Updates the specified SSL certificate. To renew a certificate and maintain its existing domain mappings, update certificate_data with a new certificate. The new certificate must be applicable to the same domains as the original certificate. The certificate display_name may also be updated.
Creates an App Engine application for a Google Cloud Platform project. Required fields: id - The ID of the target Cloud Platform project. location - The region (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/locations) where you want the App Engine application located.For more information about App Engine applications, see Managing Projects, Applications, and Billing (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/standard/python/console/).
Maps a domain to an application. A user must be authorized to administer a domain in order to map it to an application. For a list of available authorized domains, see AuthorizedDomains.ListAuthorizedDomains.
Updates the specified domain mapping. To map an SSL certificate to a domain mapping, update certificate_id to point to an AuthorizedCertificate resource. A user must be authorized to administer the associated domain in order to update a DomainMapping resource.
Replaces the entire firewall ruleset in one bulk operation. This overrides and replaces the rules of an existing firewall with the new rules.If the final rule does not match traffic with the ‘*’ wildcard IP range, then an “allow all” rule is explicitly added to the end of the list.
Gets the latest state of a long-running operation. Clients can use this method to poll the operation result at intervals as recommended by the API service.
Updates the specified Application resource. You can update the following fields: auth_domain - Google authentication domain for controlling user access to the application. default_cookie_expiration - Cookie expiration policy for the application. iap - Identity-Aware Proxy properties for the application.
Recreates the required App Engine features for the specified App Engine application, for example a Cloud Storage bucket or App Engine service account. Use this method if you receive an error message about a missing feature, for example, Error retrieving the App Engine service account. If you have deleted your App Engine service account, this will not be able to recreate it. Instead, you should attempt to use the IAM undelete API if possible at https://cloud.google.com/iam/reference/rest/v1/projects.serviceAccounts/undelete?apix_params=%7B“name“%3A“projects%2F-%2FserviceAccounts%2Funique_id“%2C“resource“%3A%7B%7D%7D . If the deletion was recent, the numeric ID can be found in the Cloud Console Activity Log.
Enables debugging on a VM instance. This allows you to use the SSH command to connect to the virtual machine where the instance lives. While in “debug mode”, the instance continues to serve live traffic. You should delete the instance when you are done debugging and then allow the system to take over and determine if another instance should be started.Only applicable for instances in App Engine flexible environment.
Stops a running instance.The instance might be automatically recreated based on the scaling settings of the version. For more information, see “How Instances are Managed” (standard environment (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/standard/python/how-instances-are-managed) | flexible environment (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/flexible/python/how-instances-are-managed)).To ensure that instances are not re-created and avoid getting billed, you can stop all instances within the target version by changing the serving status of the version to STOPPED with the apps.services.versions.patch (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions/patch) method.
Lists the instances of a version.Tip: To aggregate details about instances over time, see the Stackdriver Monitoring API (https://cloud.google.com/monitoring/api/ref_v3/rest/v3/projects.timeSeries/list).
Updates the specified Version resource. You can specify the following fields depending on the App Engine environment and type of scaling that the version resource uses:Standard environment instance_class (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#Version.FIELDS.instance_class)automatic scaling in the standard environment: automatic_scaling.min_idle_instances (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#Version.FIELDS.automatic_scaling) automatic_scaling.max_idle_instances (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#Version.FIELDS.automatic_scaling) automaticScaling.standard_scheduler_settings.max_instances (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#StandardSchedulerSettings) automaticScaling.standard_scheduler_settings.min_instances (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#StandardSchedulerSettings) automaticScaling.standard_scheduler_settings.target_cpu_utilization (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#StandardSchedulerSettings) automaticScaling.standard_scheduler_settings.target_throughput_utilization (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#StandardSchedulerSettings)basic scaling or manual scaling in the standard environment: serving_status (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#Version.FIELDS.serving_status) manual_scaling.instances (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#manualscaling)Flexible environment serving_status (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#Version.FIELDS.serving_status)automatic scaling in the flexible environment: automatic_scaling.min_total_instances (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#Version.FIELDS.automatic_scaling) automatic_scaling.max_total_instances (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#Version.FIELDS.automatic_scaling) automatic_scaling.cool_down_period_sec (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#Version.FIELDS.automatic_scaling) automatic_scaling.cpu_utilization.target_utilization (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#Version.FIELDS.automatic_scaling)manual scaling in the flexible environment: manual_scaling.instances (https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/admin-api/reference/rest/v1/apps.services.versions#manualscaling)
An SSL certificate that a user has been authorized to administer. A user is authorized to administer any certificate that applies to one of their authorized domains.
A domain that a user has been authorized to administer. To authorize use of a domain, verify ownership via Search Console (https://search.google.com/search-console/welcome).
A service with basic scaling will create an instance when the application receives a request. The instance will be turned down when the app becomes idle. Basic scaling is ideal for work that is intermittent or driven by user activity.
Options for the build operations performed as a part of the version deployment. Only applicable for App Engine flexible environment when creating a version using source code directly.
Docker image that is used to create a container and start a VM instance for the version that you deploy. Only applicable for instances running in the App Engine flexible environment.
Represents a whole or partial calendar date, such as a birthday. The time of day and time zone are either specified elsewhere or are insignificant. The date is relative to the Gregorian Calendar. This can represent one of the following: A full date, with non-zero year, month, and day values. A month and day, with a zero year (for example, an anniversary). A year on its own, with a zero month and a zero day. A year and month, with a zero day (for example, a credit card expiration date).Related types: google.type.TimeOfDay google.type.DateTime google.protobuf.Timestamp
A generic empty message that you can re-use to avoid defining duplicated empty messages in your APIs. A typical example is to use it as the request or the response type of an API method. For instance: service Foo { rpc Bar(google.protobuf.Empty) returns (google.protobuf.Empty); }
Google Cloud Endpoints (https://cloud.google.com/endpoints) configuration. The Endpoints API Service provides tooling for serving Open API and gRPC endpoints via an NGINX proxy. Only valid for App Engine Flexible environment deployments.The fields here refer to the name and configuration ID of a “service” resource in the Service Management API (https://cloud.google.com/service-management/overview).
Health checking configuration for VM instances. Unhealthy instances are killed and replaced with new instances. Only applicable for instances in App Engine flexible environment.
A Service resource is a logical component of an application that can share state and communicate in a secure fashion with other services. For example, an application that handles customer requests might include separate services to handle tasks such as backend data analysis or API requests from mobile devices. Each service has a collection of versions that define a specific set of code used to implement the functionality of that service.
Files served directly to the user for a given URL, such as images, CSS stylesheets, or JavaScript source files. Static file handlers describe which files in the application directory are static files, and which URLs serve them.
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 (https://github.com/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 (https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/errors).
URL pattern and description of how the URL should be handled. App Engine can handle URLs by executing application code or by serving static files uploaded with the version, such as images, CSS, or JavaScript.