Class ProjectsResource.ServiceAccountsResource.DeleteRequest
Deletes a ServiceAccount. Warning: After you delete a service account, you might not be able to undelete it. If you know that you need to re-enable the service account in the future, use DisableServiceAccount instead. If you delete a service account, IAM permanently removes the service account 30 days later. Google Cloud cannot recover the service account after it is permanently removed, even if you file a support request. To help avoid unplanned outages, we recommend that you disable the service account before you delete it. Use DisableServiceAccount to disable the service account, then wait at least 24 hours and watch for unintended consequences. If there are no unintended consequences, you can delete the service account.
Inheritance
Inherited Members
Namespace: Google.Apis.Iam.v1
Assembly: Google.Apis.Iam.v1.dll
Syntax
public class ProjectsResource.ServiceAccountsResource.DeleteRequest : IamBaseServiceRequest<Empty>, IClientServiceRequest<Empty>, IClientServiceRequest
Constructors
DeleteRequest(IClientService, string)
Constructs a new Delete request.
Declaration
public DeleteRequest(IClientService service, string name)
Parameters
Type | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
IClientService | service | |
string | name |
Properties
HttpMethod
Gets the HTTP method.
Declaration
public override string HttpMethod { get; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |
Overrides
MethodName
Gets the method name.
Declaration
public override string MethodName { get; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |
Overrides
Name
Required. 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
[RequestParameter("name", RequestParameterType.Path)]
public virtual string Name { get; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |
RestPath
Gets the REST path.
Declaration
public override string RestPath { get; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |
Overrides
Methods
InitParameters()
Initializes Delete parameter list.
Declaration
protected override void InitParameters()