google_alertcenter1_beta1/
lib.rs

1// DO NOT EDIT !
2// This file was generated automatically from 'src/generator/templates/api/lib.rs.mako'
3// DO NOT EDIT !
4
5//! This documentation was generated from *AlertCenter* crate version *6.0.0+20240624*, where *20240624* is the exact revision of the *alertcenter:v1beta1* schema built by the [mako](http://www.makotemplates.org/) code generator *v6.0.0*.
6//!
7//! Everything else about the *AlertCenter* *v1_beta1* API can be found at the
8//! [official documentation site](https://developers.google.com/admin-sdk/alertcenter/).
9//! The original source code is [on github](https://github.com/Byron/google-apis-rs/tree/main/gen/alertcenter1_beta1).
10//! # Features
11//!
12//! Handle the following *Resources* with ease from the central [hub](AlertCenter) ...
13//!
14//! * [alerts](api::Alert)
15//!  * [*batch delete*](api::AlertBatchDeleteCall), [*batch undelete*](api::AlertBatchUndeleteCall), [*delete*](api::AlertDeleteCall), [*feedback create*](api::AlertFeedbackCreateCall), [*feedback list*](api::AlertFeedbackListCall), [*get*](api::AlertGetCall), [*get metadata*](api::AlertGetMetadataCall), [*list*](api::AlertListCall) and [*undelete*](api::AlertUndeleteCall)
16//!
17//! Other activities are ...
18//!
19//! * [get settings](api::MethodGetSettingCall)
20//! * [update settings](api::MethodUpdateSettingCall)
21//!
22//!
23//!
24//! Not what you are looking for ? Find all other Google APIs in their Rust [documentation index](http://byron.github.io/google-apis-rs).
25//!
26//! # Structure of this Library
27//!
28//! The API is structured into the following primary items:
29//!
30//! * **[Hub](AlertCenter)**
31//!     * a central object to maintain state and allow accessing all *Activities*
32//!     * creates [*Method Builders*](common::MethodsBuilder) which in turn
33//!       allow access to individual [*Call Builders*](common::CallBuilder)
34//! * **[Resources](common::Resource)**
35//!     * primary types that you can apply *Activities* to
36//!     * a collection of properties and *Parts*
37//!     * **[Parts](common::Part)**
38//!         * a collection of properties
39//!         * never directly used in *Activities*
40//! * **[Activities](common::CallBuilder)**
41//!     * operations to apply to *Resources*
42//!
43//! All *structures* are marked with applicable traits to further categorize them and ease browsing.
44//!
45//! Generally speaking, you can invoke *Activities* like this:
46//!
47//! ```Rust,ignore
48//! let r = hub.resource().activity(...).doit().await
49//! ```
50//!
51//! Or specifically ...
52//!
53//! ```ignore
54//! let r = hub.alerts().feedback_create(...).doit().await
55//! let r = hub.alerts().feedback_list(...).doit().await
56//! let r = hub.alerts().batch_delete(...).doit().await
57//! let r = hub.alerts().batch_undelete(...).doit().await
58//! let r = hub.alerts().delete(...).doit().await
59//! let r = hub.alerts().get(...).doit().await
60//! let r = hub.alerts().get_metadata(...).doit().await
61//! let r = hub.alerts().list(...).doit().await
62//! let r = hub.alerts().undelete(...).doit().await
63//! ```
64//!
65//! The `resource()` and `activity(...)` calls create [builders][builder-pattern]. The second one dealing with `Activities`
66//! supports various methods to configure the impending operation (not shown here). It is made such that all required arguments have to be
67//! specified right away (i.e. `(...)`), whereas all optional ones can be [build up][builder-pattern] as desired.
68//! The `doit()` method performs the actual communication with the server and returns the respective result.
69//!
70//! # Usage
71//!
72//! ## Setting up your Project
73//!
74//! To use this library, you would put the following lines into your `Cargo.toml` file:
75//!
76//! ```toml
77//! [dependencies]
78//! google-alertcenter1_beta1 = "*"
79//! serde = "1"
80//! serde_json = "1"
81//! ```
82//!
83//! ## A complete example
84//!
85//! ```test_harness,no_run
86//! extern crate hyper;
87//! extern crate hyper_rustls;
88//! extern crate google_alertcenter1_beta1 as alertcenter1_beta1;
89//! use alertcenter1_beta1::{Result, Error};
90//! # async fn dox() {
91//! use alertcenter1_beta1::{AlertCenter, FieldMask, hyper_rustls, hyper_util, yup_oauth2};
92//!
93//! // Get an ApplicationSecret instance by some means. It contains the `client_id` and
94//! // `client_secret`, among other things.
95//! let secret: yup_oauth2::ApplicationSecret = Default::default();
96//! // Instantiate the authenticator. It will choose a suitable authentication flow for you,
97//! // unless you replace  `None` with the desired Flow.
98//! // Provide your own `AuthenticatorDelegate` to adjust the way it operates and get feedback about
99//! // what's going on. You probably want to bring in your own `TokenStorage` to persist tokens and
100//! // retrieve them from storage.
101//! let auth = yup_oauth2::InstalledFlowAuthenticator::builder(
102//!     secret,
103//!     yup_oauth2::InstalledFlowReturnMethod::HTTPRedirect,
104//! ).build().await.unwrap();
105//!
106//! let client = hyper_util::client::legacy::Client::builder(
107//!     hyper_util::rt::TokioExecutor::new()
108//! )
109//! .build(
110//!     hyper_rustls::HttpsConnectorBuilder::new()
111//!         .with_native_roots()
112//!         .unwrap()
113//!         .https_or_http()
114//!         .enable_http1()
115//!         .build()
116//! );
117//! let mut hub = AlertCenter::new(client, auth);
118//! // You can configure optional parameters by calling the respective setters at will, and
119//! // execute the final call using `doit()`.
120//! // Values shown here are possibly random and not representative !
121//! let result = hub.alerts().list()
122//!              .page_token("At")
123//!              .page_size(-8)
124//!              .order_by("sed")
125//!              .filter("amet.")
126//!              .customer_id("takimata")
127//!              .doit().await;
128//!
129//! match result {
130//!     Err(e) => match e {
131//!         // The Error enum provides details about what exactly happened.
132//!         // You can also just use its `Debug`, `Display` or `Error` traits
133//!          Error::HttpError(_)
134//!         |Error::Io(_)
135//!         |Error::MissingAPIKey
136//!         |Error::MissingToken(_)
137//!         |Error::Cancelled
138//!         |Error::UploadSizeLimitExceeded(_, _)
139//!         |Error::Failure(_)
140//!         |Error::BadRequest(_)
141//!         |Error::FieldClash(_)
142//!         |Error::JsonDecodeError(_, _) => println!("{}", e),
143//!     },
144//!     Ok(res) => println!("Success: {:?}", res),
145//! }
146//! # }
147//! ```
148//! ## Handling Errors
149//!
150//! All errors produced by the system are provided either as [Result](common::Result) enumeration as return value of
151//! the doit() methods, or handed as possibly intermediate results to either the
152//! [Hub Delegate](common::Delegate), or the [Authenticator Delegate](https://docs.rs/yup-oauth2/*/yup_oauth2/trait.AuthenticatorDelegate.html).
153//!
154//! When delegates handle errors or intermediate values, they may have a chance to instruct the system to retry. This
155//! makes the system potentially resilient to all kinds of errors.
156//!
157//! ## Uploads and Downloads
158//! If a method supports downloads, the response body, which is part of the [Result](common::Result), should be
159//! read by you to obtain the media.
160//! If such a method also supports a [Response Result](common::ResponseResult), it will return that by default.
161//! You can see it as meta-data for the actual media. To trigger a media download, you will have to set up the builder by making
162//! this call: `.param("alt", "media")`.
163//!
164//! Methods supporting uploads can do so using up to 2 different protocols:
165//! *simple* and *resumable*. The distinctiveness of each is represented by customized
166//! `doit(...)` methods, which are then named `upload(...)` and `upload_resumable(...)` respectively.
167//!
168//! ## Customization and Callbacks
169//!
170//! You may alter the way an `doit()` method is called by providing a [delegate](common::Delegate) to the
171//! [Method Builder](common::CallBuilder) before making the final `doit()` call.
172//! Respective methods will be called to provide progress information, as well as determine whether the system should
173//! retry on failure.
174//!
175//! The [delegate trait](common::Delegate) is default-implemented, allowing you to customize it with minimal effort.
176//!
177//! ## Optional Parts in Server-Requests
178//!
179//! All structures provided by this library are made to be [encodable](common::RequestValue) and
180//! [decodable](common::ResponseResult) via *json*. Optionals are used to indicate that partial requests are responses
181//! are valid.
182//! Most optionals are are considered [Parts](common::Part) which are identifiable by name, which will be sent to
183//! the server to indicate either the set parts of the request or the desired parts in the response.
184//!
185//! ## Builder Arguments
186//!
187//! Using [method builders](common::CallBuilder), you are able to prepare an action call by repeatedly calling it's methods.
188//! These will always take a single argument, for which the following statements are true.
189//!
190//! * [PODs][wiki-pod] are handed by copy
191//! * strings are passed as `&str`
192//! * [request values](common::RequestValue) are moved
193//!
194//! Arguments will always be copied or cloned into the builder, to make them independent of their original life times.
195//!
196//! [wiki-pod]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plain_old_data_structure
197//! [builder-pattern]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Builder_pattern
198//! [google-go-api]: https://github.com/google/google-api-go-client
199//!
200//! ## Cargo Features
201//!
202//! * `utoipa` - Add support for [utoipa](https://crates.io/crates/utoipa) and derive `utoipa::ToSchema` on all
203//! the types. You'll have to import and register the required types in `#[openapi(schemas(...))]`, otherwise the
204//! generated `openapi` spec would be invalid.
205//!
206//!
207//!
208
209// Unused attributes happen thanks to defined, but unused structures We don't
210// warn about this, as depending on the API, some data structures or facilities
211// are never used. Instead of pre-determining this, we just disable the lint.
212// It's manually tuned to not have any unused imports in fully featured APIs.
213// Same with unused_mut.
214#![allow(unused_imports, unused_mut, dead_code)]
215
216// DO NOT EDIT !
217// This file was generated automatically from 'src/generator/templates/api/lib.rs.mako'
218// DO NOT EDIT !
219
220pub extern crate hyper;
221pub extern crate hyper_rustls;
222pub extern crate hyper_util;
223#[cfg(feature = "yup-oauth2")]
224pub extern crate yup_oauth2;
225
226pub extern crate google_apis_common as common;
227pub use common::{Delegate, Error, FieldMask, Result};
228
229pub mod api;
230pub use api::AlertCenter;