Namespace Google.Apis.CloudRuntimeConfig.v1beta1.Data
Classes
Binding
Associates members
, or principals, with a role
.
Cardinality
A Cardinality condition for the Waiter resource. A cardinality condition is met when the number of variables
under a specified path prefix reaches a predefined number. For example, if you set a Cardinality condition where
the path
is set to /foo
and the number of paths is set to 2
, the following variables would meet the
condition in a RuntimeConfig resource: + /foo/variable1 = "value1"
+ /foo/variable2 = "value2"
+
/bar/variable3 = "value3"
It would not satisfy the same condition with the number
set to 3
, however,
because there is only 2 paths that start with /foo
. Cardinality conditions are recursive; all subtrees under
the specific path prefix are counted.
Empty
A generic empty message that you can re-use to avoid defining duplicated empty messages in your APIs. A typical example is to use it as the request or the response type of an API method. For instance: service Foo { rpc Bar(google.protobuf.Empty) returns (google.protobuf.Empty); }
EndCondition
The condition that a Waiter resource is waiting for.
Expr
Represents a textual expression in the Common Expression Language (CEL) syntax. CEL is a C-like expression language. The syntax and semantics of CEL are documented at https://github.com/google/cel-spec. Example (Comparison): title: "Summary size limit" description: "Determines if a summary is less than 100 chars" expression: "document.summary.size() < 100" Example (Equality): title: "Requestor is owner" description: "Determines if requestor is the document owner" expression: "document.owner == request.auth.claims.email" Example (Logic): title: "Public documents" description: "Determine whether the document should be publicly visible" expression: "document.type != 'private' && document.type != 'internal'" Example (Data Manipulation): title: "Notification string" description: "Create a notification string with a timestamp." expression: "'New message received at ' + string(document.create_time)" The exact variables and functions that may be referenced within an expression are determined by the service that evaluates it. See the service documentation for additional information.
ListConfigsResponse
ListConfigs()
returns the following response. The order of returned objects is arbitrary; that is, it is not
ordered in any particular way.
ListVariablesResponse
Response for the ListVariables()
method.
ListWaitersResponse
Response for the ListWaiters()
method. Order of returned waiter objects is arbitrary.
Operation
This resource represents a long-running operation that is the result of a network API call.
Policy
An Identity and Access Management (IAM) policy, which specifies access controls for Google Cloud resources. A
Policy
is a collection of bindings
. A binding
binds one or more members
, or principals, to a single
role
. Principals can be user accounts, service accounts, Google groups, and domains (such as G Suite). A
role
is a named list of permissions; each role
can be an IAM predefined role or a user-created custom role.
For some types of Google Cloud resources, a binding
can also specify a condition
, which is a logical
expression that allows access to a resource only if the expression evaluates to true
. A condition can add
constraints based on attributes of the request, the resource, or both. To learn which resources support
conditions in their IAM policies, see the IAM
documentation. JSON example:
{
"bindings": [ { "role": "roles/resourcemanager.organizationAdmin", "members": [ "user:mike@example.com",
"group:admins@example.com", "domain:google.com", "serviceAccount:my-project-id@appspot.gserviceaccount.com" ] },
{ "role": "roles/resourcemanager.organizationViewer", "members": [ "user:eve@example.com" ], "condition": {
"title": "expirable access", "description": "Does not grant access after Sep 2020", "expression": "request.time
< timestamp('2020-10-01T00:00:00.000Z')", } } ], "etag": "BwWWja0YfJA=", "version": 3 }
YAML example:
bindings: - members: - user:mike@example.com - group:admins@example.com - domain:google.com -
serviceAccount:my-project-id@appspot.gserviceaccount.com role: roles/resourcemanager.organizationAdmin -
members: - user:eve@example.com role: roles/resourcemanager.organizationViewer condition: title: expirable
access description: Does not grant access after Sep 2020 expression: request.time <
timestamp('2020-10-01T00:00:00.000Z') etag: BwWWja0YfJA= version: 3
For a description of IAM and its features, see the IAM documentation.
RuntimeConfig
A RuntimeConfig resource is the primary resource in the Cloud RuntimeConfig service. A RuntimeConfig resource consists of metadata and a hierarchy of variables.
SetIamPolicyRequest
Request message for SetIamPolicy
method.
Status
The Status
type defines a logical error model that is suitable for different programming environments,
including REST APIs and RPC APIs. It is used by gRPC. Each Status
message contains
three pieces of data: error code, error message, and error details. You can find out more about this error model
and how to work with it in the API Design Guide.
TestIamPermissionsRequest
Request message for TestIamPermissions
method.
TestIamPermissionsResponse
Response message for TestIamPermissions
method.
Variable
Describes a single variable within a RuntimeConfig resource. The name denotes the hierarchical variable name.
For example, ports/serving_port
is a valid variable name. The variable value is an opaque string and only leaf
variables can have values (that is, variables that do not have any child variables).
Waiter
A Waiter resource waits for some end condition within a RuntimeConfig resource to be met before it returns. For example, assume you have a distributed system where each node writes to a Variable resource indicating the node's readiness as part of the startup process. You then configure a Waiter resource with the success condition set to wait until some number of nodes have checked in. Afterwards, your application runs some arbitrary code after the condition has been met and the waiter returns successfully. Once created, a Waiter resource is immutable. To learn more about using waiters, read the Creating a Waiter documentation.
WatchVariableRequest
Request for the WatchVariable()
method.