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Release v1.49.10 #5126

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11 changes: 11 additions & 0 deletions CHANGELOG.md
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Release v1.49.10 (2023-12-26)
===

### Service Client Updates
* `service/iam`: Updates service documentation
* Documentation updates for AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM).

### SDK Enhancements
* `aws`: Add `WithUseFIPSEndpoint` to `aws.Config`. ([#5078](https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/pull/5078))
* `WithUseFIPSEndpoint` can be used to explicitly enable or disable FIPS endpoint variants.

Release v1.49.9 (2023-12-22)
===

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2 changes: 0 additions & 2 deletions CHANGELOG_PENDING.md
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### SDK Features

### SDK Enhancements
* `aws`: Add `WithUseFIPSEndpoint` to `aws.Config`. ([#5078](https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/pull/5078))
* `WithUseFIPSEndpoint` can be used to explicitly enable or disable FIPS endpoint variants.

### SDK Bugs
81 changes: 81 additions & 0 deletions aws/endpoints/defaults.go

Some generated files are not rendered by default. Learn more about how customized files appear on GitHub.

2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion aws/version.go
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const SDKName = "aws-sdk-go"

// SDKVersion is the version of this SDK
const SDKVersion = "1.49.9"
const SDKVersion = "1.49.10"
4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions models/apis/iam/2010-05-08/docs-2.json
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"CreateGroup": "<p>Creates a new group.</p> <p> For information about the number of groups you can create, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/reference_iam-quotas.html\">IAM and STS quotas</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p>",
"CreateInstanceProfile": "<p> Creates a new instance profile. For information about instance profiles, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/id_roles_use_switch-role-ec2.html\">Using roles for applications on Amazon EC2</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>, and <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/iam-roles-for-amazon-ec2.html#ec2-instance-profile\">Instance profiles</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p> <p> For information about the number of instance profiles you can create, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/reference_iam-quotas.html\">IAM object quotas</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p>",
"CreateLoginProfile": "<p>Creates a password for the specified IAM user. A password allows an IAM user to access Amazon Web Services services through the Amazon Web Services Management Console.</p> <p>You can use the CLI, the Amazon Web Services API, or the <b>Users</b> page in the IAM console to create a password for any IAM user. Use <a>ChangePassword</a> to update your own existing password in the <b>My Security Credentials</b> page in the Amazon Web Services Management Console.</p> <p>For more information about managing passwords, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/Using_ManagingLogins.html\">Managing passwords</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p>",
"CreateOpenIDConnectProvider": "<p>Creates an IAM entity to describe an identity provider (IdP) that supports <a href=\"http://openid.net/connect/\">OpenID Connect (OIDC)</a>.</p> <p>The OIDC provider that you create with this operation can be used as a principal in a role's trust policy. Such a policy establishes a trust relationship between Amazon Web Services and the OIDC provider.</p> <p>If you are using an OIDC identity provider from Google, Facebook, or Amazon Cognito, you don't need to create a separate IAM identity provider. These OIDC identity providers are already built-in to Amazon Web Services and are available for your use. Instead, you can move directly to creating new roles using your identity provider. To learn more, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/id_roles_create_for-idp_oidc.html\">Creating a role for web identity or OpenID connect federation</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p> <p>When you create the IAM OIDC provider, you specify the following:</p> <ul> <li> <p>The URL of the OIDC identity provider (IdP) to trust</p> </li> <li> <p>A list of client IDs (also known as audiences) that identify the application or applications allowed to authenticate using the OIDC provider</p> </li> <li> <p>A list of tags that are attached to the specified IAM OIDC provider</p> </li> <li> <p>A list of thumbprints of one or more server certificates that the IdP uses</p> </li> </ul> <p>You get all of this information from the OIDC IdP you want to use to access Amazon Web Services.</p> <note> <p>Amazon Web Services secures communication with some OIDC identity providers (IdPs) through our library of trusted root certificate authorities (CAs) instead of using a certificate thumbprint to verify your IdP server certificate. These OIDC IdPs include Auth0, GitHub, Google, and those that use an Amazon S3 bucket to host a JSON Web Key Set (JWKS) endpoint. In these cases, your legacy thumbprint remains in your configuration, but is no longer used for validation.</p> </note> <note> <p>The trust for the OIDC provider is derived from the IAM provider that this operation creates. Therefore, it is best to limit access to the <a>CreateOpenIDConnectProvider</a> operation to highly privileged users.</p> </note>",
"CreateOpenIDConnectProvider": "<p>Creates an IAM entity to describe an identity provider (IdP) that supports <a href=\"http://openid.net/connect/\">OpenID Connect (OIDC)</a>.</p> <p>The OIDC provider that you create with this operation can be used as a principal in a role's trust policy. Such a policy establishes a trust relationship between Amazon Web Services and the OIDC provider.</p> <p>If you are using an OIDC identity provider from Google, Facebook, or Amazon Cognito, you don't need to create a separate IAM identity provider. These OIDC identity providers are already built-in to Amazon Web Services and are available for your use. Instead, you can move directly to creating new roles using your identity provider. To learn more, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/id_roles_create_for-idp_oidc.html\">Creating a role for web identity or OpenID connect federation</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p> <p>When you create the IAM OIDC provider, you specify the following:</p> <ul> <li> <p>The URL of the OIDC identity provider (IdP) to trust</p> </li> <li> <p>A list of client IDs (also known as audiences) that identify the application or applications allowed to authenticate using the OIDC provider</p> </li> <li> <p>A list of tags that are attached to the specified IAM OIDC provider</p> </li> <li> <p>A list of thumbprints of one or more server certificates that the IdP uses</p> </li> </ul> <p>You get all of this information from the OIDC IdP you want to use to access Amazon Web Services.</p> <note> <p>Amazon Web Services secures communication with some OIDC identity providers (IdPs) through our library of trusted root certificate authorities (CAs) instead of using a certificate thumbprint to verify your IdP server certificate. In these cases, your legacy thumbprint remains in your configuration, but is no longer used for validation. These OIDC IdPs include Auth0, GitHub, GitLab, Google, and those that use an Amazon S3 bucket to host a JSON Web Key Set (JWKS) endpoint.</p> </note> <note> <p>The trust for the OIDC provider is derived from the IAM provider that this operation creates. Therefore, it is best to limit access to the <a>CreateOpenIDConnectProvider</a> operation to highly privileged users.</p> </note>",
"CreatePolicy": "<p>Creates a new managed policy for your Amazon Web Services account.</p> <p>This operation creates a policy version with a version identifier of <code>v1</code> and sets v1 as the policy's default version. For more information about policy versions, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/policies-managed-versions.html\">Versioning for managed policies</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p> <p>As a best practice, you can validate your IAM policies. To learn more, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access_policies_policy-validator.html\">Validating IAM policies</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p> <p>For more information about managed policies in general, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/policies-managed-vs-inline.html\">Managed policies and inline policies</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p>",
"CreatePolicyVersion": "<p>Creates a new version of the specified managed policy. To update a managed policy, you create a new policy version. A managed policy can have up to five versions. If the policy has five versions, you must delete an existing version using <a>DeletePolicyVersion</a> before you create a new version.</p> <p>Optionally, you can set the new version as the policy's default version. The default version is the version that is in effect for the IAM users, groups, and roles to which the policy is attached.</p> <p>For more information about managed policy versions, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/policies-managed-versions.html\">Versioning for managed policies</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p>",
"CreateRole": "<p>Creates a new role for your Amazon Web Services account.</p> <p> For more information about roles, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/id_roles.html\">IAM roles</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>. For information about quotas for role names and the number of roles you can create, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/reference_iam-quotas.html\">IAM and STS quotas</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p>",
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"UpdateAssumeRolePolicy": "<p>Updates the policy that grants an IAM entity permission to assume a role. This is typically referred to as the \"role trust policy\". For more information about roles, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/roles-toplevel.html\">Using roles to delegate permissions and federate identities</a>.</p>",
"UpdateGroup": "<p>Updates the name and/or the path of the specified IAM group.</p> <important> <p> You should understand the implications of changing a group's path or name. For more information, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/Using_WorkingWithGroupsAndUsers.html\">Renaming users and groups</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p> </important> <note> <p>The person making the request (the principal), must have permission to change the role group with the old name and the new name. For example, to change the group named <code>Managers</code> to <code>MGRs</code>, the principal must have a policy that allows them to update both groups. If the principal has permission to update the <code>Managers</code> group, but not the <code>MGRs</code> group, then the update fails. For more information about permissions, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access.html\">Access management</a>. </p> </note>",
"UpdateLoginProfile": "<p>Changes the password for the specified IAM user. You can use the CLI, the Amazon Web Services API, or the <b>Users</b> page in the IAM console to change the password for any IAM user. Use <a>ChangePassword</a> to change your own password in the <b>My Security Credentials</b> page in the Amazon Web Services Management Console.</p> <p>For more information about modifying passwords, see <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/Using_ManagingLogins.html\">Managing passwords</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p>",
"UpdateOpenIDConnectProviderThumbprint": "<p>Replaces the existing list of server certificate thumbprints associated with an OpenID Connect (OIDC) provider resource object with a new list of thumbprints.</p> <p>The list that you pass with this operation completely replaces the existing list of thumbprints. (The lists are not merged.)</p> <p>Typically, you need to update a thumbprint only when the identity provider certificate changes, which occurs rarely. However, if the provider's certificate <i>does</i> change, any attempt to assume an IAM role that specifies the OIDC provider as a principal fails until the certificate thumbprint is updated.</p> <note> <p>Amazon Web Services secures communication with some OIDC identity providers (IdPs) through our library of trusted root certificate authorities (CAs) instead of using a certificate thumbprint to verify your IdP server certificate. These OIDC IdPs include Auth0, GitHub, Google, and those that use an Amazon S3 bucket to host a JSON Web Key Set (JWKS) endpoint. In these cases, your legacy thumbprint remains in your configuration, but is no longer used for validation.</p> </note> <note> <p>Trust for the OIDC provider is derived from the provider certificate and is validated by the thumbprint. Therefore, it is best to limit access to the <code>UpdateOpenIDConnectProviderThumbprint</code> operation to highly privileged users.</p> </note>",
"UpdateOpenIDConnectProviderThumbprint": "<p>Replaces the existing list of server certificate thumbprints associated with an OpenID Connect (OIDC) provider resource object with a new list of thumbprints.</p> <p>The list that you pass with this operation completely replaces the existing list of thumbprints. (The lists are not merged.)</p> <p>Typically, you need to update a thumbprint only when the identity provider certificate changes, which occurs rarely. However, if the provider's certificate <i>does</i> change, any attempt to assume an IAM role that specifies the OIDC provider as a principal fails until the certificate thumbprint is updated.</p> <note> <p>Amazon Web Services secures communication with some OIDC identity providers (IdPs) through our library of trusted root certificate authorities (CAs) instead of using a certificate thumbprint to verify your IdP server certificate. In these cases, your legacy thumbprint remains in your configuration, but is no longer used for validation. These OIDC IdPs include Auth0, GitHub, GitLab, Google, and those that use an Amazon S3 bucket to host a JSON Web Key Set (JWKS) endpoint.</p> </note> <note> <p>Trust for the OIDC provider is derived from the provider certificate and is validated by the thumbprint. Therefore, it is best to limit access to the <code>UpdateOpenIDConnectProviderThumbprint</code> operation to highly privileged users.</p> </note>",
"UpdateRole": "<p>Updates the description or maximum session duration setting of a role.</p>",
"UpdateRoleDescription": "<p>Use <a>UpdateRole</a> instead.</p> <p>Modifies only the description of a role. This operation performs the same function as the <code>Description</code> parameter in the <code>UpdateRole</code> operation.</p>",
"UpdateSAMLProvider": "<p>Updates the metadata document for an existing SAML provider resource object.</p> <note> <p>This operation requires <a href=\"https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/signature-version-4.html\">Signature Version 4</a>.</p> </note>",
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