Class ServiceAccount
An IAM service account. A service account is an account for an application or a virtual machine (VM) instance, not a person. You can use a service account to call Google APIs. To learn more, read the overview of service accounts. When you create a service account, you specify the project ID that owns the service account, as well as a name that must be unique within the project. IAM uses these values to create an email address that identifies the service account. //
Implements
Inherited Members
Namespace: Google.Apis.Iam.v1.Data
Assembly: Google.Apis.Iam.v1.dll
Syntax
public class ServiceAccount : IDirectResponseSchema
Properties
Description
Optional. A user-specified, human-readable description of the service account. The maximum length is 256 UTF-8 bytes.
Declaration
[JsonProperty("description")]
public virtual string Description { get; set; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |
Disabled
Output only. Whether the service account is disabled.
Declaration
[JsonProperty("disabled")]
public virtual bool? Disabled { get; set; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
bool? |
DisplayName
Optional. A user-specified, human-readable name for the service account. The maximum length is 100 UTF-8 bytes.
Declaration
[JsonProperty("displayName")]
public virtual string DisplayName { get; set; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |
ETag
Deprecated. Do not use.
Declaration
[JsonProperty("etag")]
public virtual string ETag { get; set; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |
Output only. The email address of the service account.
Declaration
[JsonProperty("email")]
public virtual string Email { get; set; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |
Name
The resource name of the service account. Use one of the following formats: *
projects/{PROJECT_ID}/serviceAccounts/{EMAIL_ADDRESS}
*
projects/{PROJECT_ID}/serviceAccounts/{UNIQUE_ID}
As an alternative, you can use the -
wildcard
character instead of the project ID: * projects/-/serviceAccounts/{EMAIL_ADDRESS}
*
projects/-/serviceAccounts/{UNIQUE_ID}
When possible, avoid using the -
wildcard character, because it
can cause response messages to contain misleading error codes. For example, if you try to access the service
account projects/-/serviceAccounts/fake@example.com
, which does not exist, the response contains an HTTP
403 Forbidden
error instead of a 404 Not Found
error.
Declaration
[JsonProperty("name")]
public virtual string Name { get; set; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |
Oauth2ClientId
Output only. The OAuth 2.0 client ID for the service account.
Declaration
[JsonProperty("oauth2ClientId")]
public virtual string Oauth2ClientId { get; set; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |
ProjectId
Output only. The ID of the project that owns the service account.
Declaration
[JsonProperty("projectId")]
public virtual string ProjectId { get; set; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |
UniqueId
Output only. The unique, stable numeric ID for the service account. Each service account retains its unique ID even if you delete the service account. For example, if you delete a service account, then create a new service account with the same name, the new service account has a different unique ID than the deleted service account.
Declaration
[JsonProperty("uniqueId")]
public virtual string UniqueId { get; set; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |