Marker?: string;
3692
3692
  /**
@@ -3712,19 +3712,19 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3712
3712
  }
3713
3713
  export interface ListStreamingDistributionsResult {
3714
3714
  /**
3715
- * The StreamingDistributionList type.
3715
+ * The StreamingDistributionList type.
3716
3716
  */
3717
3717
  StreamingDistributionList?: StreamingDistributionList;
3718
3718
  }
3719
3719
  export interface ListTagsForResourceRequest {
3720
3720
  /**
3721
- * An ARN of a CloudFront resource.
3721
+ * An ARN of a CloudFront resource.
3722
3722
  */
3723
3723
  Resource: ResourceARN;
3724
3724
  }
3725
3725
  export interface ListTagsForResourceResult {
3726
3726
  /**
3727
- * A complex type that contains zero or more Tag elements.
3727
+ * A complex type that contains zero or more Tag elements.
3728
3728
  */
3729
3729
  Tags: Tags;
3730
3730
  }
@@ -3782,11 +3782,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
3782
3782
  */
3783
3783
  CustomOriginConfig?: CustomOriginConfig;
3784
3784
  /**
3785
- * The number of times that CloudFront attempts to connect to the origin. The minimum number is 1, the maximum is 3, and the default (if you dont specify otherwise) is 3. For a custom origin (including an Amazon S3 bucket thats configured with static website hosting), this value also specifies the number of times that CloudFront attempts to get a response from the origin, in the case of an Origin Response Timeout. For more information, see Origin Connection Attempts in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
3785
+ * The number of times that CloudFront attempts to connect to the origin. The minimum number is 1, the maximum is 3, and the default (if you don't specify otherwise) is 3. For a custom origin (including an Amazon S3 bucket that's configured with static website hosting), this value also specifies the number of times that CloudFront attempts to get a response from the origin, in the case of an Origin Response Timeout. For more information, see Origin Connection Attempts in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
3786
3786
  */
3787
3787
  ConnectionAttempts?: integer;
3788
3788
  /**
3789
- * The number of seconds that CloudFront waits when trying to establish a connection to the origin. The minimum timeout is 1 second, the maximum is 10 seconds, and the default (if you dont specify otherwise) is 10 seconds. For more information, see Origin Connection Timeout in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
3789
+ * The number of seconds that CloudFront waits when trying to establish a connection to the origin. The minimum timeout is 1 second, the maximum is 10 seconds, and the default (if you don't specify otherwise) is 10 seconds. For more information, see Origin Connection Timeout in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
3790
3790
  */
3791
3791
  ConnectionTimeout?: integer;
3792
3792
  /**
@@ -4042,7 +4042,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4042
4042
  export type OriginRequestPolicyType = "managed"|"custom"|string;
4043
4043
  export interface OriginShield {
4044
4044
  /**
4045
- * A flag that specifies whether Origin Shield is enabled. When its enabled, CloudFront routes all requests through Origin Shield, which can help protect your origin. When its disabled, CloudFront might send requests directly to your origin from multiple edge locations or regional edge caches.
4045
+ * A flag that specifies whether Origin Shield is enabled. When it's enabled, CloudFront routes all requests through Origin Shield, which can help protect your origin. When it's disabled, CloudFront might send requests directly to your origin from multiple edge locations or regional edge caches.
4046
4046
  */
4047
4047
  Enabled: boolean;
4048
4048
  /**
@@ -4053,7 +4053,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4053
4053
  export type OriginShieldRegion = string;
4054
4054
  export interface OriginSslProtocols {
4055
4055
  /**
4056
- * The number of SSL/TLS protocols that you want to allow CloudFront to use when establishing an HTTPS connection with this origin.
4056
+ * The number of SSL/TLS protocols that you want to allow CloudFront to use when establishing an HTTPS connection with this origin.
4057
4057
  */
4058
4058
  Quantity: integer;
4059
4059
  /**
@@ -4073,11 +4073,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4073
4073
  }
4074
4074
  export interface ParametersInCacheKeyAndForwardedToOrigin {
4075
4075
  /**
4076
- * A flag that can affect whether the Accept-Encoding HTTP header is included in the cache key and included in requests that CloudFront sends to the origin. This field is related to the EnableAcceptEncodingBrotli field. If one or both of these fields is true and the viewer request includes the Accept-Encoding header, then CloudFront does the following: Normalizes the value of the viewers Accept-Encoding header Includes the normalized header in the cache key Includes the normalized header in the request to the origin, if a request is necessary For more information, see Compression support in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. If you set this value to true, and this cache behavior also has an origin request policy attached, do not include the Accept-Encoding header in the origin request policy. CloudFront always includes the Accept-Encoding header in origin requests when the value of this field is true, so including this header in an origin request policy has no effect. If both of these fields are false, then CloudFront treats the Accept-Encoding header the same as any other HTTP header in the viewer request. By default, its not included in the cache key and its not included in origin requests. In this case, you can manually add Accept-Encoding to the headers whitelist like any other HTTP header.
4076
+ * A flag that can affect whether the Accept-Encoding HTTP header is included in the cache key and included in requests that CloudFront sends to the origin. This field is related to the EnableAcceptEncodingBrotli field. If one or both of these fields is true and the viewer request includes the Accept-Encoding header, then CloudFront does the following: Normalizes the value of the viewer's Accept-Encoding header Includes the normalized header in the cache key Includes the normalized header in the request to the origin, if a request is necessary For more information, see Compression support in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. If you set this value to true, and this cache behavior also has an origin request policy attached, do not include the Accept-Encoding header in the origin request policy. CloudFront always includes the Accept-Encoding header in origin requests when the value of this field is true, so including this header in an origin request policy has no effect. If both of these fields are false, then CloudFront treats the Accept-Encoding header the same as any other HTTP header in the viewer request. By default, it's not included in the cache key and it's not included in origin requests. In this case, you can manually add Accept-Encoding to the headers whitelist like any other HTTP header.
4077
4077
  */
4078
4078
  EnableAcceptEncodingGzip: boolean;
4079
4079
  /**
4080
- * A flag that can affect whether the Accept-Encoding HTTP header is included in the cache key and included in requests that CloudFront sends to the origin. This field is related to the EnableAcceptEncodingGzip field. If one or both of these fields is true and the viewer request includes the Accept-Encoding header, then CloudFront does the following: Normalizes the value of the viewers Accept-Encoding header Includes the normalized header in the cache key Includes the normalized header in the request to the origin, if a request is necessary For more information, see Compression support in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. If you set this value to true, and this cache behavior also has an origin request policy attached, do not include the Accept-Encoding header in the origin request policy. CloudFront always includes the Accept-Encoding header in origin requests when the value of this field is true, so including this header in an origin request policy has no effect. If both of these fields are false, then CloudFront treats the Accept-Encoding header the same as any other HTTP header in the viewer request. By default, its not included in the cache key and its not included in origin requests. In this case, you can manually add Accept-Encoding to the headers whitelist like any other HTTP header.
4080
+ * A flag that can affect whether the Accept-Encoding HTTP header is included in the cache key and included in requests that CloudFront sends to the origin. This field is related to the EnableAcceptEncodingGzip field. If one or both of these fields is true and the viewer request includes the Accept-Encoding header, then CloudFront does the following: Normalizes the value of the viewer's Accept-Encoding header Includes the normalized header in the cache key Includes the normalized header in the request to the origin, if a request is necessary For more information, see Compression support in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. If you set this value to true, and this cache behavior also has an origin request policy attached, do not include the Accept-Encoding header in the origin request policy. CloudFront always includes the Accept-Encoding header in origin requests when the value of this field is true, so including this header in an origin request policy has no effect. If both of these fields are false, then CloudFront treats the Accept-Encoding header the same as any other HTTP header in the viewer request. By default, it's not included in the cache key and it's not included in origin requests. In this case, you can manually add Accept-Encoding to the headers whitelist like any other HTTP header.
4081
4081
  */
4082
4082
  EnableAcceptEncodingBrotli?: boolean;
4083
4083
  /**
@@ -4121,7 +4121,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4121
4121
  }
4122
4122
  export interface PublicKeyConfig {
4123
4123
  /**
4124
- * A string included in the request to help make sure that the request cant be replayed.
4124
+ * A string included in the request to help make sure that the request can't be replayed.
4125
4125
  */
4126
4126
  CallerReference: string;
4127
4127
  /**
@@ -4232,7 +4232,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4232
4232
  */
4233
4233
  Quantity: integer;
4234
4234
  /**
4235
- * A list that contains the query string parameters that you want CloudFront to use as a basis for caching for a cache behavior. If Quantity is 0, you can omit Items.
4235
+ * A list that contains the query string parameters that you want CloudFront to use as a basis for caching for a cache behavior. If Quantity is 0, you can omit Items.
4236
4236
  */
4237
4237
  Items?: QueryStringCacheKeysList;
4238
4238
  }
@@ -4312,7 +4312,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4312
4312
  */
4313
4313
  LastModifiedTime: timestamp;
4314
4314
  /**
4315
- * A response headers policy configuration. A response headers policy contains information about a set of HTTP response headers and their values. CloudFront adds the headers in the policy to HTTP responses that it sends for requests that match a cache behavior thats associated with the policy.
4315
+ * A response headers policy configuration. A response headers policy contains information about a set of HTTP response headers and their values. CloudFront adds the headers in the policy to HTTP responses that it sends for requests that match a cache behavior that's associated with the policy.
4316
4316
  */
4317
4317
  ResponseHeadersPolicyConfig: ResponseHeadersPolicyConfig;
4318
4318
  }
@@ -4460,7 +4460,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4460
4460
  */
4461
4461
  Override: boolean;
4462
4462
  /**
4463
- * The value of the X-Frame-Options HTTP response header. Valid values are DENY and SAMEORIGIN. For more information about these values, see X-Frame-Options in the MDN Web Docs.
4463
+ * The value of the X-Frame-Options HTTP response header. Valid values are DENY and SAMEORIGIN. For more information about these values, see X-Frame-Options in the MDN Web Docs.
4464
4464
  */
4465
4465
  FrameOption: FrameOptionsList;
4466
4466
  }
@@ -4494,15 +4494,15 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4494
4494
  }
4495
4495
  export interface ResponseHeadersPolicySecurityHeadersConfig {
4496
4496
  /**
4497
- * Determines whether CloudFront includes the X-XSS-Protection HTTP response header and the headers value. For more information about the X-XSS-Protection HTTP response header, see X-XSS-Protection in the MDN Web Docs.
4497
+ * Determines whether CloudFront includes the X-XSS-Protection HTTP response header and the header's value. For more information about the X-XSS-Protection HTTP response header, see X-XSS-Protection in the MDN Web Docs.
4498
4498
  */
4499
4499
  XSSProtection?: ResponseHeadersPolicyXSSProtection;
4500
4500
  /**
4501
- * Determines whether CloudFront includes the X-Frame-Options HTTP response header and the headers value. For more information about the X-Frame-Options HTTP response header, see X-Frame-Options in the MDN Web Docs.
4501
+ * Determines whether CloudFront includes the X-Frame-Options HTTP response header and the header's value. For more information about the X-Frame-Options HTTP response header, see X-Frame-Options in the MDN Web Docs.
4502
4502
  */
4503
4503
  FrameOptions?: ResponseHeadersPolicyFrameOptions;
4504
4504
  /**
4505
- * Determines whether CloudFront includes the Referrer-Policy HTTP response header and the headers value. For more information about the Referrer-Policy HTTP response header, see Referrer-Policy in the MDN Web Docs.
4505
+ * Determines whether CloudFront includes the Referrer-Policy HTTP response header and the header's value. For more information about the Referrer-Policy HTTP response header, see Referrer-Policy in the MDN Web Docs.
4506
4506
  */
4507
4507
  ReferrerPolicy?: ResponseHeadersPolicyReferrerPolicy;
4508
4508
  /**
@@ -4514,7 +4514,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4514
4514
  */
4515
4515
  ContentTypeOptions?: ResponseHeadersPolicyContentTypeOptions;
4516
4516
  /**
4517
- * Determines whether CloudFront includes the Strict-Transport-Security HTTP response header and the headers value. For more information about the Strict-Transport-Security HTTP response header, see Strict-Transport-Security in the MDN Web Docs.
4517
+ * Determines whether CloudFront includes the Strict-Transport-Security HTTP response header and the header's value. For more information about the Strict-Transport-Security HTTP response header, see Strict-Transport-Security in the MDN Web Docs.
4518
4518
  */
4519
4519
  StrictTransportSecurity?: ResponseHeadersPolicyStrictTransportSecurity;
4520
4520
  }
@@ -4584,7 +4584,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4584
4584
  }
4585
4585
  export interface S3Origin {
4586
4586
  /**
4587
- * The DNS name of the Amazon S3 origin.
4587
+ * The DNS name of the Amazon S3 origin.
4588
4588
  */
4589
4589
  DomainName: string;
4590
4590
  /**
@@ -4602,7 +4602,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4602
4602
  export type SamplingRate = number;
4603
4603
  export interface SessionStickinessConfig {
4604
4604
  /**
4605
- * The amount of time after which you want sessions to cease if no requests are received.&#x2028;Allowed values are 300–3600 seconds (5–60 minutes). The value must be less than or equal to MaximumTTL.
4605
+ * The amount of time after which you want sessions to cease if no requests are received. Allowed values are 300–3600 seconds (5–60 minutes). The value must be less than or equal to MaximumTTL.
4606
4606
  */
4607
4607
  IdleTTL: integer;
4608
4608
  /**
@@ -4659,15 +4659,15 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4659
4659
  */
4660
4660
  Status: string;
4661
4661
  /**
4662
- * The date and time that the distribution was last modified.
4662
+ * The date and time that the distribution was last modified.
4663
4663
  */
4664
4664
  LastModifiedTime?: timestamp;
4665
4665
  /**
4666
- * The domain name that corresponds to the streaming distribution, for example, s5c39gqb8ow64r.cloudfront.net.
4666
+ * The domain name that corresponds to the streaming distribution, for example, s5c39gqb8ow64r.cloudfront.net.
4667
4667
  */
4668
4668
  DomainName: string;
4669
4669
  /**
4670
- * A complex type that lists the Amazon Web Services accounts, if any, that you included in the TrustedSigners complex type for this distribution. These are the accounts that you want to allow to create signed URLs for private content. The Signer complex type lists the Amazon Web Services account number of the trusted signer or self if the signer is the Amazon Web Services account that created the distribution. The Signer element also includes the IDs of any active CloudFront key pairs that are associated with the trusted signer's Amazon Web Services account. If no KeyPairId element appears for a Signer, that signer can't create signed URLs. For more information, see Serving Private Content through CloudFront in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
4670
+ * A complex type that lists the Amazon Web Services accounts, if any, that you included in the TrustedSigners complex type for this distribution. These are the accounts that you want to allow to create signed URLs for private content. The Signer complex type lists the Amazon Web Services account number of the trusted signer or self if the signer is the Amazon Web Services account that created the distribution. The Signer element also includes the IDs of any active CloudFront key pairs that are associated with the trusted signer's Amazon Web Services account. If no KeyPairId element appears for a Signer, that signer can't create signed URLs. For more information, see Serving Private Content through CloudFront in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
4671
4671
  */
4672
4672
  ActiveTrustedSigners: ActiveTrustedSigners;
4673
4673
  /**
@@ -4681,27 +4681,27 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4681
4681
  */
4682
4682
  CallerReference: string;
4683
4683
  /**
4684
- * A complex type that contains information about the Amazon S3 bucket from which you want CloudFront to get your media files for distribution.
4684
+ * A complex type that contains information about the Amazon S3 bucket from which you want CloudFront to get your media files for distribution.
4685
4685
  */
4686
4686
  S3Origin: S3Origin;
4687
4687
  /**
4688
- * A complex type that contains information about CNAMEs (alternate domain names), if any, for this streaming distribution.
4688
+ * A complex type that contains information about CNAMEs (alternate domain names), if any, for this streaming distribution.
4689
4689
  */
4690
4690
  Aliases?: Aliases;
4691
4691
  /**
4692
- * Any comments you want to include about the streaming distribution.
4692
+ * Any comments you want to include about the streaming distribution.
4693
4693
  */
4694
4694
  Comment: string;
4695
4695
  /**
4696
- * A complex type that controls whether access logs are written for the streaming distribution.
4696
+ * A complex type that controls whether access logs are written for the streaming distribution.
4697
4697
  */
4698
4698
  Logging?: StreamingLoggingConfig;
4699
4699
  /**
4700
- * A complex type that specifies any Amazon Web Services accounts that you want to permit to create signed URLs for private content. If you want the distribution to use signed URLs, include this element; if you want the distribution to use public URLs, remove this element. For more information, see Serving Private Content through CloudFront in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
4700
+ * A complex type that specifies any Amazon Web Services accounts that you want to permit to create signed URLs for private content. If you want the distribution to use signed URLs, include this element; if you want the distribution to use public URLs, remove this element. For more information, see Serving Private Content through CloudFront in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
4701
4701
  */
4702
4702
  TrustedSigners: TrustedSigners;
4703
4703
  /**
4704
- * A complex type that contains information about price class for this streaming distribution.
4704
+ * A complex type that contains information about price class for this streaming distribution.
4705
4705
  */
4706
4706
  PriceClass?: PriceClass;
4707
4707
  /**
@@ -4721,15 +4721,15 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4721
4721
  }
4722
4722
  export interface StreamingDistributionList {
4723
4723
  /**
4724
- * The value you provided for the Marker request parameter.
4724
+ * The value you provided for the Marker request parameter.
4725
4725
  */
4726
4726
  Marker: string;
4727
4727
  /**
4728
- * If IsTruncated is true, this element is present and contains the value you can use for the Marker request parameter to continue listing your RTMP distributions where they left off.
4728
+ * If IsTruncated is true, this element is present and contains the value you can use for the Marker request parameter to continue listing your RTMP distributions where they left off.
4729
4729
  */
4730
4730
  NextMarker?: string;
4731
4731
  /**
4732
- * The value you provided for the MaxItems request parameter.
4732
+ * The value you provided for the MaxItems request parameter.
4733
4733
  */
4734
4734
  MaxItems: integer;
4735
4735
  /**
@@ -4751,11 +4751,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4751
4751
  */
4752
4752
  Id: string;
4753
4753
  /**
4754
- * The ARN (Amazon Resource Name) for the streaming distribution. For example: arn:aws:cloudfront::123456789012:streaming-distribution/EDFDVBD632BHDS5, where 123456789012 is your Amazon Web Services account ID.
4754
+ * The ARN (Amazon Resource Name) for the streaming distribution. For example: arn:aws:cloudfront::123456789012:streaming-distribution/EDFDVBD632BHDS5, where 123456789012 is your Amazon Web Services account ID.
4755
4755
  */
4756
4756
  ARN: string;
4757
4757
  /**
4758
- * Indicates the current status of the distribution. When the status is Deployed, the distribution's information is fully propagated throughout the Amazon CloudFront system.
4758
+ * Indicates the current status of the distribution. When the status is Deployed, the distribution's information is fully propagated throughout the Amazon CloudFront system.
4759
4759
  */
4760
4760
  Status: string;
4761
4761
  /**
@@ -4775,7 +4775,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4775
4775
  */
4776
4776
  Aliases: Aliases;
4777
4777
  /**
4778
- * A complex type that specifies the Amazon Web Services accounts, if any, that you want to allow to create signed URLs for private content. If you want to require signed URLs in requests for objects in the target origin that match the PathPattern for this cache behavior, specify true for Enabled, and specify the applicable values for Quantity and Items.If you don't want to require signed URLs in requests for objects that match PathPattern, specify false for Enabled and 0 for Quantity. Omit Items. To add, change, or remove one or more trusted signers, change Enabled to true (if it's currently false), change Quantity as applicable, and specify all of the trusted signers that you want to include in the updated distribution. For more information, see Serving Private Content through CloudFront in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
4778
+ * A complex type that specifies the Amazon Web Services accounts, if any, that you want to allow to create signed URLs for private content. If you want to require signed URLs in requests for objects in the target origin that match the PathPattern for this cache behavior, specify true for Enabled, and specify the applicable values for Quantity and Items.If you don't want to require signed URLs in requests for objects that match PathPattern, specify false for Enabled and 0 for Quantity. Omit Items. To add, change, or remove one or more trusted signers, change Enabled to true (if it's currently false), change Quantity as applicable, and specify all of the trusted signers that you want to include in the updated distribution. For more information, see Serving Private Content through CloudFront in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
4779
4779
  */
4780
4780
  TrustedSigners: TrustedSigners;
4781
4781
  /**
@@ -4783,7 +4783,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4783
4783
  */
4784
4784
  Comment: string;
4785
4785
  /**
4786
- * A complex type that contains information about price class for this streaming distribution.
4786
+ * A complex type that contains information about price class for this streaming distribution.
4787
4787
  */
4788
4788
  PriceClass: PriceClass;
4789
4789
  /**
@@ -4794,7 +4794,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4794
4794
  export type StreamingDistributionSummaryList = StreamingDistributionSummary[];
4795
4795
  export interface StreamingLoggingConfig {
4796
4796
  /**
4797
- * Specifies whether you want CloudFront to save access logs to an Amazon S3 bucket. If you don't want to enable logging when you create a streaming distribution or if you want to disable logging for an existing streaming distribution, specify false for Enabled, and specify empty Bucket and Prefix elements. If you specify false for Enabled but you specify values for Bucket and Prefix, the values are automatically deleted.
4797
+ * Specifies whether you want CloudFront to save access logs to an Amazon S3 bucket. If you don't want to enable logging when you create a streaming distribution or if you want to disable logging for an existing streaming distribution, specify false for Enabled, and specify empty Bucket and Prefix elements. If you specify false for Enabled but you specify values for Bucket and Prefix, the values are automatically deleted.
4798
4798
  */
4799
4799
  Enabled: boolean;
4800
4800
  /**
@@ -4808,11 +4808,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4808
4808
  }
4809
4809
  export interface Tag {
4810
4810
  /**
4811
- * A string that contains Tag key. The string length should be between 1 and 128 characters. Valid characters include a-z, A-Z, 0-9, space, and the special characters _ - . : / = + @.
4811
+ * A string that contains Tag key. The string length should be between 1 and 128 characters. Valid characters include a-z, A-Z, 0-9, space, and the special characters _ - . : / = + @.
4812
4812
  */
4813
4813
  Key: TagKey;
4814
4814
  /**
4815
- * A string that contains an optional Tag value. The string length should be between 0 and 256 characters. Valid characters include a-z, A-Z, 0-9, space, and the special characters _ - . : / = + @.
4815
+ * A string that contains an optional Tag value. The string length should be between 0 and 256 characters. Valid characters include a-z, A-Z, 0-9, space, and the special characters _ - . : / = + @.
4816
4816
  */
4817
4817
  Value?: TagValue;
4818
4818
  }
@@ -4820,25 +4820,25 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4820
4820
  export type TagKeyList = TagKey[];
4821
4821
  export interface TagKeys {
4822
4822
  /**
4823
- * A complex type that contains Tag key elements.
4823
+ * A complex type that contains Tag key elements.
4824
4824
  */
4825
4825
  Items?: TagKeyList;
4826
4826
  }
4827
4827
  export type TagList = Tag[];
4828
4828
  export interface TagResourceRequest {
4829
4829
  /**
4830
- * An ARN of a CloudFront resource.
4830
+ * An ARN of a CloudFront resource.
4831
4831
  */
4832
4832
  Resource: ResourceARN;
4833
4833
  /**
4834
- * A complex type that contains zero or more Tag elements.
4834
+ * A complex type that contains zero or more Tag elements.
4835
4835
  */
4836
4836
  Tags: Tags;
4837
4837
  }
4838
4838
  export type TagValue = string;
4839
4839
  export interface Tags {
4840
4840
  /**
4841
- * A complex type that contains Tag elements.
4841
+ * A complex type that contains Tag elements.
4842
4842
  */
4843
4843
  Items?: TagList;
4844
4844
  }
@@ -4933,11 +4933,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4933
4933
  }
4934
4934
  export interface UntagResourceRequest {
4935
4935
  /**
4936
- * An ARN of a CloudFront resource.
4936
+ * An ARN of a CloudFront resource.
4937
4937
  */
4938
4938
  Resource: ResourceARN;
4939
4939
  /**
4940
- * A complex type that contains zero or more Tag key elements.
4940
+ * A complex type that contains zero or more Tag key elements.
4941
4941
  */
4942
4942
  TagKeys: TagKeys;
4943
4943
  }
@@ -4947,11 +4947,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
4947
4947
  */
4948
4948
  CachePolicyConfig: CachePolicyConfig;
4949
4949
  /**
4950
- * The unique identifier for the cache policy that you are updating. The identifier is returned in a cache behaviors CachePolicyId field in the response to GetDistributionConfig.
4950
+ * The unique identifier for the cache policy that you are updating. The identifier is returned in a cache behavior's CachePolicyId field in the response to GetDistributionConfig.
4951
4951
  */
4952
4952
  Id: string;
4953
4953
  /**
4954
- * The version of the cache policy that you are updating. The version is returned in the cache policys ETag field in the response to GetCachePolicyConfig.
4954
+ * The version of the cache policy that you are updating. The version is returned in the cache policy's ETag field in the response to GetCachePolicyConfig.
4955
4955
  */
4956
4956
  IfMatch?: string;
4957
4957
  }
@@ -5054,13 +5054,13 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
5054
5054
  export interface UpdateDistributionWithStagingConfigResult {
5055
5055
  Distribution?: Distribution;
5056
5056
  /**
5057
- * The current version of the primary distribution (after its updated).
5057
+ * The current version of the primary distribution (after it's updated).
5058
5058
  */
5059
5059
  ETag?: string;
5060
5060
  }
5061
5061
  export interface UpdateFieldLevelEncryptionConfigRequest {
5062
5062
  /**
5063
- * Request to update a field-level encryption configuration.
5063
+ * Request to update a field-level encryption configuration.
5064
5064
  */
5065
5065
  FieldLevelEncryptionConfig: FieldLevelEncryptionConfig;
5066
5066
  /**
@@ -5084,11 +5084,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
5084
5084
  }
5085
5085
  export interface UpdateFieldLevelEncryptionProfileRequest {
5086
5086
  /**
5087
- * Request to update a field-level encryption profile.
5087
+ * Request to update a field-level encryption profile.
5088
5088
  */
5089
5089
  FieldLevelEncryptionProfileConfig: FieldLevelEncryptionProfileConfig;
5090
5090
  /**
5091
- * The ID of the field-level encryption profile request.
5091
+ * The ID of the field-level encryption profile request.
5092
5092
  */
5093
5093
  Id: string;
5094
5094
  /**
@@ -5102,7 +5102,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
5102
5102
  */
5103
5103
  FieldLevelEncryptionProfile?: FieldLevelEncryptionProfile;
5104
5104
  /**
5105
- * The result of the field-level encryption profile request.
5105
+ * The result of the field-level encryption profile request.
5106
5106
  */
5107
5107
  ETag?: string;
5108
5108
  }
@@ -5144,7 +5144,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
5144
5144
  */
5145
5145
  Id: string;
5146
5146
  /**
5147
- * The version of the key group that you are updating. The version is the key groups ETag value.
5147
+ * The version of the key group that you are updating. The version is the key group's ETag value.
5148
5148
  */
5149
5149
  IfMatch?: string;
5150
5150
  }
@@ -5188,11 +5188,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
5188
5188
  */
5189
5189
  OriginRequestPolicyConfig: OriginRequestPolicyConfig;
5190
5190
  /**
5191
- * The unique identifier for the origin request policy that you are updating. The identifier is returned in a cache behaviors OriginRequestPolicyId field in the response to GetDistributionConfig.
5191
+ * The unique identifier for the origin request policy that you are updating. The identifier is returned in a cache behavior's OriginRequestPolicyId field in the response to GetDistributionConfig.
5192
5192
  */
5193
5193
  Id: string;
5194
5194
  /**
5195
- * The version of the origin request policy that you are updating. The version is returned in the origin request policys ETag field in the response to GetOriginRequestPolicyConfig.
5195
+ * The version of the origin request policy that you are updating. The version is returned in the origin request policy's ETag field in the response to GetOriginRequestPolicyConfig.
5196
5196
  */
5197
5197
  IfMatch?: string;
5198
5198
  }
@@ -5268,7 +5268,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
5268
5268
  */
5269
5269
  Id: string;
5270
5270
  /**
5271
- * The version of the response headers policy that you are updating. The version is returned in the cache policys ETag field in the response to GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfig.
5271
+ * The version of the response headers policy that you are updating. The version is returned in the cache policy's ETag field in the response to GetResponseHeadersPolicyConfig.
5272
5272
  */
5273
5273
  IfMatch?: string;
5274
5274
  }
@@ -5320,11 +5320,11 @@ declare namespace CloudFront {
5320
5320
  */
5321
5321
  ACMCertificateArn?: string;
5322
5322
  /**
5323
- * If the distribution uses Aliases (alternate domain names or CNAMEs), specify which viewers the distribution accepts HTTPS connections from. sni-only – The distribution accepts HTTPS connections from only viewers that support server name indication (SNI). This is recommended. Most browsers and clients support SNI. vip – The distribution accepts HTTPS connections from all viewers including those that dont support SNI. This is not recommended, and results in additional monthly charges from CloudFront. static-ip - Do not specify this value unless your distribution has been enabled for this feature by the CloudFront team. If you have a use case that requires static IP addresses for a distribution, contact CloudFront through the Amazon Web Services Support Center. If the distribution uses the CloudFront domain name such as d111111abcdef8.cloudfront.net, dont set a value for this field.
5323
+ * If the distribution uses Aliases (alternate domain names or CNAMEs), specify which viewers the distribution accepts HTTPS connections from. sni-only – The distribution accepts HTTPS connections from only viewers that support server name indication (SNI). This is recommended. Most browsers and clients support SNI. vip – The distribution accepts HTTPS connections from all viewers including those that don't support SNI. This is not recommended, and results in additional monthly charges from CloudFront. static-ip - Do not specify this value unless your distribution has been enabled for this feature by the CloudFront team. If you have a use case that requires static IP addresses for a distribution, contact CloudFront through the Amazon Web Services Support Center. If the distribution uses the CloudFront domain name such as d111111abcdef8.cloudfront.net, don't set a value for this field.
5324
5324
  */
5325
5325
  SSLSupportMethod?: SSLSupportMethod;
5326
5326
  /**
5327
- * If the distribution uses Aliases (alternate domain names or CNAMEs), specify the security policy that you want CloudFront to use for HTTPS connections with viewers. The security policy determines two settings: The minimum SSL/TLS protocol that CloudFront can use to communicate with viewers. The ciphers that CloudFront can use to encrypt the content that it returns to viewers. For more information, see Security Policy and Supported Protocols and Ciphers Between Viewers and CloudFront in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. On the CloudFront console, this setting is called Security Policy. When youre using SNI only (you set SSLSupportMethod to sni-only), you must specify TLSv1 or higher. If the distribution uses the CloudFront domain name such as d111111abcdef8.cloudfront.net (you set CloudFrontDefaultCertificate to true), CloudFront automatically sets the security policy to TLSv1 regardless of the value that you set here.
5327
+ * If the distribution uses Aliases (alternate domain names or CNAMEs), specify the security policy that you want CloudFront to use for HTTPS connections with viewers. The security policy determines two settings: The minimum SSL/TLS protocol that CloudFront can use to communicate with viewers. The ciphers that CloudFront can use to encrypt the content that it returns to viewers. For more information, see Security Policy and Supported Protocols and Ciphers Between Viewers and CloudFront in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide. On the CloudFront console, this setting is called Security Policy. When you're using SNI only (you set SSLSupportMethod to sni-only), you must specify TLSv1 or higher. If the distribution uses the CloudFront domain name such as d111111abcdef8.cloudfront.net (you set CloudFrontDefaultCertificate to true), CloudFront automatically sets the security policy to TLSv1 regardless of the value that you set here.
5328
5328
  */
5329
5329
  MinimumProtocolVersion?: MinimumProtocolVersion;
5330
5330
  /**