Examples of using Use a wildcard in English and their translations into Spanish
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Colloquial
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Official
Use a wildcard to search for prefixes.
Rules don't cascade unless you use a wildcard.
How to use a Wildcard SSL certificate.
To specify multiple actions or resources, use a wildcard character(*) in your ARN.
To use a wildcard character within a pattern.
When you specify users in a Principal element,you cannot use a wildcard(*) to mean"all users.
You can use a wildcard to specify multiple actions or resources.
If you specify an ARN for a policy,you can also use a wildcard"*" character in the relative-ID part of the ARN.
You can't use a wildcard within the path; only at the end of the path.
If you are familiar with the JSON syntax,you can also use a wildcard character(*) to manually specify multiple services.
You can use a wildcard to grant permission for all Amazon S3 actions.
If an action does not support resource-level permissions,then that statement in the policy must use a wildcard(*) in the Resource element.
You cannot use a wildcard to replace part of a subdomain name, like this:*domain.
To specify all users, groups, orpolicies in your AWS account, use a wildcard after the user/, group/, or policy part of the ARN, respectively.
To use a wildcard character as a literal character, enclose the wildcard character in brackets.
For example, you can specify lambda:CreateFunction to specify a certain action, or use a wildcard( lambda:*) to grant permission to all Lambda actions.
You can use a wildcard(*) to give access to all the actions the specific AWS product offers.
For example, if you are writing an IAM policy and in the Resource element you want to specify all IAM users thathave the path product_1234, you can use a wildcard like this.
You cannot use a wildcard(*) in the Principal element in a role's trust policy.
Note that, instead of identifying a specific table as a resource,you can use a wildcard character(*) to grant permissions on all tables where the name is prefixed with the name of the IAM user that is making the request, as shown following.
You cannot use a wildcard in the portion of the ARN that specifies the resource type, such as the term user in an IAM ARN.
We also strongly recommend that you do not use a wildcard in the Principal element in a role's trust policy unless you otherwise restrict access through a Condition element in the policy.
You cannot use a wildcard to specify all users in the Principal element in a resource-based policy or a role trust policy.
Such as an Allow statement that uses a wildcard.
The following permissions policy uses a wildcard character("codecommit:*") to allow users to perform all AWS CodeCommit actions in the us-east-2 Region.
Using a wildcard character(*) in the action name often makes it easier to grant permissions for all the actions related to a specific task.
The second statement uses a wildcard to enable users to create instance resources, and requires users to specify the key pair project_keypair and the security group sg-1a2b3c4d.
The extra steps are required because moving a domain yourself, as described in the previous procedure,requires setting up domain routing using a wildcard for part of the domain name.
It uses a wildcard character* to indicate all the contents of the current location.