AWS managedservices documentation change
Summary
Changed 'AWS CloudFormation' to 'CloudFormation' in SSP documentation
Security assessment
This is a branding terminology update. The security-related content about IAM changes requiring approval remains unaffected.
Diff
diff --git a/managedservices/latest/onboardingguide/self-service-provisioning-section.md b/managedservices/latest/onboardingguide/self-service-provisioning-section.md index 6e6545c68..fc662f286 100644 --- a//managedservices/latest/onboardingguide/self-service-provisioning-section.md +++ b//managedservices/latest/onboardingguide/self-service-provisioning-section.md @@ -7 +7 @@ -AWS Managed Services (AMS) Self-Service Provisioning (SSP) mode provides full access to native AWS service and API capabilities in AMS managed accounts. You access services through standardized, scoped down, AWS Identity and Access Management roles. AMS provides service requests and incident management. Alerting, monitoring, logging, patch, back up, and change management are your responsibility. In many cases, Self-Service Provisioning services (SSPS) are self-managed, or serverless, and don’t require management of certain operational tasks like patching. You benefit from using these services within the environment boundary defined by AMS guardrails and any IAM changes (including service linked roles, service roles, cross-account roles, or policy updates) need to be approved by AMS Operations to maintain the baseline security of the platform. You can leverage AWS CloudFormation templates to automate deployment of these services, but this isn't supported for all SSP services. +AWS Managed Services (AMS) Self-Service Provisioning (SSP) mode provides full access to native AWS service and API capabilities in AMS managed accounts. You access services through standardized, scoped down, AWS Identity and Access Management roles. AMS provides service requests and incident management. Alerting, monitoring, logging, patch, back up, and change management are your responsibility. In many cases, Self-Service Provisioning services (SSPS) are self-managed, or serverless, and don’t require management of certain operational tasks like patching. You benefit from using these services within the environment boundary defined by AMS guardrails and any IAM changes (including service linked roles, service roles, cross-account roles, or policy updates) need to be approved by AMS Operations to maintain the baseline security of the platform. You can leverage CloudFormation templates to automate deployment of these services, but this isn't supported for all SSP services.