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AWS datatransferterminal documentation change

Service: datatransferterminal · 2025-10-16 · Documentation low

File: datatransferterminal/latest/userguide/logging-using-cloudtrail.md

Summary

Minor punctuation changes (straight apostrophes replaced with curly apostrophes) in CloudTrail documentation

Security assessment

The changes are purely typographical (apostrophe formatting) with no impact on security content. No security vulnerabilities, features, or procedures were modified or added.

Diff

diff --git a/datatransferterminal/latest/userguide/logging-using-cloudtrail.md b/datatransferterminal/latest/userguide/logging-using-cloudtrail.md
index 431604805..72f26c9af 100644
--- a//datatransferterminal/latest/userguide/logging-using-cloudtrail.md
+++ b//datatransferterminal/latest/userguide/logging-using-cloudtrail.md
@@ -9 +9 @@ Data Transfer Terminal information in CloudTrailUnderstanding Data Transfer Term
-AWS Data Transfer Terminal is integrated with AWS CloudTrail, a service that provides a record of actions taken by a user, role, or an AWS service in Data Transfer Terminal. CloudTrail captures all API calls for Data Transfer Terminal as events. The calls captured include calls from the Data Transfer Terminal console and code calls to the Data Transfer Terminal API operations. If you create a trail, you can enable continuous delivery of CloudTrail events to an Amazon S3 bucket, including events for Data Transfer Terminal. If you don't configure a trail, you can still view the most recent events in the CloudTrail console in **Event history**. Using the information collected by CloudTrail, you can determine the request that was made to Data Transfer Terminal, the IP address from which the request was made, who made the request, when it was made, and additional details.
+AWS Data Transfer Terminal is integrated with AWS CloudTrail, a service that provides a record of actions taken by a user, role, or an AWS service in Data Transfer Terminal. CloudTrail captures all API calls for Data Transfer Terminal as events. The calls captured include calls from the Data Transfer Terminal console and code calls to the Data Transfer Terminal API operations. If you create a trail, you can enable continuous delivery of CloudTrail events to an Amazon S3 bucket, including events for Data Transfer Terminal. If you don’t configure a trail, you can still view the most recent events in the CloudTrail console in **Event history**. Using the information collected by CloudTrail, you can determine the request that was made to Data Transfer Terminal, the IP address from which the request was made, who made the request, when it was made, and additional details.
@@ -47 +47 @@ For more information, see the [CloudTrail userIdentity element](https://docs.aws
-A trail is a configuration that enables delivery of events as log files to an Amazon S3 bucket that you specify. CloudTrail log files contain one or more log entries. An event represents a single request from any source and includes information about the requested action, the date and time of the action, request parameters, and so on. CloudTrail log files aren't an ordered stack trace of the public API calls, so they don't appear in any specific order. 
+A trail is a configuration that enables delivery of events as log files to an Amazon S3 bucket that you specify. CloudTrail log files contain one or more log entries. An event represents a single request from any source and includes information about the requested action, the date and time of the action, request parameters, and so on. CloudTrail log files aren’t an ordered stack trace of the public API calls, so they don’t appear in any specific order.