AWS directoryservice documentation change
Summary
Updated documentation to remove 'AWS' prefix from references to Directory Service-provided DNS servers in multiple Linux distribution sections
Security assessment
The change appears to be a branding/naming consistency update rather than addressing a security vulnerability. The modification removes 'AWS' from service references but maintains the same technical guidance about configuring DNS servers. No security implications or vulnerability mitigations are indicated in the diff.
Diff
diff --git a/directoryservice/latest/admin-guide/simple_ad_join_linux_instance.md b/directoryservice/latest/admin-guide/simple_ad_join_linux_instance.md index 195021948..f37b19999 100644 --- a//directoryservice/latest/admin-guide/simple_ad_join_linux_instance.md +++ b//directoryservice/latest/admin-guide/simple_ad_join_linux_instance.md @@ -49 +49 @@ Amazon Linux - 2. Configure the Linux instance to use the DNS server IP addresses of the AWS Directory Service-provided DNS servers. You can do this either by setting it up in the DHCP Options set attached to the VPC or by setting it manually on the instance. If you want to set it manually, see [How do I assign a static DNS server to a private Amazon EC2 instance](https://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/ec2-static-dns-ubuntu-debian/) in the AWS Knowledge Center for guidance on setting the persistent DNS server for your particular Linux distribution and version. + 2. Configure the Linux instance to use the DNS server IP addresses of the Directory Service-provided DNS servers. You can do this either by setting it up in the DHCP Options set attached to the VPC or by setting it manually on the instance. If you want to set it manually, see [How do I assign a static DNS server to a private Amazon EC2 instance](https://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/ec2-static-dns-ubuntu-debian/) in the AWS Knowledge Center for guidance on setting the persistent DNS server for your particular Linux distribution and version. @@ -129 +129 @@ CentOS - 2. Configure the Linux instance to use the DNS server IP addresses of the AWS Directory Service-provided DNS servers. You can do this either by setting it up in the DHCP Options set attached to the VPC or by setting it manually on the instance. If you want to set it manually, see [How do I assign a static DNS server to a private Amazon EC2 instance](https://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/ec2-static-dns-ubuntu-debian/) in the AWS Knowledge Center for guidance on setting the persistent DNS server for your particular Linux distribution and version. + 2. Configure the Linux instance to use the DNS server IP addresses of the Directory Service-provided DNS servers. You can do this either by setting it up in the DHCP Options set attached to the VPC or by setting it manually on the instance. If you want to set it manually, see [How do I assign a static DNS server to a private Amazon EC2 instance](https://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/ec2-static-dns-ubuntu-debian/) in the AWS Knowledge Center for guidance on setting the persistent DNS server for your particular Linux distribution and version. @@ -202 +202 @@ Red hat - 2. Configure the Linux instance to use the DNS server IP addresses of the AWS Directory Service-provided DNS servers. You can do this either by setting it up in the DHCP Options set attached to the VPC or by setting it manually on the instance. If you want to set it manually, see [How do I assign a static DNS server to a private Amazon EC2 instance](https://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/ec2-static-dns-ubuntu-debian/) in the AWS Knowledge Center for guidance on setting the persistent DNS server for your particular Linux distribution and version. + 2. Configure the Linux instance to use the DNS server IP addresses of the Directory Service-provided DNS servers. You can do this either by setting it up in the DHCP Options set attached to the VPC or by setting it manually on the instance. If you want to set it manually, see [How do I assign a static DNS server to a private Amazon EC2 instance](https://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/ec2-static-dns-ubuntu-debian/) in the AWS Knowledge Center for guidance on setting the persistent DNS server for your particular Linux distribution and version. @@ -275 +275 @@ Ubuntu - 2. Configure the Linux instance to use the DNS server IP addresses of the AWS Directory Service-provided DNS servers. You can do this either by setting it up in the DHCP Options set attached to the VPC or by setting it manually on the instance. If you want to set it manually, see [How do I assign a static DNS server to a private Amazon EC2 instance](https://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/ec2-static-dns-ubuntu-debian/) in the AWS Knowledge Center for guidance on setting the persistent DNS server for your particular Linux distribution and version. + 2. Configure the Linux instance to use the DNS server IP addresses of the Directory Service-provided DNS servers. You can do this either by setting it up in the DHCP Options set attached to the VPC or by setting it manually on the instance. If you want to set it manually, see [How do I assign a static DNS server to a private Amazon EC2 instance](https://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/ec2-static-dns-ubuntu-debian/) in the AWS Knowledge Center for guidance on setting the persistent DNS server for your particular Linux distribution and version.