Contains the configurations necessary to generate a signature for access to private storage buckets that support Signature Version 4 for authentication. The service name for generating the authentication header will always default to ‘s3’.
A specification of the type and number of accelerator cards attached to the instance.
Represents an Accelerator Type resource. Google Cloud Platform provides graphics processing units (accelerators) that you can add to VM instances to improve or accelerate performance when working with intensive workloads. For more information, read GPUs on Compute Engine.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of accelerator types. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Returns the specified accelerator type.
Contains a list of accelerator types.
Retrieves a list of accelerator types that are available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
acceleratorType resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] An informational warning that appears when the accelerator types list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
An access configuration attached to an instance’s network interface. Only one access config per instance is supported.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of addresses. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified address resource.
Returns the specified address resource.
Creates an address resource in the specified project by using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of addresses.
Retrieves a list of addresses contained within the specified region.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
address resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Moves the specified address resource.
Sets the labels on an Address. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning which replaces the list of addresses when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Specifies options for controlling advanced machine features. Options that would traditionally be configured in a BIOS belong here. Features that require operating system support may have corresponding entries in the GuestOsFeatures of an Image (e.g., whether or not the OS in the Image supports nested virtualization being enabled or disabled).
An alias IP range attached to an instance’s network interface.
This reservation type is specified by total resource amounts (e.g. total count of CPUs) and can account for multiple instance SKUs. In other words, one can create instances of varying shapes against this reservation.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Contains output only fields.
Contains Properties set for the reservation.
There is no detailed description.
Properties of the SKU instances being reserved. Next ID: 9
This reservation type allows to pre allocate specific instance configuration. Next ID: 6
An instance-attached disk resource.
[Input Only] Specifies the parameters for a new disk that will be created alongside the new instance. Use initialization parameters to create boot disks or local SSDs attached to the new instance. This field is persisted and returned for instanceTemplate and not returned in the context of instance. This property is mutually exclusive with the source property; you can only define one or the other, but not both.
Specifies the audit configuration for a service. The configuration determines which permission types are logged, and what identities, if any, are exempted from logging. An AuditConfig must have one or more AuditLogConfigs. If there are AuditConfigs for both allServices
and a specific service, the union of the two AuditConfigs is used for that service: the log_types specified in each AuditConfig are enabled, and the exempted_members in each AuditLogConfig are exempted. Example Policy with multiple AuditConfigs: { “audit_configs”: [ { “service”: “allServices”, “audit_log_configs”: [ { “log_type”: “DATA_READ”, “exempted_members”: [ “user:jose@example.com” ] }, { “log_type”: “DATA_WRITE” }, { “log_type”: “ADMIN_READ” } ] }, { “service”: “sampleservice.googleapis.com”, “audit_log_configs”: [ { “log_type”: “DATA_READ” }, { “log_type”: “DATA_WRITE”, “exempted_members”: [ “user:aliya@example.com” ] } ] } ] } For sampleservice, this policy enables DATA_READ, DATA_WRITE and ADMIN_READ logging. It also exempts jose@example.com from DATA_READ logging, and aliya@example.com from DATA_WRITE logging.
Provides the configuration for logging a type of permissions. Example: { “audit_log_configs”: [ { “log_type”: “DATA_READ”, “exempted_members”: [ “user:jose@example.com” ] }, { “log_type”: “DATA_WRITE” } ] } This enables ‘DATA_READ’ and ‘DATA_WRITE’ logging, while exempting jose@example.com from DATA_READ logging.
This is deprecated and has no effect. Do not use.
Represents an Autoscaler resource. Google Compute Engine has two Autoscaler resources: *
Zonal *
Regional Use autoscalers to automatically add or delete instances from a managed instance group according to your defined autoscaling policy. For more information, read Autoscaling Groups of Instances. For zonal managed instance groups resource, use the autoscaler resource. For regional managed instance groups, use the regionAutoscalers resource.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of autoscalers. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified autoscaler.
Returns the specified autoscaler resource.
Creates an autoscaler in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of Autoscaler resources.
Retrieves a list of autoscalers contained within the specified zone.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
autoscaler resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates an autoscaler in the specified project using the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
There is no detailed description.
Updates an autoscaler in the specified project using the data included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning which replaces the list of autoscalers when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Cloud Autoscaler policy.
CPU utilization policy.
Custom utilization metric policy.
Configuration parameters of autoscaling based on load balancing.
Configuration that allows for slower scale in so that even if Autoscaler recommends an abrupt scale in of a MIG, it will be throttled as specified by the parameters below.
Scaling based on user-defined schedule. The message describes a single scaling schedule. A scaling schedule changes the minimum number of VM instances an autoscaler can recommend, which can trigger scaling out.
Message containing information of one individual backend.
Represents a Cloud Storage Bucket resource. This Cloud Storage bucket resource is referenced by a URL map of a load balancer. For more information, read Backend Buckets.
Adds a key for validating requests with signed URLs for this backend bucket.
Message containing Cloud CDN configuration for a backend bucket.
Bypass the cache when the specified request headers are present, e.g. Pragma or Authorization headers. Values are case insensitive. The presence of such a header overrides the cache_mode setting.
Message containing what to include in the cache key for a request for Cloud CDN.
Specify CDN TTLs for response error codes.
Deletes the specified BackendBucket resource.
Deletes a key for validating requests with signed URLs for this backend bucket.
Returns the specified BackendBucket resource.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates a BackendBucket resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of BackendBucket resources.
Retrieves the list of BackendBucket resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
backendBucket resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates the specified BackendBucket resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Sets the edge security policy for the specified backend bucket.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Updates the specified BackendBucket resource with the data included in the request.
Represents a Backend Service resource. A backend service defines how Google Cloud load balancers distribute traffic. The backend service configuration contains a set of values, such as the protocol used to connect to backends, various distribution and session settings, health checks, and timeouts. These settings provide fine-grained control over how your load balancer behaves. Most of the settings have default values that allow for easy configuration if you need to get started quickly. Backend services in Google Compute Engine can be either regionally or globally scoped. *
Global *
Regional For more information, see Backend Services.
Adds a key for validating requests with signed URLs for this backend service.
Contains a list of BackendServicesScopedList.
Retrieves the list of all BackendService resources, regional and global, available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Message containing Cloud CDN configuration for a backend service.
Bypass the cache when the specified request headers are present, e.g. Pragma or Authorization headers. Values are case insensitive. The presence of such a header overrides the cache_mode setting.
Specify CDN TTLs for response error codes.
Connection Tracking configuration for this BackendService.
Deletes the specified BackendService resource.
Deletes a key for validating requests with signed URLs for this backend service.
For load balancers that have configurable failover:
Internal passthrough Network Load Balancers and
external passthrough Network Load Balancers. On failover or failback, this field indicates whether connection draining will be honored. Google Cloud has a fixed connection draining timeout of 10 minutes. A setting of true terminates existing TCP connections to the active pool during failover and failback, immediately draining traffic. A setting of false allows existing TCP connections to persist, even on VMs no longer in the active pool, for up to the duration of the connection draining timeout (10 minutes).
Returns the specified BackendService resource.
Gets the most recent health check results for this BackendService. Example request body: { “group”: “/zones/us-east1-b/instanceGroups/lb-backend-example” }
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
There is no detailed description.
Identity-Aware Proxy
Creates a BackendService resource in the specified project using the data included in the request. For more information, see Backend services overview .
Contains a list of BackendService resources.
Retrieves the list of BackendService resources available to the specified project.
Contains a list of usable BackendService resources.
Retrieves an aggregated list of all usable backend services in the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Container for either a built-in LB policy supported by gRPC or Envoy or a custom one implemented by the end user.
The configuration for a custom policy implemented by the user and deployed with the client.
The configuration for a built-in load balancing policy.
The available logging options for the load balancer traffic served by this backend service.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
backendService resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified BackendService resource with the data included in the request. For more information, see Backend services overview. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
There is no detailed description.
Sets the edge security policy for the specified backend service.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Sets the Google Cloud Armor security policy for the specified backend service. For more information, see Google Cloud Armor Overview
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Updates the specified BackendService resource with the data included in the request. For more information, see Backend services overview.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of backend services when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Next free: 15
There is no detailed description.
Associates members
, or principals, with a role
.
A transient resource used in compute.disks.bulkInsert and compute.regionDisks.bulkInsert. It is only used to process requests and is not persisted.
A transient resource used in compute.instances.bulkInsert and compute.regionInstances.bulkInsert . This resource is not persisted anywhere, it is used only for processing the requests.
Per-instance properties to be set on individual instances. To be extended in the future.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Message containing what to include in the cache key for a request for Cloud CDN.
Settings controlling the volume of requests, connections and retries to this backend service.
Represents a regional Commitment resource. Creating a commitment resource means that you are purchasing a committed use contract with an explicit start and end time. You can create commitments based on vCPUs and memory usage and receive discounted rates. For full details, read Signing Up for Committed Use Discounts.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Contains a list of Commitment resources.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning which replaces the list of commitments when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Central instance to access all Compute related resource activities
This is deprecated and has no effect. Do not use.
A set of Confidential Instance options.
Message containing connection draining configuration.
This message defines settings for a consistent hash style load balancer.
The information about the HTTP Cookie on which the hash function is based for load balancing policies that use a consistent hash.
The specification for allowing client-side cross-origin requests. For more information about the W3C recommendation for cross-origin resource sharing (CORS), see Fetch API Living Standard.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Deprecation status for a public resource.
Represents a Persistent Disk resource. Google Compute Engine has two Disk resources: *
Zonal *
Regional Persistent disks are required for running your VM instances. Create both boot and non-boot (data) persistent disks. For more information, read Persistent Disks. For more storage options, read Storage options. The disks resource represents a zonal persistent disk. For more information, read Zonal persistent disks. The regionDisks resource represents a regional persistent disk. For more information, read Regional resources.
Adds existing resource policies to a disk. You can only add one policy which will be applied to this disk for scheduling snapshot creation.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of persistent disks. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Bulk create a set of disks.
Creates a snapshot of a specified persistent disk. For regular snapshot creation, consider using snapshots.insert instead, as that method supports more features, such as creating snapshots in a project different from the source disk project.
Deletes the specified persistent disk. Deleting a disk removes its data permanently and is irreversible. However, deleting a disk does not delete any snapshots previously made from the disk. You must separately delete snapshots.
Returns the specified persistent disk.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates a persistent disk in the specified project using the data in the request. You can create a disk from a source (sourceImage, sourceSnapshot, or sourceDisk) or create an empty 500 GB data disk by omitting all properties. You can also create a disk that is larger than the default size by specifying the sizeGb property.
A specification of the desired way to instantiate a disk in the instance template when its created from a source instance.
A list of Disk resources.
Retrieves a list of persistent disks contained within the specified zone.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
disk resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
Additional disk params.
Removes resource policies from a disk.
Resizes the specified persistent disk. You can only increase the size of the disk.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Sets the labels on a disk. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
Starts asynchronous replication. Must be invoked on the primary disk.
Stops asynchronous replication. Can be invoked either on the primary or on the secondary disk.
Stops asynchronous replication for a consistency group of disks. Can be invoked either in the primary or secondary scope.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Represents a Disk Type resource. Google Compute Engine has two Disk Type resources: *
Regional *
Zonal You can choose from a variety of disk types based on your needs. For more information, read Storage options. The diskTypes resource represents disk types for a zonal persistent disk. For more information, read Zonal persistent disks. The regionDiskTypes resource represents disk types for a regional persistent disk. For more information, read Regional persistent disks.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of disk types. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Returns the specified disk type.
Contains a list of disk types.
Retrieves a list of disk types available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
diskType resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning which replaces the list of disk types when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Updates the specified disk with the data included in the request. The update is performed only on selected fields included as part of update-mask. Only the following fields can be modified: user_license.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning which replaces the list of disks when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
A transient resource used in compute.disks.stopGroupAsyncReplication and compute.regionDisks.stopGroupAsyncReplication. It is only used to process requests and is not persisted.
A set of Display Device options
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
A Duration represents a fixed-length span of time represented as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. It is independent of any calendar and concepts like “day” or “month”. Range is approximately 10,000 years.
Describes the cause of the error with structured details. Example of an error when contacting the “pubsub.googleapis.com” API when it is not enabled: { “reason”: “API_DISABLED” “domain”: “googleapis.com” “metadata”: { “resource”: “projects/123”, “service”: “pubsub.googleapis.com” } } This response indicates that the pubsub.googleapis.com API is not enabled. Example of an error that is returned when attempting to create a Spanner instance in a region that is out of stock: { “reason”: “STOCKOUT” “domain”: “spanner.googleapis.com”, “metadata”: { “availableRegions”: “us-central1,us-east2” } }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
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.
Represents an external VPN gateway. External VPN gateway is the on-premises VPN gateway(s) or another cloud provider’s VPN gateway that connects to your Google Cloud VPN gateway. To create a highly available VPN from Google Cloud Platform to your VPN gateway or another cloud provider’s VPN gateway, you must create a external VPN gateway resource with information about the other gateway. For more information about using external VPN gateways, see Creating an HA VPN gateway and tunnel pair to a peer VPN.
Deletes the specified externalVpnGateway.
Returns the specified externalVpnGateway. Get a list of available externalVpnGateways by making a list() request.
Creates a ExternalVpnGateway in the specified project using the data included in the request.
The interface for the external VPN gateway.
Response to the list request, and contains a list of externalVpnGateways.
Retrieves the list of ExternalVpnGateway available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
externalVpnGateway resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Sets the labels on an ExternalVpnGateway. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
There is no detailed description.
Represents a Firewall Rule resource. Firewall rules allow or deny ingress traffic to, and egress traffic from your instances. For more information, read Firewall rules.
The list of ALLOW rules specified by this firewall. Each rule specifies a protocol and port-range tuple that describes a permitted connection.
Deletes the specified firewall.
The list of DENY rules specified by this firewall. Each rule specifies a protocol and port-range tuple that describes a denied connection.
Returns the specified firewall.
Creates a firewall rule in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of firewalls.
Retrieves the list of firewall rules available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
The available logging options for a firewall rule.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
firewall resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates the specified firewall rule with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
There is no detailed description.
Represents a Firewall Policy resource.
Inserts an association for the specified firewall policy.
Inserts a rule into a firewall policy.
There is no detailed description.
Copies rules to the specified firewall policy.
Deletes the specified policy.
Gets an association with the specified name.
Returns the specified firewall policy.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Gets a rule of the specified priority.
Creates a new policy in the specified project using the data included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
Lists associations of a specified target, i.e., organization or folder.
Lists all the policies that have been configured for the specified folder or organization.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
firewallPolicy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Moves the specified firewall policy.
Patches the specified policy with the data included in the request.
Patches a rule of the specified priority.
Removes an association for the specified firewall policy.
Deletes a rule of the specified priority.
Represents a rule that describes one or more match conditions along with the action to be taken when traffic matches this condition (allow or deny).
Represents a match condition that incoming traffic is evaluated against. Exactly one field must be specified.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Updates the specified firewall rule with the data included in the request. Note that all fields will be updated if using PUT, even fields that are not specified. To update individual fields, please use PATCH instead.
Encapsulates numeric value that can be either absolute or relative.
Represents a Forwarding Rule resource. Forwarding rule resources in Google Cloud can be either regional or global in scope: *
Global *
Regional A forwarding rule and its corresponding IP address represent the frontend configuration of a Google Cloud load balancer. Forwarding rules can also reference target instances and Cloud VPN Classic gateways (targetVpnGateway). For more information, read Forwarding rule concepts and Using protocol forwarding.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of forwarding rules. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified ForwardingRule resource.
Returns the specified ForwardingRule resource.
Creates a ForwardingRule resource in the specified project and region using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of ForwardingRule resources.
Retrieves a list of ForwardingRule resources available to the specified project and region.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
forwardingRule resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates the specified forwarding rule with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules. Currently, you can only patch the network_tier field.
There is no detailed description.
Describes the auto-registration of the forwarding rule to Service Directory. The region and project of the Service Directory resource generated from this registration will be the same as this forwarding rule.
Sets the labels on the specified resource. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
Changes target URL for forwarding rule. The new target should be of the same type as the old target.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of forwarding rules when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Deletes the specified address resource.
Returns the specified address resource.
Creates an address resource in the specified project by using the data included in the request.
Retrieves a list of global addresses.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
globalAddress resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Moves the specified address resource from one project to another project.
Sets the labels on a GlobalAddress. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
There is no detailed description.
Deletes the specified GlobalForwardingRule resource.
Returns the specified GlobalForwardingRule resource. Gets a list of available forwarding rules by making a list() request.
Creates a GlobalForwardingRule resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Retrieves a list of GlobalForwardingRule resources available to the specified project.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
globalForwardingRule resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates the specified forwarding rule with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules. Currently, you can only patch the network_tier field.
Sets the labels on the specified resource. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling resources documentation.
Changes target URL for the GlobalForwardingRule resource. The new target should be of the same type as the old target.
Attach a network endpoint to the specified network endpoint group.
Deletes the specified network endpoint group.Note that the NEG cannot be deleted if there are backend services referencing it.
Detach the network endpoint from the specified network endpoint group.
Returns the specified network endpoint group.
Creates a network endpoint group in the specified project using the parameters that are included in the request.
Retrieves the list of network endpoint groups that are located in the specified project.
Lists the network endpoints in the specified network endpoint group.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
globalNetworkEndpointGroup resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of all operations. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
Deletes the specified Operations resource.
Retrieves the specified Operations resource.
Retrieves a list of Operation resources contained within the specified project.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
globalOperation resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Waits for the specified Operation resource to return as DONE
or for the request to approach the 2 minute deadline, and retrieves the specified Operation resource. This method differs from the GET
method in that it waits for no more than the default deadline (2 minutes) and then returns the current state of the operation, which might be DONE
or still in progress. This method is called on a best-effort basis. Specifically: - In uncommon cases, when the server is overloaded, the request might return before the default deadline is reached, or might return after zero seconds. - If the default deadline is reached, there is no guarantee that the operation is actually done when the method returns. Be prepared to retry if the operation is not DONE
.
Deletes the specified Operations resource.
Retrieves the specified Operations resource. Gets a list of operations by making a list()
request.
Retrieves a list of Operation resources contained within the specified organization.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
globalOrganizationOperation resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
Deletes the specified global PublicDelegatedPrefix.
Returns the specified global PublicDelegatedPrefix resource.
Creates a global PublicDelegatedPrefix in the specified project using the parameters that are included in the request.
Lists the global PublicDelegatedPrefixes for a project.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
globalPublicDelegatedPrefix resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified global PublicDelegatedPrefix resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
A guest attributes entry.
A guest attributes namespace/key/value entry.
Array of guest attribute namespace/key/value tuples.
Guest OS features.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Represents a health check resource. Google Compute Engine has two health check resources: *
Regional *
Global These health check resources can be used for load balancing and for autohealing VMs in a managed instance group (MIG).
Load balancing Health check requirements vary depending on the type of load balancer. For details about the type of health check supported for each load balancer and corresponding backend type, see Health checks overview: Load balancer guide.
Autohealing in MIGs The health checks that you use for autohealing VMs in a MIG can be either regional or global. For more information, see Set up an application health check and autohealing. For more information, see Health checks overview.
Retrieves the list of all HealthCheck resources, regional and global, available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
Deletes the specified HealthCheck resource.
Returns the specified HealthCheck resource.
Creates a HealthCheck resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of HealthCheck resources.
Retrieves the list of HealthCheck resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Configuration of logging on a health check. If logging is enabled, logs will be exported to Stackdriver.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
healthCheck resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates a HealthCheck resource in the specified project using the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
A full or valid partial URL to a health check. For example, the following are valid URLs: - https://www.googleapis.com/compute/beta/projects/project-id/global/httpHealthChecks/health-check - projects/project-id/global/httpHealthChecks/health-check - global/httpHealthChecks/health-check
Represents a Health-Check as a Service resource.
A full or valid partial URL to a health check service. For example, the following are valid URLs: - https://www.googleapis.com/compute/beta/projects/project-id/regions/us-west1/healthCheckServices/health-check-service - projects/project-id/regions/us-west1/healthCheckServices/health-check-service - regions/us-west1/healthCheckServices/health-check-service
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Updates a HealthCheck resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of backend services when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Provides links to documentation or for performing an out of band action. For example, if a quota check failed with an error indicating the calling project hasn’t enabled the accessed service, this can contain a URL pointing directly to the right place in the developer console to flip the bit.
Describes a URL link.
UrlMaps A host-matching rule for a URL. If matched, will use the named PathMatcher to select the BackendService.
Specification for how requests are aborted as part of fault injection.
Specifies the delay introduced by the load balancer before forwarding the request to the backend service as part of fault injection.
The specification for fault injection introduced into traffic to test the resiliency of clients to backend service failure. As part of fault injection, when clients send requests to a backend service, delays can be introduced by the load balancer on a percentage of requests before sending those request to the backend service. Similarly requests from clients can be aborted by the load balancer for a percentage of requests.
The request and response header transformations that take effect before the request is passed along to the selected backendService.
matchRule criteria for request header matches.
Specification determining how headers are added to requests or responses.
Represents a legacy HTTP Health Check resource. Legacy HTTP health checks are now only required by target pool-based network load balancers. For all other load balancers, including backend service-based network load balancers, and for managed instance group auto-healing, you must use modern (non-legacy) health checks. For more information, see Health checks overview .
Deletes the specified HttpHealthCheck resource.
Returns the specified HttpHealthCheck resource.
Creates a HttpHealthCheck resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of HttpHealthCheck resources.
Retrieves the list of HttpHealthCheck resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
httpHealthCheck resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates a HttpHealthCheck resource in the specified project using the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Updates a HttpHealthCheck resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
HttpRouteRuleMatch criteria for a request’s query parameter.
Specifies settings for an HTTP redirect.
The retry policy associates with HttpRouteRule
There is no detailed description.
The HttpRouteRule setting specifies how to match an HTTP request and the corresponding routing action that load balancing proxies perform.
HttpRouteRuleMatch specifies a set of criteria for matching requests to an HttpRouteRule. All specified criteria must be satisfied for a match to occur.
Represents a legacy HTTPS Health Check resource. Legacy HTTPS health checks have been deprecated. If you are using a target pool-based network load balancer, you must use a legacy HTTP (not HTTPS) health check. For all other load balancers, including backend service-based network load balancers, and for managed instance group auto-healing, you must use modern (non-legacy) health checks. For more information, see Health checks overview .
Deletes the specified HttpsHealthCheck resource.
Returns the specified HttpsHealthCheck resource.
Creates a HttpsHealthCheck resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of HttpsHealthCheck resources.
Retrieves the list of HttpsHealthCheck resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
httpsHealthCheck resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates a HttpsHealthCheck resource in the specified project using the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Updates a HttpsHealthCheck resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Represents an Image resource. You can use images to create boot disks for your VM instances. For more information, read Images.
Deletes the specified image.
Sets the deprecation status of an image. If an empty request body is given, clears the deprecation status instead.
There is no detailed description.
Returns the latest image that is part of an image family, is not deprecated and is rolled out in the specified zone.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
imageFamilyView resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Returns the specified image.
Returns the latest image that is part of an image family and is not deprecated. For more information on image families, see Public image families documentation.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates an image in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of images.
Retrieves the list of custom images available to the specified project. Custom images are images you create that belong to your project. This method does not get any images that belong to other projects, including publicly-available images, like Debian 8. If you want to get a list of publicly-available images, use this method to make a request to the respective image project, such as debian-cloud or windows-cloud.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
image resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified image with the data included in the request. Only the following fields can be modified: family, description, deprecation status.
The parameters of the raw disk image.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Sets the labels on an image. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Initial State for shielded instance, these are public keys which are safe to store in public
Represents an Instance resource. An instance is a virtual machine that is hosted on Google Cloud Platform. For more information, read Virtual Machine Instances.
Adds an access config to an instance’s network interface.
Adds existing resource policies to an instance. You can only add one policy right now which will be applied to this instance for scheduling live migrations.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of all of the instances in your project across all regions and zones. The performance of this method degrades when a filter is specified on a project that has a very large number of instances. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Attaches an existing Disk resource to an instance. You must first create the disk before you can attach it. It is not possible to create and attach a disk at the same time. For more information, read Adding a persistent disk to your instance.
Creates multiple instances. Count specifies the number of instances to create. For more information, see About bulk creation of VMs.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Deletes an access config from an instance’s network interface.
Deletes the specified Instance resource. For more information, see Deleting an instance.
Detaches a disk from an instance.
Returns the specified Instance resource.
Returns effective firewalls applied to an interface of the instance.
Returns the specified guest attributes entry.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Returns the screenshot from the specified instance.
Returns the last 1 MB of serial port output from the specified instance.
Returns the Shielded Instance Identity of an instance
Represents an Instance Group resource. Instance Groups can be used to configure a target for load balancing. Instance groups can either be managed or unmanaged. To create managed instance groups, use the instanceGroupManager or regionInstanceGroupManager resource instead. Use zonal unmanaged instance groups if you need to apply load balancing to groups of heterogeneous instances or if you need to manage the instances yourself. You cannot create regional unmanaged instance groups. For more information, read Instance groups.
Adds a list of instances to the specified instance group. All of the instances in the instance group must be in the same network/subnetwork. Read Adding instances for more information.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves the list of instance groups and sorts them by zone. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified instance group. The instances in the group are not deleted. Note that instance group must not belong to a backend service. Read Deleting an instance group for more information.
Returns the specified zonal instance group. Get a list of available zonal instance groups by making a list() request. For managed instance groups, use the instanceGroupManagers or regionInstanceGroupManagers methods instead.
Creates an instance group in the specified project using the parameters that are included in the request.
A list of InstanceGroup resources.
Retrieves the list of zonal instance group resources contained within the specified zone. For managed instance groups, use the instanceGroupManagers or regionInstanceGroupManagers methods instead.
Lists the instances in the specified instance group. The orderBy query parameter is not supported. The filter query parameter is supported, but only for expressions that use eq
(equal) or ne
(not equal) operators.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Represents a Managed Instance Group resource. An instance group is a collection of VM instances that you can manage as a single entity. For more information, read Instance groups. For zonal Managed Instance Group, use the instanceGroupManagers resource. For regional Managed Instance Group, use the regionInstanceGroupManagers resource.
Flags the specified instances to be removed from the managed instance group. Abandoning an instance does not delete the instance, but it does remove the instance from any target pools that are applied by the managed instance group. This method reduces the targetSize of the managed instance group by the number of instances that you abandon. This operation is marked as DONE when the action is scheduled even if the instances have not yet been removed from the group. You must separately verify the status of the abandoning action with the listmanagedinstances method. If the group is part of a backend service that has enabled connection draining, it can take up to 60 seconds after the connection draining duration has elapsed before the VM instance is removed or deleted. You can specify a maximum of 1000 instances with this method per request.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves the list of managed instance groups and groups them by zone. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Applies changes to selected instances on the managed instance group. This method can be used to apply new overrides and/or new versions.
There is no detailed description.
Creates instances with per-instance configurations in this managed instance group. Instances are created using the current instance template. The create instances operation is marked DONE if the createInstances request is successful. The underlying actions take additional time. You must separately verify the status of the creating or actions with the listmanagedinstances method.
Deletes the specified managed instance group and all of the instances in that group. Note that the instance group must not belong to a backend service. Read Deleting an instance group for more information.
Flags the specified instances in the managed instance group for immediate deletion. The instances are also removed from any target pools of which they were a member. This method reduces the targetSize of the managed instance group by the number of instances that you delete. This operation is marked as DONE when the action is scheduled even if the instances are still being deleted. You must separately verify the status of the deleting action with the listmanagedinstances method. If the group is part of a backend service that has enabled connection draining, it can take up to 60 seconds after the connection draining duration has elapsed before the VM instance is removed or deleted. You can specify a maximum of 1000 instances with this method per request.
Deletes selected per-instance configurations for the managed instance group.
Returns all of the details about the specified managed instance group.
Creates a managed instance group using the information that you specify in the request. After the group is created, instances in the group are created using the specified instance template. This operation is marked as DONE when the group is created even if the instances in the group have not yet been created. You must separately verify the status of the individual instances with the listmanagedinstances method. A managed instance group can have up to 1000 VM instances per group. Please contact Cloud Support if you need an increase in this limit.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] A list of managed instance groups.
Retrieves a list of managed instance groups that are contained within the specified project and zone.
Lists all errors thrown by actions on instances for a given managed instance group. The filter and orderBy query parameters are not supported.
Lists all of the instances in the managed instance group. Each instance in the list has a currentAction, which indicates the action that the managed instance group is performing on the instance. For example, if the group is still creating an instance, the currentAction is CREATING. If a previous action failed, the list displays the errors for that failed action. The orderBy query parameter is not supported. The pageToken
query parameter is supported only if the group’s listManagedInstancesResults
field is set to PAGINATED
.
Lists all of the per-instance configurations defined for the managed instance group. The orderBy query parameter is not supported.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
instanceGroupManager resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates a managed instance group using the information that you specify in the request. This operation is marked as DONE when the group is patched even if the instances in the group are still in the process of being patched. You must separately verify the status of the individual instances with the listManagedInstances method. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules. If you update your group to specify a new template or instance configuration, it’s possible that your intended specification for each VM in the group is different from the current state of that VM. To learn how to apply an updated configuration to the VMs in a MIG, see Updating instances in a MIG.
Inserts or patches per-instance configurations for the managed instance group. perInstanceConfig.name serves as a key used to distinguish whether to perform insert or patch.
Flags the specified VM instances in the managed instance group to be immediately recreated. Each instance is recreated using the group’s current configuration. This operation is marked as DONE when the flag is set even if the instances have not yet been recreated. You must separately verify the status of each instance by checking its currentAction field; for more information, see Checking the status of managed instances. If the group is part of a backend service that has enabled connection draining, it can take up to 60 seconds after the connection draining duration has elapsed before the VM instance is removed or deleted. You can specify a maximum of 1000 instances with this method per request.
Resizes the managed instance group. If you increase the size, the group creates new instances using the current instance template. If you decrease the size, the group deletes instances. The resize operation is marked DONE when the resize actions are scheduled even if the group has not yet added or deleted any instances. You must separately verify the status of the creating or deleting actions with the listmanagedinstances method. When resizing down, the instance group arbitrarily chooses the order in which VMs are deleted. The group takes into account some VM attributes when making the selection including: + The status of the VM instance. + The health of the VM instance. + The instance template version the VM is based on. + For regional managed instance groups, the location of the VM instance. This list is subject to change. If the group is part of a backend service that has enabled connection draining, it can take up to 60 seconds after the connection draining duration has elapsed before the VM instance is removed or deleted.
Specifies the instance template to use when creating new instances in this group. The templates for existing instances in the group do not change unless you run recreateInstances, run applyUpdatesToInstances, or set the group’s updatePolicy.type to PROACTIVE.
Modifies the target pools to which all instances in this managed instance group are assigned. The target pools automatically apply to all of the instances in the managed instance group. This operation is marked DONE when you make the request even if the instances have not yet been added to their target pools. The change might take some time to apply to all of the instances in the group depending on the size of the group.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Inserts or updates per-instance configurations for the managed instance group. perInstanceConfig.name serves as a key used to distinguish whether to perform insert or patch.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
InstanceGroupManagers.applyUpdatesToInstances
InstanceGroupManagers.createInstances
There is no detailed description.
InstanceGroupManagers.deletePerInstanceConfigs
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
InstanceGroupManagers.patchPerInstanceConfigs
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] The warning that replaces the list of managed instance groups when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
InstanceGroupManagers.updatePerInstanceConfigs
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
instanceGroup resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Removes one or more instances from the specified instance group, but does not delete those instances. If the group is part of a backend service that has enabled connection draining, it can take up to 60 seconds after the connection draining duration before the VM instance is removed or deleted.
Sets the named ports for the specified instance group.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] An informational warning that replaces the list of instance groups when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Creates an instance resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of instances.
Retrieves the list of instances contained within the specified zone.
Retrieves a list of resources that refer to the VM instance specified in the request. For example, if the VM instance is part of a managed or unmanaged instance group, the referrers list includes the instance group. For more information, read Viewing referrers to VM instances.
Contains a list of instance referrers.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
instance resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
Additional instance params.
Perform a manual maintenance on the instance.
There is no detailed description.
Represents the change that you want to make to the instance properties.
There is no detailed description.
Removes resource policies from an instance.
Performs a reset on the instance. This is a hard reset. The VM does not do a graceful shutdown. For more information, see Resetting an instance.
Resumes an instance that was suspended using the instances().suspend method.
Sends diagnostic interrupt to the instance.
Sets deletion protection on the instance.
Sets the auto-delete flag for a disk attached to an instance.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Sets labels on an instance. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
Changes the number and/or type of accelerator for a stopped instance to the values specified in the request.
Changes the machine type for a stopped instance to the machine type specified in the request.
Sets metadata for the specified instance to the data included in the request.
Changes the minimum CPU platform that this instance should use. This method can only be called on a stopped instance. For more information, read Specifying a Minimum CPU Platform.
Sets name of an instance.
Sets an instance’s scheduling options. You can only call this method on a stopped instance, that is, a VM instance that is in a TERMINATED
state. See Instance Life Cycle for more information on the possible instance states. For more information about setting scheduling options for a VM, see Set VM host maintenance policy.
Sets the Google Cloud Armor security policy for the specified instance. For more information, see Google Cloud Armor Overview
Sets the service account on the instance. For more information, read Changing the service account and access scopes for an instance.
Sets the Shielded Instance integrity policy for an instance. You can only use this method on a running instance. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Sets network tags for the specified instance to the data included in the request.
Simulates a host maintenance event on a VM. For more information, see Simulate a host maintenance event.
Starts an instance that was stopped using the instances().stop method. For more information, see Restart an instance.
Starts an instance that was stopped using the instances().stop method. For more information, see Restart an instance.
Stops a running instance, shutting it down cleanly, and allows you to restart the instance at a later time. Stopped instances do not incur VM usage charges while they are stopped. However, resources that the VM is using, such as persistent disks and static IP addresses, will continue to be charged until they are deleted. For more information, see Stopping an instance.
This method suspends a running instance, saving its state to persistent storage, and allows you to resume the instance at a later time. Suspended instances have no compute costs (cores or RAM), and incur only storage charges for the saved VM memory and localSSD data. Any charged resources the virtual machine was using, such as persistent disks and static IP addresses, will continue to be charged while the instance is suspended. For more information, see Suspending and resuming an instance.
Represents an Instance Template resource. Google Compute Engine has two Instance Template resources: *
Global *
Regional You can reuse a global instance template in different regions whereas you can use a regional instance template in a specified region only. If you want to reduce cross-region dependency or achieve data residency, use a regional instance template. To create VMs, managed instance groups, and reservations, you can use either global or regional instance templates. For more information, read Instance Templates.
Contains a list of InstanceTemplatesScopedList.
Retrieves the list of all InstanceTemplates resources, regional and global, available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified instance template. Deleting an instance template is permanent and cannot be undone. It is not possible to delete templates that are already in use by a managed instance group.
Returns the specified instance template.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates an instance template in the specified project using the data that is included in the request. If you are creating a new template to update an existing instance group, your new instance template must use the same network or, if applicable, the same subnetwork as the original template.
A list of instance templates.
Retrieves a list of instance templates that are contained within the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
instanceTemplate resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] An informational warning that replaces the list of instance templates when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Updates the specified access config from an instance’s network interface with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Updates an instance only if the necessary resources are available. This method can update only a specific set of instance properties. See Updating a running instance for a list of updatable instance properties.
Updates the Display config for a VM instance. You can only use this method on a stopped VM instance. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Updates an instance’s network interface. This method can only update an interface’s alias IP range and attached network. See Modifying alias IP ranges for an existing instance for instructions on changing alias IP ranges. See Migrating a VM between networks for instructions on migrating an interface. This method follows PATCH semantics.
Updates the Shielded Instance config for an instance. You can only use this method on a stopped instance. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning which replaces the list of instances when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Represents a InstantSnapshot resource. You can use instant snapshots to create disk rollback points quickly..
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of instantSnapshots. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified InstantSnapshot resource. Keep in mind that deleting a single instantSnapshot might not necessarily delete all the data on that instantSnapshot. If any data on the instantSnapshot that is marked for deletion is needed for subsequent instantSnapshots, the data will be moved to the next corresponding instantSnapshot. For more information, see Deleting instantSnapshots.
Returns the specified InstantSnapshot resource in the specified zone.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates an instant snapshot in the specified zone.
Contains a list of InstantSnapshot resources.
Retrieves the list of InstantSnapshot resources contained within the specified zone.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
instantSnapshot resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Sets the labels on a instantSnapshot in the given zone. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning which replaces the list of instantSnapshots when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
HttpRouteRuleMatch criteria for field values that must stay within the specified integer range.
Represents an Interconnect resource. An Interconnect resource is a dedicated connection between the Google Cloud network and your on-premises network. For more information, read the Dedicated Interconnect Overview.
Represents an Interconnect Attachment (VLAN) resource. You can use Interconnect attachments (VLANS) to connect your Virtual Private Cloud networks to your on-premises networks through an Interconnect. For more information, read Creating VLAN Attachments.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of interconnect attachments. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Deletes the specified interconnect attachment.
Returns the specified interconnect attachment.
Creates an InterconnectAttachment in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Response to the list request, and contains a list of interconnect attachments.
Retrieves the list of interconnect attachments contained within the specified region.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
interconnectAttachment resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Informational metadata about Partner attachments from Partners to display to customers. These fields are propagated from PARTNER_PROVIDER attachments to their corresponding PARTNER attachments.
Updates the specified interconnect attachment with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Information for an interconnect attachment when this belongs to an interconnect of type DEDICATED.
Sets the labels on an InterconnectAttachment. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of addresses when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Describes a single physical circuit between the Customer and Google. CircuitInfo objects are created by Google, so all fields are output only.
Deletes the specified Interconnect.
Diagnostics information about the Interconnect connection, which contains detailed and current technical information about Google’s side of the connection.
Describing the ARP neighbor entries seen on this link
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Describes the status of MACsec encryption on the link.
Returns the specified Interconnect. Get a list of available Interconnects by making a list() request.
Returns the interconnectDiagnostics for the specified Interconnect. In the event of a global outage, do not use this API to make decisions about where to redirect your network traffic. Unlike a VLAN attachment, which is regional, a Cloud Interconnect connection is a global resource. A global outage can prevent this API from functioning properly.
Returns the interconnectMacsecConfig for the specified Interconnect.
Creates an Interconnect in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Response to the list request, and contains a list of interconnects.
Retrieves the list of Interconnects available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Represents an Interconnect Attachment (VLAN) Location resource. You can use this resource to find location details about an Interconnect attachment (VLAN). For more information about interconnect attachments, read Creating VLAN Attachments.
Returns the details for the specified interconnect location. Gets a list of available interconnect locations by making a list() request.
Response to the list request, and contains a list of interconnect locations.
Retrieves the list of interconnect locations available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
interconnectLocation resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Information about any potential InterconnectAttachments between an Interconnect at a specific InterconnectLocation, and a specific Cloud Region.
Configuration information for enabling Media Access Control security (MACsec) on this Cloud Interconnect connection between Google and your on-premises router.
MACsec configuration information for the Interconnect connection. Contains the generated Connectivity Association Key Name (CKN) and the key (CAK) for this Interconnect connection.
Describes a pre-shared key used to setup MACsec in static connectivity association key (CAK) mode.
Describes a pre-shared key used to setup MACsec in static connectivity association key (CAK) mode.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
interconnect resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Description of a planned outage on this Interconnect.
Updates the specified Interconnect with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Represents a Cross-Cloud Interconnect Remote Location resource. You can use this resource to find remote location details about an Interconnect attachment (VLAN).
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Returns the details for the specified interconnect remote location. Gets a list of available interconnect remote locations by making a list() request.
Response to the list request, and contains a list of interconnect remote locations.
Retrieves the list of interconnect remote locations available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
interconnectRemoteLocation resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
Sets the labels on an Interconnect. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
Response for the InterconnectsGetDiagnosticsRequest.
Response for the InterconnectsGetMacsecConfigRequest.
Represents a License resource. A License represents billing and aggregate usage data for public and marketplace images. Caution This resource is intended for use only by third-party partners who are creating Cloud Marketplace images.
Represents a License Code resource. A License Code is a unique identifier used to represent a license resource. Caution This resource is intended for use only by third-party partners who are creating Cloud Marketplace images.
Return a specified license code. License codes are mirrored across all projects that have permissions to read the License Code. Caution This resource is intended for use only by third-party partners who are creating Cloud Marketplace images.
There is no detailed description.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
licenseCode resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource. Caution This resource is intended for use only by third-party partners who are creating Cloud Marketplace images.
Deletes the specified license. Caution This resource is intended for use only by third-party partners who are creating Cloud Marketplace images.
Returns the specified License resource. Caution This resource is intended for use only by third-party partners who are creating Cloud Marketplace images.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists. Caution This resource is intended for use only by third-party partners who are creating Cloud Marketplace images.
Create a License resource in the specified project. Caution This resource is intended for use only by third-party partners who are creating Cloud Marketplace images.
Retrieves the list of licenses available in the specified project. This method does not get any licenses that belong to other projects, including licenses attached to publicly-available images, like Debian 9. If you want to get a list of publicly-available licenses, use this method to make a request to the respective image project, such as debian-cloud or windows-cloud. Caution This resource is intended for use only by third-party partners who are creating Cloud Marketplace images.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
license resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Commitment for a particular license resource.
There is no detailed description.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy. Caution This resource is intended for use only by third-party partners who are creating Cloud Marketplace images.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource. Caution This resource is intended for use only by third-party partners who are creating Cloud Marketplace images.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Provides a localized error message that is safe to return to the user which can be attached to an RPC error.
Configuration for location policy among multiple possible locations (e.g. preferences for zone selection among zones in a single region).
There is no detailed description.
Per-zone constraints on location policy for this zone.
This is deprecated and has no effect. Do not use.
This is deprecated and has no effect. Do not use.
This is deprecated and has no effect. Do not use.
This is deprecated and has no effect. Do not use.
This is deprecated and has no effect. Do not use.
Represents a machine image resource. A machine image is a Compute Engine resource that stores all the configuration, metadata, permissions, and data from one or more disks required to create a Virtual machine (VM) instance. For more information, see Machine images.
Deletes the specified machine image. Deleting a machine image is permanent and cannot be undone.
Returns the specified machine image.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates a machine image in the specified project using the data that is included in the request. If you are creating a new machine image to update an existing instance, your new machine image should use the same network or, if applicable, the same subnetwork as the original instance.
A list of machine images.
Retrieves a list of machine images that are contained within the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
machineImage resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Represents a Machine Type resource. You can use specific machine types for your VM instances based on performance and pricing requirements. For more information, read Machine Types.
[Output Only] A list of accelerator configurations assigned to this machine type.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of machine types. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Returns the specified machine type.
Contains a list of machine types.
Retrieves a list of machine types available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
machineType resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
[Output Only] A list of extended scratch disks assigned to the instance.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] An informational warning that appears when the machine types list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A Managed Instance resource.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Encountered errors during the last attempt to create or delete the instance.
[Output Only] The array of errors encountered while processing this operation.
[Output Only] An optional list of messages that contain the error details. There is a set of defined message types to use for providing details.The syntax depends on the error code. For example, QuotaExceededInfo will have details when the error code is QUOTA_EXCEEDED.
There is no detailed description.
A metadata key/value entry.
Opaque filter criteria used by load balancers to restrict routing configuration to a limited set of load balancing proxies. Proxies and sidecars involved in load balancing would typically present metadata to the load balancers that need to match criteria specified here. If a match takes place, the relevant configuration is made available to those proxies. For each metadataFilter in this list, if its filterMatchCriteria is set to MATCH_ANY, at least one of the filterLabels must match the corresponding label provided in the metadata. If its filterMatchCriteria is set to MATCH_ALL, then all of its filterLabels must match with corresponding labels provided in the metadata. An example for using metadataFilters would be: if load balancing involves Envoys, they receive routing configuration when values in metadataFilters match values supplied in of their XDS requests to loadbalancers.
MetadataFilter label name value pairs that are expected to match corresponding labels presented as metadata to the load balancer.
Metadata
The named port. For example: <“http”, 80>.
Contains NAT IP information of a NAT config (i.e. usage status, mode).
Contains information of a NAT IP.
There is no detailed description.
Represents a VPC Network resource. Networks connect resources to each other and to the internet. For more information, read Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) Network.
Adds a peering to the specified network.
NetworkAttachments A network attachment resource …
Contains a list of NetworkAttachmentsScopedList.
Retrieves the list of all NetworkAttachment resources, regional and global, available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
[Output Only] A connection connected to this network attachment.
Deletes the specified NetworkAttachment in the given scope
Returns the specified NetworkAttachment resource in the given scope.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates a NetworkAttachment in the specified project in the given scope using the parameters that are included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
Lists the NetworkAttachments for a project in the given scope.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
networkAttachment resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified NetworkAttachment resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of network attachments when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified network.
Represents a Google Cloud Armor network edge security service resource.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves the list of all NetworkEdgeSecurityService resources available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified service.
Gets a specified NetworkEdgeSecurityService.
Creates a new service in the specified project using the data included in the request.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
networkEdgeSecurityService resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified policy with the data included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of security policies when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
The network endpoint.
Represents a collection of network endpoints. A network endpoint group (NEG) defines how a set of endpoints should be reached, whether they are reachable, and where they are located. For more information about using NEGs for different use cases, see Network endpoint groups overview.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves the list of network endpoint groups and sorts them by zone. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Configuration for an App Engine network endpoint group (NEG). The service is optional, may be provided explicitly or in the URL mask. The version is optional and can only be provided explicitly or in the URL mask when service is present. Note: App Engine service must be in the same project and located in the same region as the Serverless NEG.
Attach a list of network endpoints to the specified network endpoint group.
Configuration for a Cloud Function network endpoint group (NEG). The function must be provided explicitly or in the URL mask. Note: Cloud Function must be in the same project and located in the same region as the Serverless NEG.
Configuration for a Cloud Run network endpoint group (NEG). The service must be provided explicitly or in the URL mask. The tag is optional, may be provided explicitly or in the URL mask. Note: Cloud Run service must be in the same project and located in the same region as the Serverless NEG.
Deletes the specified network endpoint group. The network endpoints in the NEG and the VM instances they belong to are not terminated when the NEG is deleted. Note that the NEG cannot be deleted if there are backend services referencing it.
Detach a list of network endpoints from the specified network endpoint group.
Returns the specified network endpoint group.
Creates a network endpoint group in the specified project using the parameters that are included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves the list of network endpoint groups that are located in the specified project and zone.
Lists the network endpoints in the specified network endpoint group.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
networkEndpointGroup resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
All data that is specifically relevant to only network endpoint groups of type PRIVATE_SERVICE_CONNECT.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] An informational warning that replaces the list of network endpoint groups when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Inserts an association for the specified firewall policy.
Inserts a rule into a firewall policy.
Copies rules to the specified firewall policy.
Deletes the specified policy.
Gets an association with the specified name.
Returns the specified network firewall policy.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Gets a rule of the specified priority.
Creates a new policy in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Lists all the policies that have been configured for the specified project.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
networkFirewallPolicy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified policy with the data included in the request.
Patches a rule of the specified priority.
Removes an association for the specified firewall policy.
Deletes a rule of the specified priority.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Returns the specified network.
Returns the effective firewalls on a given network.
Creates a network in the specified project using the data included in the request.
A network interface resource attached to an instance.
Contains a list of networks.
Retrieves the list of networks available to the specified project.
Lists the peering routes exchanged over peering connection.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
network resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified network with the data included in the request. Only the following fields can be modified: routingConfig.routingMode.
A network peering attached to a network resource. The message includes the peering name, peer network, peering state, and a flag indicating whether Google Compute Engine should automatically create routes for the peering.
There is no detailed description.
Removes a peering from the specified network.
A routing configuration attached to a network resource. The message includes the list of routers associated with the network, and a flag indicating the type of routing behavior to enforce network-wide.
Switches the network mode from auto subnet mode to custom subnet mode.
Updates the specified network peering with the data included in the request. You can only modify the NetworkPeering.export_custom_routes field and the NetworkPeering.import_custom_routes field.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Represents a sole-tenant Node Group resource. A sole-tenant node is a physical server that is dedicated to hosting VM instances only for your specific project. Use sole-tenant nodes to keep your instances physically separated from instances in other projects, or to group your instances together on the same host hardware. For more information, read Sole-tenant nodes.
Adds specified number of nodes to the node group.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of node groups. Note: use nodeGroups.listNodes for more details about each group. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Deletes the specified NodeGroup resource.
Deletes specified nodes from the node group.
Returns the specified NodeGroup. Get a list of available NodeGroups by making a list() request. Note: the “nodes” field should not be used. Use nodeGroups.listNodes instead.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates a NodeGroup resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of nodeGroups.
Retrieves a list of node groups available to the specified project. Note: use nodeGroups.listNodes for more details about each group.
Lists nodes in the node group.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Time window specified for daily maintenance operations. GCE’s internal maintenance will be performed within this window.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
nodeGroup resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
Updates the specified node group.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Updates the node template of the node group.
Simulates maintenance event on specified nodes from the node group.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] An informational warning that appears when the nodeGroup list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Represent a sole-tenant Node Template resource. You can use a template to define properties for nodes in a node group. For more information, read Creating node groups and instances.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of node templates. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified NodeTemplate resource.
Returns the specified node template.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates a NodeTemplate resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of node templates.
Retrieves a list of node templates available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
nodeTemplate resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] An informational warning that appears when the node templates list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Represent a sole-tenant Node Type resource. Each node within a node group must have a node type. A node type specifies the total amount of cores and memory for that node. Currently, the only available node type is n1-node-96-624 node type that has 96 vCPUs and 624 GB of memory, available in multiple zones. For more information read Node types.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of node types. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Returns the specified node type.
Contains a list of node types.
Retrieves a list of node types available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
nodeType resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] An informational warning that appears when the node types list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Represents a notification endpoint. A notification endpoint resource defines an endpoint to receive notifications when there are status changes detected by the associated health check service. For more information, see Health checks overview.
Represents a gRPC setting that describes one gRPC notification endpoint and the retry duration attempting to send notification to this endpoint.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Represents an Operation resource. Google Compute Engine has three Operation resources: *
Global *
Regional *
Zonal You can use an operation resource to manage asynchronous API requests. For more information, read Handling API responses. Operations can be global, regional or zonal. - For global operations, use the
globalOperations
resource. - For regional operations, use the
regionOperations
resource. - For zonal operations, use the
zoneOperations
resource. For more information, read Global, Regional, and Zonal Resources. Note that completed Operation resources have a limited retention period.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
[Output Only] If errors are generated during processing of the operation, this field will be populated.
[Output Only] The array of errors encountered while processing this operation.
[Output Only] An optional list of messages that contain the error details. There is a set of defined message types to use for providing details.The syntax depends on the error code. For example, QuotaExceededInfo will have details when the error code is QUOTA_EXCEEDED.
Contains a list of Operation resources.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
[Output Only] If warning messages are generated during processing of the operation, this field will be populated.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning which replaces the list of operations when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Settings controlling the eviction of unhealthy hosts from the load balancing pool for the backend service.
Next free: 7
Represents a Packet Mirroring resource. Packet Mirroring clones the traffic of specified instances in your Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) network and forwards it to a collector destination, such as an instance group of an internal TCP/UDP load balancer, for analysis or examination. For more information about setting up Packet Mirroring, see Using Packet Mirroring.
Contains a list of packetMirrorings.
Retrieves an aggregated list of packetMirrorings. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified PacketMirroring resource.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Returns the specified PacketMirroring resource.
Creates a PacketMirroring resource in the specified project and region using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of PacketMirroring resources.
Retrieves a list of PacketMirroring resources available to the specified project and region.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
packetMirroring resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Patches the specified PacketMirroring resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of packetMirrorings when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A matcher for the path portion of the URL. The BackendService from the longest-matched rule will serve the URL. If no rule was matched, the default service is used.
A path-matching rule for a URL. If matched, will use the specified BackendService to handle the traffic arriving at this URL.
There is no detailed description.
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.
There is no detailed description.
Preserved state for a given instance.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Represents a Project resource. A project is used to organize resources in a Google Cloud Platform environment. For more information, read about the Resource Hierarchy.
Disable this project as a shared VPC host project.
Disable a service resource (also known as service project) associated with this host project.
Enable this project as a shared VPC host project.
Enable service resource (a.k.a service project) for a host project, so that subnets in the host project can be used by instances in the service project.
Returns the specified Project resource. To decrease latency for this method, you can optionally omit any unneeded information from the response by using a field mask. This practice is especially recommended for unused quota information (the quotas
field). To exclude one or more fields, set your request’s fields
query parameter to only include the fields you need. For example, to only include the id
and selfLink
fields, add the query parameter ?fields=id,selfLink
to your request.
Gets the shared VPC host project that this project links to. May be empty if no link exists.
Gets service resources (a.k.a service project) associated with this host project.
Lists all shared VPC host projects visible to the user in an organization.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
project resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Moves a persistent disk from one zone to another.
Moves an instance and its attached persistent disks from one zone to another.
Note: Moving VMs or disks by using this method might cause unexpected behavior. For more information, see the
known issue. [Deprecated] This method is deprecated. See
moving instance across zones instead.
Sets the Cloud Armor tier of the project. To set ENTERPRISE or above the billing account of the project must be subscribed to Cloud Armor Enterprise. See Subscribing to Cloud Armor Enterprise for more information.
Sets metadata common to all instances within the specified project using the data included in the request.
Sets the default network tier of the project. The default network tier is used when an address/forwardingRule/instance is created without specifying the network tier field.
Enables the usage export feature and sets the usage export bucket where reports are stored. If you provide an empty request body using this method, the usage export feature will be disabled.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
A public advertised prefix represents an aggregated IP prefix or netblock which customers bring to cloud. The IP prefix is a single unit of route advertisement and is announced globally to the internet.
Announces the specified PublicAdvertisedPrefix
Deletes the specified PublicAdvertisedPrefix
Returns the specified PublicAdvertisedPrefix resource.
Creates a PublicAdvertisedPrefix in the specified project using the parameters that are included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
Lists the PublicAdvertisedPrefixes for a project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
publicAdvertisedPrefix resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified Router resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Represents a CIDR range which can be used to assign addresses.
Withdraws the specified PublicAdvertisedPrefix
A PublicDelegatedPrefix resource represents an IP block within a PublicAdvertisedPrefix that is configured within a single cloud scope (global or region). IPs in the block can be allocated to resources within that scope. Public delegated prefixes may be further broken up into smaller IP blocks in the same scope as the parent block.
There is no detailed description.
Lists all PublicDelegatedPrefix resources owned by the specific project across all scopes. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Announces the specified PublicDelegatedPrefix in the given region.
Deletes the specified PublicDelegatedPrefix in the given region.
Returns the specified PublicDelegatedPrefix resource in the given region.
Creates a PublicDelegatedPrefix in the specified project in the given region using the parameters that are included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
Lists the PublicDelegatedPrefixes for a project in the given region.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
publicDelegatedPrefix resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified PublicDelegatedPrefix resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Represents a sub PublicDelegatedPrefix.
Withdraws the specified PublicDelegatedPrefix in the given region.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning which replaces the list of public delegated prefixes when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A quotas entry.
Additional details for quota exceeded error for resource quota.
Represents a reference to a resource.
Represents a Region resource. A region is a geographical area where a resource is located. For more information, read Regions and Zones.
There is no detailed description.
Deletes the specified autoscaler.
Returns the specified autoscaler.
Creates an autoscaler in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of autoscalers.
Retrieves a list of autoscalers contained within the specified region.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionAutoscaler resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates an autoscaler in the specified project using the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Updates an autoscaler in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Deletes the specified regional BackendService resource.
Returns the specified regional BackendService resource.
Gets the most recent health check results for this regional BackendService.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates a regional BackendService resource in the specified project using the data included in the request. For more information, see Backend services overview.
Retrieves the list of regional BackendService resources available to the specified project in the given region.
Retrieves an aggregated list of all usable backend services in the specified project in the given region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionBackendService resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates the specified regional BackendService resource with the data included in the request. For more information, see Understanding backend services This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Sets the Google Cloud Armor security policy for the specified backend service. For more information, see Google Cloud Armor Overview
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Updates the specified regional BackendService resource with the data included in the request. For more information, see Backend services overview .
Retrieves an aggregated list of commitments by region. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
Returns the specified commitment resource.
Creates a commitment in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Retrieves a list of commitments contained within the specified region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionCommitment resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates the specified commitment with the data included in the request. Update is performed only on selected fields included as part of update-mask. Only the following fields can be modified: auto_renew.
Adds existing resource policies to a regional disk. You can only add one policy which will be applied to this disk for scheduling snapshot creation.
Bulk create a set of disks.
Creates a snapshot of a specified persistent disk. For regular snapshot creation, consider using snapshots.insert instead, as that method supports more features, such as creating snapshots in a project different from the source disk project.
Deletes the specified regional persistent disk. Deleting a regional disk removes all the replicas of its data permanently and is irreversible. However, deleting a disk does not delete any snapshots previously made from the disk. You must separately delete snapshots.
Returns a specified regional persistent disk.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates a persistent regional disk in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Retrieves the list of persistent disks contained within the specified region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionDisk resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Removes resource policies from a regional disk.
Resizes the specified regional persistent disk.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Sets the labels on the target regional disk.
Starts asynchronous replication. Must be invoked on the primary disk.
Stops asynchronous replication. Can be invoked either on the primary or on the secondary disk.
Stops asynchronous replication for a consistency group of disks. Can be invoked either in the primary or secondary scope.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Returns the specified regional disk type.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves a list of regional disk types available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionDiskType resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Update the specified disk with the data included in the request. Update is performed only on selected fields included as part of update-mask. Only the following fields can be modified: user_license.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Returns the specified Region resource. To decrease latency for this method, you can optionally omit any unneeded information from the response by using a field mask. This practice is especially recommended for unused quota information (the quotas
field). To exclude one or more fields, set your request’s fields
query parameter to only include the fields you need. For example, to only include the id
and selfLink
fields, add the query parameter ?fields=id,selfLink
to your request.
Deletes the specified HealthCheck resource.
Returns the specified HealthCheck resource.
Creates a HealthCheck resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Retrieves the list of HealthCheck resources available to the specified project.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionHealthCheck resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates a HealthCheck resource in the specified project using the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Deletes the specified regional HealthCheckService.
Returns the specified regional HealthCheckService resource.
Creates a regional HealthCheckService resource in the specified project and region using the data included in the request.
Lists all the HealthCheckService resources that have been configured for the specified project in the given region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionHealthCheckService resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates the specified regional HealthCheckService resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Updates a HealthCheck resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Creates multiple instances in a given region. Count specifies the number of instances to create.
Returns the specified instance group resource.
Contains a list of InstanceGroup resources.
Retrieves the list of instance group resources contained within the specified region.
Lists the instances in the specified instance group and displays information about the named ports. Depending on the specified options, this method can list all instances or only the instances that are running. The orderBy query parameter is not supported.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Flags the specified instances to be immediately removed from the managed instance group. Abandoning an instance does not delete the instance, but it does remove the instance from any target pools that are applied by the managed instance group. This method reduces the targetSize of the managed instance group by the number of instances that you abandon. This operation is marked as DONE when the action is scheduled even if the instances have not yet been removed from the group. You must separately verify the status of the abandoning action with the listmanagedinstances method. If the group is part of a backend service that has enabled connection draining, it can take up to 60 seconds after the connection draining duration has elapsed before the VM instance is removed or deleted. You can specify a maximum of 1000 instances with this method per request.
Apply updates to selected instances the managed instance group.
Creates instances with per-instance configurations in this regional managed instance group. Instances are created using the current instance template. The create instances operation is marked DONE if the createInstances request is successful. The underlying actions take additional time. You must separately verify the status of the creating or actions with the listmanagedinstances method.
Deletes the specified managed instance group and all of the instances in that group.
Flags the specified instances in the managed instance group to be immediately deleted. The instances are also removed from any target pools of which they were a member. This method reduces the targetSize of the managed instance group by the number of instances that you delete. The deleteInstances operation is marked DONE if the deleteInstances request is successful. The underlying actions take additional time. You must separately verify the status of the deleting action with the listmanagedinstances method. If the group is part of a backend service that has enabled connection draining, it can take up to 60 seconds after the connection draining duration has elapsed before the VM instance is removed or deleted. You can specify a maximum of 1000 instances with this method per request.
RegionInstanceGroupManagers.deletePerInstanceConfigs
Deletes selected per-instance configurations for the managed instance group.
Returns all of the details about the specified managed instance group.
Creates a managed instance group using the information that you specify in the request. After the group is created, instances in the group are created using the specified instance template. This operation is marked as DONE when the group is created even if the instances in the group have not yet been created. You must separately verify the status of the individual instances with the listmanagedinstances method. A regional managed instance group can contain up to 2000 instances.
Contains a list of managed instance groups.
Retrieves the list of managed instance groups that are contained within the specified region.
Lists all errors thrown by actions on instances for a given regional managed instance group. The filter and orderBy query parameters are not supported.
Lists the instances in the managed instance group and instances that are scheduled to be created. The list includes any current actions that the group has scheduled for its instances. The orderBy query parameter is not supported. The pageToken
query parameter is supported only if the group’s listManagedInstancesResults
field is set to PAGINATED
.
Lists all of the per-instance configurations defined for the managed instance group. The orderBy query parameter is not supported.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionInstanceGroupManager resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Updates a managed instance group using the information that you specify in the request. This operation is marked as DONE when the group is patched even if the instances in the group are still in the process of being patched. You must separately verify the status of the individual instances with the listmanagedinstances method. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules. If you update your group to specify a new template or instance configuration, it’s possible that your intended specification for each VM in the group is different from the current state of that VM. To learn how to apply an updated configuration to the VMs in a MIG, see Updating instances in a MIG.
RegionInstanceGroupManagers.patchPerInstanceConfigs
Inserts or patches per-instance configurations for the managed instance group. perInstanceConfig.name serves as a key used to distinguish whether to perform insert or patch.
Flags the specified VM instances in the managed instance group to be immediately recreated. Each instance is recreated using the group’s current configuration. This operation is marked as DONE when the flag is set even if the instances have not yet been recreated. You must separately verify the status of each instance by checking its currentAction field; for more information, see Checking the status of managed instances. If the group is part of a backend service that has enabled connection draining, it can take up to 60 seconds after the connection draining duration has elapsed before the VM instance is removed or deleted. You can specify a maximum of 1000 instances with this method per request.
Changes the intended size of the managed instance group. If you increase the size, the group creates new instances using the current instance template. If you decrease the size, the group deletes one or more instances. The resize operation is marked DONE if the resize request is successful. The underlying actions take additional time. You must separately verify the status of the creating or deleting actions with the listmanagedinstances method. If the group is part of a backend service that has enabled connection draining, it can take up to 60 seconds after the connection draining duration has elapsed before the VM instance is removed or deleted.
Sets the instance template to use when creating new instances or recreating instances in this group. Existing instances are not affected.
Modifies the target pools to which all new instances in this group are assigned. Existing instances in the group are not affected.
RegionInstanceGroupManagers.updatePerInstanceConfigs
Inserts or updates per-instance configurations for the managed instance group. perInstanceConfig.name serves as a key used to distinguish whether to perform insert or patch.
There is no detailed description.
RegionInstanceGroupManagers.applyUpdatesToInstances
RegionInstanceGroupManagers.createInstances
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionInstanceGroup resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Sets the named ports for the specified regional instance group.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionInstance resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Deletes the specified instance template. Deleting an instance template is permanent and cannot be undone.
Returns the specified instance template.
Creates an instance template in the specified project and region using the global instance template whose URL is included in the request.
Retrieves a list of instance templates that are contained within the specified project and region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionInstanceTemplate resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Deletes the specified InstantSnapshot resource. Keep in mind that deleting a single instantSnapshot might not necessarily delete all the data on that instantSnapshot. If any data on the instantSnapshot that is marked for deletion is needed for subsequent instantSnapshots, the data will be moved to the next corresponding instantSnapshot. For more information, see Deleting instantSnapshots.
Returns the specified InstantSnapshot resource in the specified region.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates an instant snapshot in the specified region.
Retrieves the list of InstantSnapshot resources contained within the specified region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionInstantSnapshot resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Sets the labels on a instantSnapshot in the given region. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Contains a list of region resources.
Retrieves the list of region resources available to the specified project. To decrease latency for this method, you can optionally omit any unneeded information from the response by using a field mask. This practice is especially recommended for unused quota information (the items.quotas
field). To exclude one or more fields, set your request’s fields
query parameter to only include the fields you need. For example, to only include the id
and selfLink
fields, add the query parameter ?fields=id,selfLink
to your request.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
region resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Attach a list of network endpoints to the specified network endpoint group.
Deletes the specified network endpoint group. Note that the NEG cannot be deleted if it is configured as a backend of a backend service.
Detach the network endpoint from the specified network endpoint group.
Returns the specified network endpoint group.
Creates a network endpoint group in the specified project using the parameters that are included in the request.
Retrieves the list of regional network endpoint groups available to the specified project in the given region.
Lists the network endpoints in the specified network endpoint group.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionNetworkEndpointGroup resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Inserts an association for the specified network firewall policy.
Inserts a rule into a network firewall policy.
Copies rules to the specified network firewall policy.
Deletes the specified network firewall policy.
Gets an association with the specified name.
Returns the specified network firewall policy.
Returns the effective firewalls on a given network.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Gets a rule of the specified priority.
Creates a new network firewall policy in the specified project and region.
Lists all the network firewall policies that have been configured for the specified project in the given region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionNetworkFirewallPolicy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified network firewall policy.
Patches a rule of the specified priority.
Removes an association for the specified network firewall policy.
Deletes a rule of the specified priority.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Deletes the specified NotificationEndpoint in the given region
Returns the specified NotificationEndpoint resource in the given region.
Create a NotificationEndpoint in the specified project in the given region using the parameters that are included in the request.
Lists the NotificationEndpoints for a project in the given region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionNotificationEndpoint resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Deletes the specified region-specific Operations resource.
Retrieves the specified region-specific Operations resource.
Retrieves a list of Operation resources contained within the specified region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionOperation resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Waits for the specified Operation resource to return as DONE
or for the request to approach the 2 minute deadline, and retrieves the specified Operation resource. This method differs from the GET
method in that it waits for no more than the default deadline (2 minutes) and then returns the current state of the operation, which might be DONE
or still in progress. This method is called on a best-effort basis. Specifically: - In uncommon cases, when the server is overloaded, the request might return before the default deadline is reached, or might return after zero seconds. - If the default deadline is reached, there is no guarantee that the operation is actually done when the method returns. Be prepared to retry if the operation is not DONE
.
Inserts a rule into a security policy.
Deletes the specified policy.
List all of the ordered rules present in a single specified policy.
Gets a rule at the specified priority.
Creates a new policy in the specified project using the data included in the request.
List all the policies that have been configured for the specified project and region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionSecurityPolicy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified policy with the data included in the request. To clear fields in the policy, leave the fields empty and specify them in the updateMask. This cannot be used to be update the rules in the policy. Please use the per rule methods like addRule, patchRule, and removeRule instead.
Patches a rule at the specified priority. To clear fields in the rule, leave the fields empty and specify them in the updateMask.
Deletes a rule at the specified priority.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Deletes the specified SslCertificate resource in the region.
Returns the specified SslCertificate resource in the specified region. Get a list of available SSL certificates by making a list() request.
Creates a SslCertificate resource in the specified project and region using the data included in the request
Retrieves the list of SslCertificate resources available to the specified project in the specified region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionSslCertificate resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Deletes the specified SSL policy. The SSL policy resource can be deleted only if it is not in use by any TargetHttpsProxy or TargetSslProxy resources.
Lists all of the ordered rules present in a single specified policy.
Creates a new policy in the specified project and region using the data included in the request.
Lists all features that can be specified in the SSL policy when using custom profile.
Lists all the SSL policies that have been configured for the specified project and region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionSslPolicy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified SSL policy with the data included in the request.
Deletes the specified TargetHttpProxy resource.
Returns the specified TargetHttpProxy resource in the specified region.
Creates a TargetHttpProxy resource in the specified project and region using the data included in the request.
Retrieves the list of TargetHttpProxy resources available to the specified project in the specified region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionTargetHttpProxy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Changes the URL map for TargetHttpProxy.
There is no detailed description.
Deletes the specified TargetHttpsProxy resource.
Returns the specified TargetHttpsProxy resource in the specified region.
Creates a TargetHttpsProxy resource in the specified project and region using the data included in the request.
Retrieves the list of TargetHttpsProxy resources available to the specified project in the specified region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionTargetHttpsProxy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified regional TargetHttpsProxy resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Replaces SslCertificates for TargetHttpsProxy.
Changes the URL map for TargetHttpsProxy.
Deletes the specified TargetTcpProxy resource.
Returns the specified TargetTcpProxy resource.
Creates a TargetTcpProxy resource in the specified project and region using the data included in the request.
Retrieves a list of TargetTcpProxy resources available to the specified project in a given region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionTargetTcpProxy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Deletes the specified UrlMap resource.
Returns the specified UrlMap resource.
Creates a UrlMap resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Retrieves the list of UrlMap resources available to the specified project in the specified region.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionUrlMap resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified UrlMap resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Updates the specified UrlMap resource with the data included in the request.
Runs static validation for the UrlMap. In particular, the tests of the provided UrlMap will be run. Calling this method does NOT create the UrlMap.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves the list of Zone resources under the specific region available to the specified project.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
regionZone resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
A policy that specifies how requests intended for the route’s backends are shadowed to a separate mirrored backend service. The load balancer doesn’t wait for responses from the shadow service. Before sending traffic to the shadow service, the host or authority header is suffixed with -shadow.
Represents a reservation resource. A reservation ensures that capacity is held in a specific zone even if the reserved VMs are not running. For more information, read Reserving zonal resources.
Specifies the reservations that this instance can consume from.
Contains a list of reservations.
Retrieves an aggregated list of reservations. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified reservation.
Retrieves information about the specified reservation.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates a new reservation. For more information, read Reserving zonal resources.
There is no detailed description.
A list of all the reservations that have been configured for the specified project in specified zone.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
reservation resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Resizes the reservation (applicable to standalone reservations only). For more information, read Modifying reservations.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Update share settings of the reservation.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of reservations when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Commitment for a particular resource (a Commitment is composed of one or more of these).
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of resourcePolicies when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Represents a Resource Policy resource. You can use resource policies to schedule actions for some Compute Engine resources. For example, you can use them to schedule persistent disk snapshots.
Contains a list of resourcePolicies.
Retrieves an aggregated list of resource policies. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Time window specified for daily operations.
Deletes the specified resource policy.
Resource policy for disk consistency groups.
Retrieves all information of the specified resource policy.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
A GroupPlacementPolicy specifies resource placement configuration. It specifies the failure bucket separation as well as network locality
Time window specified for hourly operations.
Creates a new resource policy.
An InstanceSchedulePolicy specifies when and how frequent certain operations are performed on the instance.
Schedule for an instance operation.
There is no detailed description.
A list all the resource policies that have been configured for the specified project in specified region.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
resourcePolicy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Modify the specified resource policy.
Contains output only fields. Use this sub-message for all output fields set on ResourcePolicy. The internal structure of this “status” field should mimic the structure of ResourcePolicy proto specification.
There is no detailed description.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
A snapshot schedule policy specifies when and how frequently snapshots are to be created for the target disk. Also specifies how many and how long these scheduled snapshots should be retained.
Policy for retention of scheduled snapshots.
A schedule for disks where the schedueled operations are performed.
Specified snapshot properties for scheduled snapshots created by this policy.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
Time window specified for weekly operations.
There is no detailed description.
Contains output only fields. Use this sub-message for actual values set on Instance attributes as compared to the value requested by the user (intent) in their instance CRUD calls.
Represents a Route resource. A route defines a path from VM instances in the VPC network to a specific destination. This destination can be inside or outside the VPC network. For more information, read the Routes overview.
There is no detailed description.
Deletes the specified Route resource.
Returns the specified Route resource.
Creates a Route resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of Route resources.
Retrieves the list of Route resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
route resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
[Output Only] If potential misconfigurations are detected for this route, this field will be populated with warning messages.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Represents a Cloud Router resource. For more information about Cloud Router, read the Cloud Router overview.
Description-tagged IP ranges for the router to advertise.
Contains a list of routers.
Retrieves an aggregated list of routers. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Deletes the specified Router resource.
Returns the specified Router resource.
Retrieves runtime NAT IP information.
Retrieves runtime Nat mapping information of VM endpoints.
Retrieves runtime information of the specified router.
Creates a Router resource in the specified project and region using the data included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
Contains a list of Router resources.
Retrieves a list of Router resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
router resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Represents a Nat resource. It enables the VMs within the specified subnetworks to access Internet without external IP addresses. It specifies a list of subnetworks (and the ranges within) that want to use NAT. Customers can also provide the external IPs that would be used for NAT. GCP would auto-allocate ephemeral IPs if no external IPs are provided.
Configuration of logging on a NAT.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Defines the IP ranges that want to use NAT for a subnetwork.
Patches the specified Router resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Preview fields auto-generated during router create and update operations. Calling this method does NOT create or update the router.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Status of a NAT contained in this router.
Status of a NAT Rule contained in this NAT.
There is no detailed description.
Updates the specified Router resource with the data included in the request. This method conforms to PUT semantics, which requests that the state of the target resource be created or replaced with the state defined by the representation enclosed in the request message payload.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of routers when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
This is deprecated and has no effect. Do not use.
There is no detailed description.
DEPRECATED: Please use compute#savedDisk instead. An instance-attached disk resource.
An instance-attached disk resource.
There is no detailed description.
Sets the scheduling options for an Instance.
Node Affinity: the configuration of desired nodes onto which this Instance could be scheduled.
An instance’s screenshot.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of security policies when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Represents a Google Cloud Armor security policy resource. Only external backend services that use load balancers can reference a security policy. For more information, see Google Cloud Armor security policy overview.
Configuration options for Cloud Armor Adaptive Protection (CAAP).
Configuration options for L7 DDoS detection. This field is only supported in Global Security Policies of type CLOUD_ARMOR.
There is no detailed description.
Inserts a rule into a security policy.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves the list of all SecurityPolicy resources, regional and global, available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
There is no detailed description.
Deletes the specified policy.
List all of the ordered rules present in a single specified policy.
Gets a rule at the specified priority.
Creates a new policy in the specified project using the data included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
List all the policies that have been configured for the specified project.
Gets the current list of preconfigured Web Application Firewall (WAF) expressions.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
securityPolicy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified policy with the data included in the request. To clear fields in the policy, leave the fields empty and specify them in the updateMask. This cannot be used to be update the rules in the policy. Please use the per rule methods like addRule, patchRule, and removeRule instead.
Patches a rule at the specified priority. To clear fields in the rule, leave the fields empty and specify them in the updateMask.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Deletes a rule at the specified priority.
Represents a rule that describes one or more match conditions along with the action to be taken when traffic matches this condition (allow or deny).
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Represents a match condition that incoming traffic is evaluated against. Exactly one field must be specified.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Represents a match condition that incoming network traffic is evaluated against.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Sets the labels on a security policy. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
There is no detailed description.
The authentication and authorization settings for a BackendService.
An instance serial console output.
There is no detailed description.
A service account.
Represents a ServiceAttachment resource. A service attachment represents a service that a producer has exposed. It encapsulates the load balancer which fronts the service runs and a list of NAT IP ranges that the producers uses to represent the consumers connecting to the service.
Contains a list of ServiceAttachmentsScopedList.
Retrieves the list of all ServiceAttachment resources, regional and global, available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
[Output Only] A connection connected to this service attachment.
There is no detailed description.
Deletes the specified ServiceAttachment in the given scope
Returns the specified ServiceAttachment resource in the given scope.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates a ServiceAttachment in the specified project in the given scope using the parameters that are included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
Lists the ServiceAttachments for a project in the given scope.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
serviceAttachment resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified ServiceAttachment resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of service attachments when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
The share setting for reservations and sole tenancy node groups.
Config for each project in the share settings.
A set of Shielded Instance options.
A Shielded Instance Identity.
A Shielded Instance Identity Entry.
The policy describes the baseline against which Instance boot integrity is measured.
Represents a customer-supplied Signing Key used by Cloud CDN Signed URLs
Represents a Persistent Disk Snapshot resource. You can use snapshots to back up data on a regular interval. For more information, read Creating persistent disk snapshots.
Deletes the specified Snapshot resource. Keep in mind that deleting a single snapshot might not necessarily delete all the data on that snapshot. If any data on the snapshot that is marked for deletion is needed for subsequent snapshots, the data will be moved to the next corresponding snapshot. For more information, see Deleting snapshots.
Returns the specified Snapshot resource.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates a snapshot in the specified project using the data included in the request. For regular snapshot creation, consider using this method instead of disks.createSnapshot, as this method supports more features, such as creating snapshots in a project different from the source disk project.
Contains a list of Snapshot resources.
Retrieves the list of Snapshot resources contained within the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
snapshot resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Sets the labels on a snapshot. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
Get snapshot settings.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
snapshotSetting resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patch snapshot settings.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
A structure for specifying storage locations.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
There is no detailed description.
A specification of the parameters to use when creating the instance template from a source instance.
DEPRECATED: Please use compute#instanceProperties instead. New properties will not be added to this field.
Represents an SSL certificate resource. Google Compute Engine has two SSL certificate resources: *
Global *
Regional The global SSL certificates (sslCertificates) are used by: - Global external Application Load Balancers - Classic Application Load Balancers - Proxy Network Load Balancers (with target SSL proxies) The regional SSL certificates (regionSslCertificates) are used by: - Regional external Application Load Balancers - Regional internal Application Load Balancers Optionally, certificate file contents that you upload can contain a set of up to five PEM-encoded certificates. The API call creates an object (sslCertificate) that holds this data. You can use SSL keys and certificates to secure connections to a load balancer. For more information, read Creating and using SSL certificates, SSL certificates quotas and limits, and Troubleshooting SSL certificates.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves the list of all SslCertificate resources, regional and global, available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified SslCertificate resource.
Returns the specified SslCertificate resource.
Creates a SslCertificate resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of SslCertificate resources.
Retrieves the list of SslCertificate resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Configuration and status of a managed SSL certificate.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
sslCertificate resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Configuration and status of a self-managed SSL certificate.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of backend services when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of SSL policies when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Represents an SSL Policy resource. Use SSL policies to control SSL features, such as versions and cipher suites, that are offered by Application Load Balancers and proxy Network Load Balancers. For more information, read SSL policies overview.
Retrieves the list of all SslPolicy resources, regional and global, available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
Deletes the specified SSL policy. The SSL policy resource can be deleted only if it is not in use by any TargetHttpsProxy or TargetSslProxy resources.
Lists all of the ordered rules present in a single specified policy.
Returns the specified SSL policy resource.
Lists all features that can be specified in the SSL policy when using custom profile.
Lists all the SSL policies that have been configured for the specified project.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
sslPolicy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified SSL policy with the data included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] If potential misconfigurations are detected for this SSL policy, this field will be populated with warning messages.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Configuration of preserved resources.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
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.
Represents a Subnetwork resource. A subnetwork (also known as a subnet) is a logical partition of a Virtual Private Cloud network with one primary IP range and zero or more secondary IP ranges. For more information, read Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) Network.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of subnetworks. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified subnetwork.
Expands the IP CIDR range of the subnetwork to a specified value.
Returns the specified subnetwork.
Gets the access control policy for a resource. May be empty if no such policy or resource exists.
Creates a subnetwork in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of Subnetwork resources.
Retrieves a list of subnetworks available to the specified project.
Retrieves an aggregated list of all usable subnetworks in the project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
The available logging options for this subnetwork.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
subnetwork resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified subnetwork with the data included in the request. Only certain fields can be updated with a patch request as indicated in the field descriptions. You must specify the current fingerprint of the subnetwork resource being patched.
Represents a secondary IP range of a subnetwork.
Sets the access control policy on the specified resource. Replaces any existing policy.
Set whether VMs in this subnet can access Google services without assigning external IP addresses through Private Google Access.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
An informational warning that appears when the list of addresses is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Subsetting configuration for this BackendService. Currently this is applicable only for Internal TCP/UDP load balancing, Internal HTTP(S) load balancing and Traffic Director.
There is no detailed description.
A set of instance tags.
Represents a Target gRPC Proxy resource. A target gRPC proxy is a component of load balancers intended for load balancing gRPC traffic. Only global forwarding rules with load balancing scheme INTERNAL_SELF_MANAGED can reference a target gRPC proxy. The target gRPC Proxy references a URL map that specifies how traffic is routed to gRPC backend services.
Deletes the specified TargetGrpcProxy in the given scope
Returns the specified TargetGrpcProxy resource in the given scope.
Creates a TargetGrpcProxy in the specified project in the given scope using the parameters that are included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
Lists the TargetGrpcProxies for a project in the given scope.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
targetGrpcProxy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified TargetGrpcProxy resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of backend services when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Represents a Target HTTP Proxy resource. Google Compute Engine has two Target HTTP Proxy resources: *
Global *
Regional A target HTTP proxy is a component of Google Cloud HTTP load balancers. * targetHttpProxies are used by global external Application Load Balancers, classic Application Load Balancers, cross-region internal Application Load Balancers, and Traffic Director. * regionTargetHttpProxies are used by regional internal Application Load Balancers and regional external Application Load Balancers. Forwarding rules reference a target HTTP proxy, and the target proxy then references a URL map. For more information, read Using Target Proxies and Forwarding rule concepts.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves the list of all TargetHttpProxy resources, regional and global, available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
Deletes the specified TargetHttpProxy resource.
Returns the specified TargetHttpProxy resource.
Creates a TargetHttpProxy resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
A list of TargetHttpProxy resources.
Retrieves the list of TargetHttpProxy resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
targetHttpProxy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified TargetHttpProxy resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Changes the URL map for TargetHttpProxy.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of backend services when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Represents a Target HTTPS Proxy resource. Google Compute Engine has two Target HTTPS Proxy resources: *
Global *
Regional A target HTTPS proxy is a component of GCP HTTPS load balancers. * targetHttpProxies are used by global external Application Load Balancers, classic Application Load Balancers, cross-region internal Application Load Balancers, and Traffic Director. * regionTargetHttpProxies are used by regional internal Application Load Balancers and regional external Application Load Balancers. Forwarding rules reference a target HTTPS proxy, and the target proxy then references a URL map. For more information, read Using Target Proxies and Forwarding rule concepts.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves the list of all TargetHttpsProxy resources, regional and global, available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified TargetHttpsProxy resource.
Returns the specified TargetHttpsProxy resource.
Creates a TargetHttpsProxy resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of TargetHttpsProxy resources.
Retrieves the list of TargetHttpsProxy resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
targetHttpsProxy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified TargetHttpsProxy resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
Changes the Certificate Map for TargetHttpsProxy.
Sets the QUIC override policy for TargetHttpsProxy.
Replaces SslCertificates for TargetHttpsProxy.
Sets the SSL policy for TargetHttpsProxy. The SSL policy specifies the server-side support for SSL features. This affects connections between clients and the HTTPS proxy load balancer. They do not affect the connection between the load balancer and the backends.
Changes the URL map for TargetHttpsProxy.
Represents a Target Instance resource. You can use a target instance to handle traffic for one or more forwarding rules, which is ideal for forwarding protocol traffic that is managed by a single source. For example, ESP, AH, TCP, or UDP. For more information, read Target instances.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of target instances. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified TargetInstance resource.
Returns the specified TargetInstance resource.
Creates a TargetInstance resource in the specified project and zone using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of TargetInstance resources.
Retrieves a list of TargetInstance resources available to the specified project and zone.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
targetInstance resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Sets the Google Cloud Armor security policy for the specified target instance. For more information, see Google Cloud Armor Overview
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of addresses when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Represents a Target Pool resource. Target pools are used with external passthrough Network Load Balancers. A target pool references member instances, an associated legacy HttpHealthCheck resource, and, optionally, a backup target pool. For more information, read Using target pools.
Adds health check URLs to a target pool.
Adds an instance to a target pool.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of target pools. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified target pool.
Returns the specified target pool.
Gets the most recent health check results for each IP for the instance that is referenced by the given target pool.
Creates a target pool in the specified project and region using the data included in the request.
There is no detailed description.
Contains a list of TargetPool resources.
Retrieves a list of target pools available to the specified project and region.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
targetPool resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Removes health check URL from a target pool.
Removes instance URL from a target pool.
Changes a backup target pool’s configurations.
Sets the Google Cloud Armor security policy for the specified target pool. For more information, see Google Cloud Armor Overview
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of addresses when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Represents a Target SSL Proxy resource. A target SSL proxy is a component of a Proxy Network Load Balancer. The forwarding rule references the target SSL proxy, and the target proxy then references a backend service. For more information, read Proxy Network Load Balancer overview.
Deletes the specified TargetSslProxy resource.
Returns the specified TargetSslProxy resource.
Creates a TargetSslProxy resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of TargetSslProxy resources.
Retrieves the list of TargetSslProxy resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
targetSslProxy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Changes the BackendService for TargetSslProxy.
Changes the Certificate Map for TargetSslProxy.
Changes the ProxyHeaderType for TargetSslProxy.
Changes SslCertificates for TargetSslProxy.
Sets the SSL policy for TargetSslProxy. The SSL policy specifies the server-side support for SSL features. This affects connections between clients and the load balancer. They do not affect the connection between the load balancer and the backends.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of backend services when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Represents a Target TCP Proxy resource. A target TCP proxy is a component of a Proxy Network Load Balancer. The forwarding rule references the target TCP proxy, and the target proxy then references a backend service. For more information, read Proxy Network Load Balancer overview.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves the list of all TargetTcpProxy resources, regional and global, available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified TargetTcpProxy resource.
Returns the specified TargetTcpProxy resource.
Creates a TargetTcpProxy resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of TargetTcpProxy resources.
Retrieves the list of TargetTcpProxy resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
targetTcpProxy resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Changes the BackendService for TargetTcpProxy.
Changes the ProxyHeaderType for TargetTcpProxy.
Represents a Target VPN Gateway resource. The target VPN gateway resource represents a Classic Cloud VPN gateway. For more information, read the the Cloud VPN Overview.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of target VPN gateways. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified target VPN gateway.
Returns the specified target VPN gateway.
Creates a target VPN gateway in the specified project and region using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of TargetVpnGateway resources.
Retrieves a list of target VPN gateways available to the specified project and region.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
targetVpnGateway resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Sets the labels on a TargetVpnGateway. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning which replaces the list of addresses when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
Upcoming Maintenance notification information.
Represents a URL Map resource. Compute Engine has two URL Map resources: *
Global *
Regional A URL map resource is a component of certain types of cloud load balancers and Traffic Director: * urlMaps are used by global external Application Load Balancers, classic Application Load Balancers, and cross-region internal Application Load Balancers. * regionUrlMaps are used by internal Application Load Balancers, regional external Application Load Balancers and regional internal Application Load Balancers. For a list of supported URL map features by the load balancer type, see the Load balancing features: Routing and traffic management table. For a list of supported URL map features for Traffic Director, see the Traffic Director features: Routing and traffic management table. This resource defines mappings from hostnames and URL paths to either a backend service or a backend bucket. To use the global urlMaps resource, the backend service must have a loadBalancingScheme of either EXTERNAL or INTERNAL_SELF_MANAGED. To use the regionUrlMaps resource, the backend service must have a loadBalancingScheme of INTERNAL_MANAGED. For more information, read URL Map Concepts.
Retrieves the list of all UrlMap resources, regional and global, available to the specified project. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
Deletes the specified UrlMap resource.
Returns the specified UrlMap resource.
Creates a UrlMap resource in the specified project using the data included in the request.
Initiates a cache invalidation operation, invalidating the specified path, scoped to the specified UrlMap. For more information, see
Invalidating cached content.
Contains a list of UrlMap resources.
Retrieves the list of UrlMap resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
urlMap resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Patches the specified UrlMap resource with the data included in the request. This method supports PATCH semantics and uses the JSON merge patch format and processing rules.
There is no detailed description.
Message for the expected URL mappings.
HTTP headers used in UrlMapTests.
Updates the specified UrlMap resource with the data included in the request.
Runs static validation for the UrlMap. In particular, the tests of the provided UrlMap will be run. Calling this method does NOT create the UrlMap.
Message representing the validation result for a UrlMap.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of backend services when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
The spec for modifying the path before sending the request to the matched backend service.
Subnetwork which the current user has compute.subnetworks.use permission on.
Secondary IP range of a usable subnetwork.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
The location in Cloud Storage and naming method of the daily usage report. Contains bucket_name and report_name prefix.
Contain information of Nat mapping for a VM endpoint (i.e., NIC).
Contain information of Nat mapping for an interface of this endpoint.
Contains information of NAT Mappings provided by a NAT Rule.
Contains a list of VmEndpointNatMappings.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Represents a HA VPN gateway. HA VPN is a high-availability (HA) Cloud VPN solution that lets you securely connect your on-premises network to your Google Cloud Virtual Private Cloud network through an IPsec VPN connection in a single region. For more information about Cloud HA VPN solutions, see Cloud VPN topologies .
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of VPN gateways. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified VPN gateway.
Returns the specified VPN gateway.
Returns the status for the specified VPN gateway.
Creates a VPN gateway in the specified project and region using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of VpnGateway resources.
Retrieves a list of VPN gateways available to the specified project and region.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
vpnGateway resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Sets the labels on a VpnGateway. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
There is no detailed description.
Describes the high availability requirement state for the VPN connection between this Cloud VPN gateway and a peer gateway.
Contains some information about a VPN tunnel.
A VPN connection contains all VPN tunnels connected from this VpnGateway to the same peer gateway. The peer gateway could either be an external VPN gateway or a Google Cloud VPN gateway.
Returns permissions that a caller has on the specified resource.
A VPN gateway interface.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning which replaces the list of addresses when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Represents a Cloud VPN Tunnel resource. For more information about VPN, read the the Cloud VPN Overview.
There is no detailed description.
Retrieves an aggregated list of VPN tunnels. To prevent failure, Google recommends that you set the returnPartialSuccess
parameter to true
.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Deletes the specified VpnTunnel resource.
Returns the specified VpnTunnel resource.
Creates a VpnTunnel resource in the specified project and region using the data included in the request.
Contains a list of VpnTunnel resources.
Retrieves a list of VpnTunnel resources contained in the specified project and region.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
vpnTunnel resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Sets the labels on a VpnTunnel. To learn more about labels, read the Labeling Resources documentation.
There is no detailed description.
Informational warning which replaces the list of addresses when the list is empty.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.
In contrast to a single BackendService in HttpRouteAction to which all matching traffic is directed to, WeightedBackendService allows traffic to be split across multiple backend services. The volume of traffic for each backend service is proportional to the weight specified in each WeightedBackendService
There is no detailed description.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
Service resource (a.k.a service project) ID.
Represents a Zone resource. A zone is a deployment area. These deployment areas are subsets of a region. For example the zone us-east1-a is located in the us-east1 region. For more information, read Regions and Zones.
Returns the specified Zone resource.
Contains a list of zone resources.
Retrieves the list of Zone resources available to the specified project.
[Output Only] Informational warning message.
[Output Only] Metadata about this warning in key: value format. For example: “data”: [ { “key”: “scope”, “value”: “zones/us-east1-d” }
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
zone resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Deletes the specified zone-specific Operations resource.
Retrieves the specified zone-specific Operations resource.
Retrieves a list of Operation resources contained within the specified zone.
A builder providing access to all methods supported on
zoneOperation resources.
It is not used directly, but through the
Compute
hub.
Waits for the specified Operation resource to return as DONE
or for the request to approach the 2 minute deadline, and retrieves the specified Operation resource. This method waits for no more than the 2 minutes and then returns the current state of the operation, which might be DONE
or still in progress. This method is called on a best-effort basis. Specifically: - In uncommon cases, when the server is overloaded, the request might return before the default deadline is reached, or might return after zero seconds. - If the default deadline is reached, there is no guarantee that the operation is actually done when the method returns. Be prepared to retry if the operation is not DONE
.
There is no detailed description.
There is no detailed description.