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| <h1><a href="serviceusage_v1beta1.html">Service Usage API</a> . <a href="serviceusage_v1beta1.services.html">services</a></h1> |
| <h2>Instance Methods</h2> |
| <p class="toc_element"> |
| <code><a href="#batchEnable">batchEnable(parent, body, x__xgafv=None)</a></code></p> |
| <p class="firstline">Enable multiple services on a project. The operation is atomic: if enabling</p> |
| <p class="toc_element"> |
| <code><a href="#disable">disable(name, body=None, x__xgafv=None)</a></code></p> |
| <p class="firstline">Disable a service so that it can no longer be used with a project.</p> |
| <p class="toc_element"> |
| <code><a href="#enable">enable(name, body=None, x__xgafv=None)</a></code></p> |
| <p class="firstline">Enable a service so that it can be used with a project.</p> |
| <p class="toc_element"> |
| <code><a href="#get">get(name, x__xgafv=None)</a></code></p> |
| <p class="firstline">Returns the service configuration and enabled state for a given service.</p> |
| <p class="toc_element"> |
| <code><a href="#list">list(parent, pageToken=None, x__xgafv=None, pageSize=None, filter=None)</a></code></p> |
| <p class="firstline">List all services available to the specified project, and the current</p> |
| <p class="toc_element"> |
| <code><a href="#list_next">list_next(previous_request, previous_response)</a></code></p> |
| <p class="firstline">Retrieves the next page of results.</p> |
| <h3>Method Details</h3> |
| <div class="method"> |
| <code class="details" id="batchEnable">batchEnable(parent, body, x__xgafv=None)</code> |
| <pre>Enable multiple services on a project. The operation is atomic: if enabling |
| any service fails, then the entire batch fails, and no state changes occur. |
| |
| Operation<response: google.protobuf.Empty> |
| |
| Args: |
| parent: string, Parent to enable services on. |
| |
| An example name would be: |
| `projects/123` |
| where `123` is the project number (not project ID). |
| |
| The `BatchEnableServices` method currently only supports projects. (required) |
| body: object, The request body. (required) |
| The object takes the form of: |
| |
| { # Request message for the `BatchEnableServices` method. |
| "serviceIds": [ # The identifiers of the services to enable on the project. |
| # |
| # A valid identifier would be: |
| # serviceusage.googleapis.com |
| # |
| # Enabling services requires that each service is public or is shared with |
| # the user enabling the service. |
| # |
| # Two or more services must be specified. To enable a single service, |
| # use the `EnableService` method instead. |
| # |
| # A single request can enable a maximum of 20 services at a time. If more |
| # than 20 services are specified, the request will fail, and no state changes |
| # will occur. |
| "A String", |
| ], |
| } |
| |
| x__xgafv: string, V1 error format. |
| Allowed values |
| 1 - v1 error format |
| 2 - v2 error format |
| |
| Returns: |
| An object of the form: |
| |
| { # This resource represents a long-running operation that is the result of a |
| # network API call. |
| "response": { # The normal response of the operation in case of success. If the original |
| # method returns no data on success, such as `Delete`, the response is |
| # `google.protobuf.Empty`. If the original method is standard |
| # `Get`/`Create`/`Update`, the response should be the resource. For other |
| # methods, the response should have the type `XxxResponse`, where `Xxx` |
| # is the original method name. For example, if the original method name |
| # is `TakeSnapshot()`, the inferred response type is |
| # `TakeSnapshotResponse`. |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| "metadata": { # Service-specific metadata associated with the operation. It typically |
| # contains progress information and common metadata such as create time. |
| # Some services might not provide such metadata. Any method that returns a |
| # long-running operation should document the metadata type, if any. |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| "done": True or False, # If the value is `false`, it means the operation is still in progress. |
| # If `true`, the operation is completed, and either `error` or `response` is |
| # available. |
| "name": "A String", # The server-assigned name, which is only unique within the same service that |
| # originally returns it. If you use the default HTTP mapping, the |
| # `name` should be a resource name ending with `operations/{unique_id}`. |
| "error": { # The `Status` type defines a logical error model that is suitable for # The error result of the operation in case of failure or cancellation. |
| # 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). |
| "message": "A String", # A developer-facing error message, which should be in English. Any |
| # user-facing error message should be localized and sent in the |
| # google.rpc.Status.details field, or localized by the client. |
| "code": 42, # The status code, which should be an enum value of google.rpc.Code. |
| "details": [ # A list of messages that carry the error details. There is a common set of |
| # message types for APIs to use. |
| { |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| }</pre> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="method"> |
| <code class="details" id="disable">disable(name, body=None, x__xgafv=None)</code> |
| <pre>Disable a service so that it can no longer be used with a project. |
| This prevents unintended usage that may cause unexpected billing |
| charges or security leaks. |
| |
| It is not valid to call the disable method on a service that is not |
| currently enabled. Callers will receive a `FAILED_PRECONDITION` status if |
| the target service is not currently enabled. |
| |
| Operation<response: google.protobuf.Empty> |
| |
| Args: |
| name: string, Name of the consumer and service to disable the service on. |
| |
| The enable and disable methods currently only support projects. |
| |
| An example name would be: |
| `projects/123/services/serviceusage.googleapis.com` |
| where `123` is the project number (not project ID). (required) |
| body: object, The request body. |
| The object takes the form of: |
| |
| { # Request message for the `DisableService` method. |
| } |
| |
| x__xgafv: string, V1 error format. |
| Allowed values |
| 1 - v1 error format |
| 2 - v2 error format |
| |
| Returns: |
| An object of the form: |
| |
| { # This resource represents a long-running operation that is the result of a |
| # network API call. |
| "response": { # The normal response of the operation in case of success. If the original |
| # method returns no data on success, such as `Delete`, the response is |
| # `google.protobuf.Empty`. If the original method is standard |
| # `Get`/`Create`/`Update`, the response should be the resource. For other |
| # methods, the response should have the type `XxxResponse`, where `Xxx` |
| # is the original method name. For example, if the original method name |
| # is `TakeSnapshot()`, the inferred response type is |
| # `TakeSnapshotResponse`. |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| "metadata": { # Service-specific metadata associated with the operation. It typically |
| # contains progress information and common metadata such as create time. |
| # Some services might not provide such metadata. Any method that returns a |
| # long-running operation should document the metadata type, if any. |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| "done": True or False, # If the value is `false`, it means the operation is still in progress. |
| # If `true`, the operation is completed, and either `error` or `response` is |
| # available. |
| "name": "A String", # The server-assigned name, which is only unique within the same service that |
| # originally returns it. If you use the default HTTP mapping, the |
| # `name` should be a resource name ending with `operations/{unique_id}`. |
| "error": { # The `Status` type defines a logical error model that is suitable for # The error result of the operation in case of failure or cancellation. |
| # 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). |
| "message": "A String", # A developer-facing error message, which should be in English. Any |
| # user-facing error message should be localized and sent in the |
| # google.rpc.Status.details field, or localized by the client. |
| "code": 42, # The status code, which should be an enum value of google.rpc.Code. |
| "details": [ # A list of messages that carry the error details. There is a common set of |
| # message types for APIs to use. |
| { |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| }</pre> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="method"> |
| <code class="details" id="enable">enable(name, body=None, x__xgafv=None)</code> |
| <pre>Enable a service so that it can be used with a project. |
| |
| Operation<response: google.protobuf.Empty> |
| |
| Args: |
| name: string, Name of the consumer and service to enable the service on. |
| |
| The `EnableService` and `DisableService` methods currently only support |
| projects. |
| |
| Enabling a service requires that the service is public or is shared with |
| the user enabling the service. |
| |
| An example name would be: |
| `projects/123/services/serviceusage.googleapis.com` |
| where `123` is the project number (not project ID). (required) |
| body: object, The request body. |
| The object takes the form of: |
| |
| { # Request message for the `EnableService` method. |
| } |
| |
| x__xgafv: string, V1 error format. |
| Allowed values |
| 1 - v1 error format |
| 2 - v2 error format |
| |
| Returns: |
| An object of the form: |
| |
| { # This resource represents a long-running operation that is the result of a |
| # network API call. |
| "response": { # The normal response of the operation in case of success. If the original |
| # method returns no data on success, such as `Delete`, the response is |
| # `google.protobuf.Empty`. If the original method is standard |
| # `Get`/`Create`/`Update`, the response should be the resource. For other |
| # methods, the response should have the type `XxxResponse`, where `Xxx` |
| # is the original method name. For example, if the original method name |
| # is `TakeSnapshot()`, the inferred response type is |
| # `TakeSnapshotResponse`. |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| "metadata": { # Service-specific metadata associated with the operation. It typically |
| # contains progress information and common metadata such as create time. |
| # Some services might not provide such metadata. Any method that returns a |
| # long-running operation should document the metadata type, if any. |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| "done": True or False, # If the value is `false`, it means the operation is still in progress. |
| # If `true`, the operation is completed, and either `error` or `response` is |
| # available. |
| "name": "A String", # The server-assigned name, which is only unique within the same service that |
| # originally returns it. If you use the default HTTP mapping, the |
| # `name` should be a resource name ending with `operations/{unique_id}`. |
| "error": { # The `Status` type defines a logical error model that is suitable for # The error result of the operation in case of failure or cancellation. |
| # 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). |
| "message": "A String", # A developer-facing error message, which should be in English. Any |
| # user-facing error message should be localized and sent in the |
| # google.rpc.Status.details field, or localized by the client. |
| "code": 42, # The status code, which should be an enum value of google.rpc.Code. |
| "details": [ # A list of messages that carry the error details. There is a common set of |
| # message types for APIs to use. |
| { |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| }</pre> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="method"> |
| <code class="details" id="get">get(name, x__xgafv=None)</code> |
| <pre>Returns the service configuration and enabled state for a given service. |
| |
| Args: |
| name: string, Name of the consumer and service to get the `ConsumerState` for. |
| |
| An example name would be: |
| `projects/123/services/serviceusage.googleapis.com` |
| where `123` is the project number (not project ID). (required) |
| x__xgafv: string, V1 error format. |
| Allowed values |
| 1 - v1 error format |
| 2 - v2 error format |
| |
| Returns: |
| An object of the form: |
| |
| { # A service that is available for use by the consumer. |
| "state": "A String", # Whether or not the service has been enabled for use by the consumer. |
| "config": { # The configuration of the service. # The service configuration of the available service. |
| # Some fields may be filtered out of the configuration in responses to |
| # the `ListServices` method. These fields are present only in responses to |
| # the `GetService` method. |
| "name": "A String", # The DNS address at which this service is available. |
| # |
| # An example DNS address would be: |
| # `calendar.googleapis.com`. |
| "apis": [ # A list of API interfaces exported by this service. Contains only the names, |
| # versions, and method names of the interfaces. |
| { # Api is a light-weight descriptor for an API Interface. |
| # |
| # Interfaces are also described as "protocol buffer services" in some contexts, |
| # such as by the "service" keyword in a .proto file, but they are different |
| # from API Services, which represent a concrete implementation of an interface |
| # as opposed to simply a description of methods and bindings. They are also |
| # sometimes simply referred to as "APIs" in other contexts, such as the name of |
| # this message itself. See https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/glossary for |
| # detailed terminology. |
| "name": "A String", # The fully qualified name of this interface, including package name |
| # followed by the interface's simple name. |
| "sourceContext": { # `SourceContext` represents information about the source of a # Source context for the protocol buffer service represented by this |
| # message. |
| # protobuf element, like the file in which it is defined. |
| "fileName": "A String", # The path-qualified name of the .proto file that contained the associated |
| # protobuf element. For example: `"google/protobuf/source_context.proto"`. |
| }, |
| "mixins": [ # Included interfaces. See Mixin. |
| { # Declares an API Interface to be included in this interface. The including |
| # interface must redeclare all the methods from the included interface, but |
| # documentation and options are inherited as follows: |
| # |
| # - If after comment and whitespace stripping, the documentation |
| # string of the redeclared method is empty, it will be inherited |
| # from the original method. |
| # |
| # - Each annotation belonging to the service config (http, |
| # visibility) which is not set in the redeclared method will be |
| # inherited. |
| # |
| # - If an http annotation is inherited, the path pattern will be |
| # modified as follows. Any version prefix will be replaced by the |
| # version of the including interface plus the root path if |
| # specified. |
| # |
| # Example of a simple mixin: |
| # |
| # package google.acl.v1; |
| # service AccessControl { |
| # // Get the underlying ACL object. |
| # rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl) { |
| # option (google.api.http).get = "/v1/{resource=**}:getAcl"; |
| # } |
| # } |
| # |
| # package google.storage.v2; |
| # service Storage { |
| # // rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl); |
| # |
| # // Get a data record. |
| # rpc GetData(GetDataRequest) returns (Data) { |
| # option (google.api.http).get = "/v2/{resource=**}"; |
| # } |
| # } |
| # |
| # Example of a mixin configuration: |
| # |
| # apis: |
| # - name: google.storage.v2.Storage |
| # mixins: |
| # - name: google.acl.v1.AccessControl |
| # |
| # The mixin construct implies that all methods in `AccessControl` are |
| # also declared with same name and request/response types in |
| # `Storage`. A documentation generator or annotation processor will |
| # see the effective `Storage.GetAcl` method after inherting |
| # documentation and annotations as follows: |
| # |
| # service Storage { |
| # // Get the underlying ACL object. |
| # rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl) { |
| # option (google.api.http).get = "/v2/{resource=**}:getAcl"; |
| # } |
| # ... |
| # } |
| # |
| # Note how the version in the path pattern changed from `v1` to `v2`. |
| # |
| # If the `root` field in the mixin is specified, it should be a |
| # relative path under which inherited HTTP paths are placed. Example: |
| # |
| # apis: |
| # - name: google.storage.v2.Storage |
| # mixins: |
| # - name: google.acl.v1.AccessControl |
| # root: acls |
| # |
| # This implies the following inherited HTTP annotation: |
| # |
| # service Storage { |
| # // Get the underlying ACL object. |
| # rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl) { |
| # option (google.api.http).get = "/v2/acls/{resource=**}:getAcl"; |
| # } |
| # ... |
| # } |
| "root": "A String", # If non-empty specifies a path under which inherited HTTP paths |
| # are rooted. |
| "name": "A String", # The fully qualified name of the interface which is included. |
| }, |
| ], |
| "syntax": "A String", # The source syntax of the service. |
| "version": "A String", # A version string for this interface. If specified, must have the form |
| # `major-version.minor-version`, as in `1.10`. If the minor version is |
| # omitted, it defaults to zero. If the entire version field is empty, the |
| # major version is derived from the package name, as outlined below. If the |
| # field is not empty, the version in the package name will be verified to be |
| # consistent with what is provided here. |
| # |
| # The versioning schema uses [semantic |
| # versioning](http://semver.org) where the major version number |
| # indicates a breaking change and the minor version an additive, |
| # non-breaking change. Both version numbers are signals to users |
| # what to expect from different versions, and should be carefully |
| # chosen based on the product plan. |
| # |
| # The major version is also reflected in the package name of the |
| # interface, which must end in `v<major-version>`, as in |
| # `google.feature.v1`. For major versions 0 and 1, the suffix can |
| # be omitted. Zero major versions must only be used for |
| # experimental, non-GA interfaces. |
| "options": [ # Any metadata attached to the interface. |
| { # A protocol buffer option, which can be attached to a message, field, |
| # enumeration, etc. |
| "name": "A String", # The option's name. For protobuf built-in options (options defined in |
| # descriptor.proto), this is the short name. For example, `"map_entry"`. |
| # For custom options, it should be the fully-qualified name. For example, |
| # `"google.api.http"`. |
| "value": { # The option's value packed in an Any message. If the value is a primitive, |
| # the corresponding wrapper type defined in google/protobuf/wrappers.proto |
| # should be used. If the value is an enum, it should be stored as an int32 |
| # value using the google.protobuf.Int32Value type. |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| }, |
| ], |
| "methods": [ # The methods of this interface, in unspecified order. |
| { # Method represents a method of an API interface. |
| "name": "A String", # The simple name of this method. |
| "requestStreaming": True or False, # If true, the request is streamed. |
| "responseTypeUrl": "A String", # The URL of the output message type. |
| "requestTypeUrl": "A String", # A URL of the input message type. |
| "responseStreaming": True or False, # If true, the response is streamed. |
| "syntax": "A String", # The source syntax of this method. |
| "options": [ # Any metadata attached to the method. |
| { # A protocol buffer option, which can be attached to a message, field, |
| # enumeration, etc. |
| "name": "A String", # The option's name. For protobuf built-in options (options defined in |
| # descriptor.proto), this is the short name. For example, `"map_entry"`. |
| # For custom options, it should be the fully-qualified name. For example, |
| # `"google.api.http"`. |
| "value": { # The option's value packed in an Any message. If the value is a primitive, |
| # the corresponding wrapper type defined in google/protobuf/wrappers.proto |
| # should be used. If the value is an enum, it should be stored as an int32 |
| # value using the google.protobuf.Int32Value type. |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| ], |
| "documentation": { # `Documentation` provides the information for describing a service. # Additional API documentation. Contains only the summary and the |
| # documentation URL. |
| # |
| # Example: |
| # <pre><code>documentation: |
| # summary: > |
| # The Google Calendar API gives access |
| # to most calendar features. |
| # pages: |
| # - name: Overview |
| # content: (== include google/foo/overview.md ==) |
| # - name: Tutorial |
| # content: (== include google/foo/tutorial.md ==) |
| # subpages; |
| # - name: Java |
| # content: (== include google/foo/tutorial_java.md ==) |
| # rules: |
| # - selector: google.calendar.Calendar.Get |
| # description: > |
| # ... |
| # - selector: google.calendar.Calendar.Put |
| # description: > |
| # ... |
| # </code></pre> |
| # Documentation is provided in markdown syntax. In addition to |
| # standard markdown features, definition lists, tables and fenced |
| # code blocks are supported. Section headers can be provided and are |
| # interpreted relative to the section nesting of the context where |
| # a documentation fragment is embedded. |
| # |
| # Documentation from the IDL is merged with documentation defined |
| # via the config at normalization time, where documentation provided |
| # by config rules overrides IDL provided. |
| # |
| # A number of constructs specific to the API platform are supported |
| # in documentation text. |
| # |
| # In order to reference a proto element, the following |
| # notation can be used: |
| # <pre><code>[fully.qualified.proto.name][]</code></pre> |
| # To override the display text used for the link, this can be used: |
| # <pre><code>[display text][fully.qualified.proto.name]</code></pre> |
| # Text can be excluded from doc using the following notation: |
| # <pre><code>(-- internal comment --)</code></pre> |
| # |
| # A few directives are available in documentation. Note that |
| # directives must appear on a single line to be properly |
| # identified. The `include` directive includes a markdown file from |
| # an external source: |
| # <pre><code>(== include path/to/file ==)</code></pre> |
| # The `resource_for` directive marks a message to be the resource of |
| # a collection in REST view. If it is not specified, tools attempt |
| # to infer the resource from the operations in a collection: |
| # <pre><code>(== resource_for v1.shelves.books ==)</code></pre> |
| # The directive `suppress_warning` does not directly affect documentation |
| # and is documented together with service config validation. |
| "rules": [ # A list of documentation rules that apply to individual API elements. |
| # |
| # **NOTE:** All service configuration rules follow "last one wins" order. |
| { # A documentation rule provides information about individual API elements. |
| "description": "A String", # Description of the selected API(s). |
| "deprecationDescription": "A String", # Deprecation description of the selected element(s). It can be provided if |
| # an element is marked as `deprecated`. |
| "selector": "A String", # The selector is a comma-separated list of patterns. Each pattern is a |
| # qualified name of the element which may end in "*", indicating a wildcard. |
| # Wildcards are only allowed at the end and for a whole component of the |
| # qualified name, i.e. "foo.*" is ok, but not "foo.b*" or "foo.*.bar". A |
| # wildcard will match one or more components. To specify a default for all |
| # applicable elements, the whole pattern "*" is used. |
| }, |
| ], |
| "overview": "A String", # Declares a single overview page. For example: |
| # <pre><code>documentation: |
| # summary: ... |
| # overview: (== include overview.md ==) |
| # </code></pre> |
| # This is a shortcut for the following declaration (using pages style): |
| # <pre><code>documentation: |
| # summary: ... |
| # pages: |
| # - name: Overview |
| # content: (== include overview.md ==) |
| # </code></pre> |
| # Note: you cannot specify both `overview` field and `pages` field. |
| "pages": [ # The top level pages for the documentation set. |
| { # Represents a documentation page. A page can contain subpages to represent |
| # nested documentation set structure. |
| "content": "A String", # The Markdown content of the page. You can use <code>(== include {path} |
| # ==)</code> to include content from a Markdown file. |
| "subpages": [ # Subpages of this page. The order of subpages specified here will be |
| # honored in the generated docset. |
| # Object with schema name: Page |
| ], |
| "name": "A String", # The name of the page. It will be used as an identity of the page to |
| # generate URI of the page, text of the link to this page in navigation, |
| # etc. The full page name (start from the root page name to this page |
| # concatenated with `.`) can be used as reference to the page in your |
| # documentation. For example: |
| # <pre><code>pages: |
| # - name: Tutorial |
| # content: (== include tutorial.md ==) |
| # subpages: |
| # - name: Java |
| # content: (== include tutorial_java.md ==) |
| # </code></pre> |
| # You can reference `Java` page using Markdown reference link syntax: |
| # `Java`. |
| }, |
| ], |
| "documentationRootUrl": "A String", # The URL to the root of documentation. |
| "summary": "A String", # A short summary of what the service does. Can only be provided by |
| # plain text. |
| }, |
| "quota": { # Quota configuration helps to achieve fairness and budgeting in service # Quota configuration. |
| # usage. |
| # |
| # The metric based quota configuration works this way: |
| # - The service configuration defines a set of metrics. |
| # - For API calls, the quota.metric_rules maps methods to metrics with |
| # corresponding costs. |
| # - The quota.limits defines limits on the metrics, which will be used for |
| # quota checks at runtime. |
| # |
| # An example quota configuration in yaml format: |
| # |
| # quota: |
| # limits: |
| # |
| # - name: apiWriteQpsPerProject |
| # metric: library.googleapis.com/write_calls |
| # unit: "1/min/{project}" # rate limit for consumer projects |
| # values: |
| # STANDARD: 10000 |
| # |
| # |
| # # The metric rules bind all methods to the read_calls metric, |
| # # except for the UpdateBook and DeleteBook methods. These two methods |
| # # are mapped to the write_calls metric, with the UpdateBook method |
| # # consuming at twice rate as the DeleteBook method. |
| # metric_rules: |
| # - selector: "*" |
| # metric_costs: |
| # library.googleapis.com/read_calls: 1 |
| # - selector: google.example.library.v1.LibraryService.UpdateBook |
| # metric_costs: |
| # library.googleapis.com/write_calls: 2 |
| # - selector: google.example.library.v1.LibraryService.DeleteBook |
| # metric_costs: |
| # library.googleapis.com/write_calls: 1 |
| # |
| # Corresponding Metric definition: |
| # |
| # metrics: |
| # - name: library.googleapis.com/read_calls |
| # display_name: Read requests |
| # metric_kind: DELTA |
| # value_type: INT64 |
| # |
| # - name: library.googleapis.com/write_calls |
| # display_name: Write requests |
| # metric_kind: DELTA |
| # value_type: INT64 |
| # |
| "metricRules": [ # List of `MetricRule` definitions, each one mapping a selected method to one |
| # or more metrics. |
| { # Bind API methods to metrics. Binding a method to a metric causes that |
| # metric's configured quota behaviors to apply to the method call. |
| "metricCosts": { # Metrics to update when the selected methods are called, and the associated |
| # cost applied to each metric. |
| # |
| # The key of the map is the metric name, and the values are the amount |
| # increased for the metric against which the quota limits are defined. |
| # The value must not be negative. |
| "a_key": "A String", |
| }, |
| "selector": "A String", # Selects the methods to which this rule applies. |
| # |
| # Refer to selector for syntax details. |
| }, |
| ], |
| "limits": [ # List of `QuotaLimit` definitions for the service. |
| { # `QuotaLimit` defines a specific limit that applies over a specified duration |
| # for a limit type. There can be at most one limit for a duration and limit |
| # type combination defined within a `QuotaGroup`. |
| "displayName": "A String", # User-visible display name for this limit. |
| # Optional. If not set, the UI will provide a default display name based on |
| # the quota configuration. This field can be used to override the default |
| # display name generated from the configuration. |
| "name": "A String", # Name of the quota limit. |
| # |
| # The name must be provided, and it must be unique within the service. The |
| # name can only include alphanumeric characters as well as '-'. |
| # |
| # The maximum length of the limit name is 64 characters. |
| "defaultLimit": "A String", # Default number of tokens that can be consumed during the specified |
| # duration. This is the number of tokens assigned when a client |
| # application developer activates the service for his/her project. |
| # |
| # Specifying a value of 0 will block all requests. This can be used if you |
| # are provisioning quota to selected consumers and blocking others. |
| # Similarly, a value of -1 will indicate an unlimited quota. No other |
| # negative values are allowed. |
| # |
| # Used by group-based quotas only. |
| "metric": "A String", # The name of the metric this quota limit applies to. The quota limits with |
| # the same metric will be checked together during runtime. The metric must be |
| # defined within the service config. |
| "values": { # Tiered limit values. You must specify this as a key:value pair, with an |
| # integer value that is the maximum number of requests allowed for the |
| # specified unit. Currently only STANDARD is supported. |
| "a_key": "A String", |
| }, |
| "maxLimit": "A String", # Maximum number of tokens that can be consumed during the specified |
| # duration. Client application developers can override the default limit up |
| # to this maximum. If specified, this value cannot be set to a value less |
| # than the default limit. If not specified, it is set to the default limit. |
| # |
| # To allow clients to apply overrides with no upper bound, set this to -1, |
| # indicating unlimited maximum quota. |
| # |
| # Used by group-based quotas only. |
| "duration": "A String", # Duration of this limit in textual notation. Example: "100s", "24h", "1d". |
| # For duration longer than a day, only multiple of days is supported. We |
| # support only "100s" and "1d" for now. Additional support will be added in |
| # the future. "0" indicates indefinite duration. |
| # |
| # Used by group-based quotas only. |
| "freeTier": "A String", # Free tier value displayed in the Developers Console for this limit. |
| # The free tier is the number of tokens that will be subtracted from the |
| # billed amount when billing is enabled. |
| # This field can only be set on a limit with duration "1d", in a billable |
| # group; it is invalid on any other limit. If this field is not set, it |
| # defaults to 0, indicating that there is no free tier for this service. |
| # |
| # Used by group-based quotas only. |
| "unit": "A String", # Specify the unit of the quota limit. It uses the same syntax as |
| # Metric.unit. The supported unit kinds are determined by the quota |
| # backend system. |
| # |
| # Here are some examples: |
| # * "1/min/{project}" for quota per minute per project. |
| # |
| # Note: the order of unit components is insignificant. |
| # The "1" at the beginning is required to follow the metric unit syntax. |
| "description": "A String", # Optional. User-visible, extended description for this quota limit. |
| # Should be used only when more context is needed to understand this limit |
| # than provided by the limit's display name (see: `display_name`). |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| "authentication": { # `Authentication` defines the authentication configuration for an API. # Auth configuration. Contains only the OAuth rules. |
| # |
| # Example for an API targeted for external use: |
| # |
| # name: calendar.googleapis.com |
| # authentication: |
| # providers: |
| # - id: google_calendar_auth |
| # jwks_uri: https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v1/certs |
| # issuer: https://securetoken.google.com |
| # rules: |
| # - selector: "*" |
| # requirements: |
| # provider_id: google_calendar_auth |
| "rules": [ # A list of authentication rules that apply to individual API methods. |
| # |
| # **NOTE:** All service configuration rules follow "last one wins" order. |
| { # Authentication rules for the service. |
| # |
| # By default, if a method has any authentication requirements, every request |
| # must include a valid credential matching one of the requirements. |
| # It's an error to include more than one kind of credential in a single |
| # request. |
| # |
| # If a method doesn't have any auth requirements, request credentials will be |
| # ignored. |
| "oauth": { # OAuth scopes are a way to define data and permissions on data. For example, # The requirements for OAuth credentials. |
| # there are scopes defined for "Read-only access to Google Calendar" and |
| # "Access to Cloud Platform". Users can consent to a scope for an application, |
| # giving it permission to access that data on their behalf. |
| # |
| # OAuth scope specifications should be fairly coarse grained; a user will need |
| # to see and understand the text description of what your scope means. |
| # |
| # In most cases: use one or at most two OAuth scopes for an entire family of |
| # products. If your product has multiple APIs, you should probably be sharing |
| # the OAuth scope across all of those APIs. |
| # |
| # When you need finer grained OAuth consent screens: talk with your product |
| # management about how developers will use them in practice. |
| # |
| # Please note that even though each of the canonical scopes is enough for a |
| # request to be accepted and passed to the backend, a request can still fail |
| # due to the backend requiring additional scopes or permissions. |
| "canonicalScopes": "A String", # The list of publicly documented OAuth scopes that are allowed access. An |
| # OAuth token containing any of these scopes will be accepted. |
| # |
| # Example: |
| # |
| # canonical_scopes: https://www.googleapis.com/auth/calendar, |
| # https://www.googleapis.com/auth/calendar.read |
| }, |
| "allowWithoutCredential": True or False, # If true, the service accepts API keys without any other credential. |
| "requirements": [ # Requirements for additional authentication providers. |
| { # User-defined authentication requirements, including support for |
| # [JSON Web Token |
| # (JWT)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-json-web-token-32). |
| "providerId": "A String", # id from authentication provider. |
| # |
| # Example: |
| # |
| # provider_id: bookstore_auth |
| "audiences": "A String", # NOTE: This will be deprecated soon, once AuthProvider.audiences is |
| # implemented and accepted in all the runtime components. |
| # |
| # The list of JWT |
| # [audiences](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-json-web-token-32#section-4.1.3). |
| # that are allowed to access. A JWT containing any of these audiences will |
| # be accepted. When this setting is absent, only JWTs with audience |
| # "https://Service_name/API_name" |
| # will be accepted. For example, if no audiences are in the setting, |
| # LibraryService API will only accept JWTs with the following audience |
| # "https://library-example.googleapis.com/google.example.library.v1.LibraryService". |
| # |
| # Example: |
| # |
| # audiences: bookstore_android.apps.googleusercontent.com, |
| # bookstore_web.apps.googleusercontent.com |
| }, |
| ], |
| "selector": "A String", # Selects the methods to which this rule applies. |
| # |
| # Refer to selector for syntax details. |
| }, |
| ], |
| "providers": [ # Defines a set of authentication providers that a service supports. |
| { # Configuration for an authentication provider, including support for |
| # [JSON Web Token |
| # (JWT)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-json-web-token-32). |
| "audiences": "A String", # The list of JWT |
| # [audiences](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-json-web-token-32#section-4.1.3). |
| # that are allowed to access. A JWT containing any of these audiences will |
| # be accepted. When this setting is absent, only JWTs with audience |
| # "https://Service_name/API_name" |
| # will be accepted. For example, if no audiences are in the setting, |
| # LibraryService API will only accept JWTs with the following audience |
| # "https://library-example.googleapis.com/google.example.library.v1.LibraryService". |
| # |
| # Example: |
| # |
| # audiences: bookstore_android.apps.googleusercontent.com, |
| # bookstore_web.apps.googleusercontent.com |
| "jwksUri": "A String", # URL of the provider's public key set to validate signature of the JWT. See |
| # [OpenID |
| # Discovery](https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-discovery-1_0.html#ProviderMetadata). |
| # Optional if the key set document: |
| # - can be retrieved from |
| # [OpenID |
| # Discovery](https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-discovery-1_0.html of |
| # the issuer. |
| # - can be inferred from the email domain of the issuer (e.g. a Google |
| # service account). |
| # |
| # Example: https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v1/certs |
| "id": "A String", # The unique identifier of the auth provider. It will be referred to by |
| # `AuthRequirement.provider_id`. |
| # |
| # Example: "bookstore_auth". |
| "authorizationUrl": "A String", # Redirect URL if JWT token is required but not present or is expired. |
| # Implement authorizationUrl of securityDefinitions in OpenAPI spec. |
| "issuer": "A String", # Identifies the principal that issued the JWT. See |
| # https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-json-web-token-32#section-4.1.1 |
| # Usually a URL or an email address. |
| # |
| # Example: https://securetoken.google.com |
| # Example: [email protected] |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| "usage": { # Configuration controlling usage of a service. # Configuration controlling usage of this service. |
| "rules": [ # A list of usage rules that apply to individual API methods. |
| # |
| # **NOTE:** All service configuration rules follow "last one wins" order. |
| { # Usage configuration rules for the service. |
| # |
| # NOTE: Under development. |
| # |
| # |
| # Use this rule to configure unregistered calls for the service. Unregistered |
| # calls are calls that do not contain consumer project identity. |
| # (Example: calls that do not contain an API key). |
| # By default, API methods do not allow unregistered calls, and each method call |
| # must be identified by a consumer project identity. Use this rule to |
| # allow/disallow unregistered calls. |
| # |
| # Example of an API that wants to allow unregistered calls for entire service. |
| # |
| # usage: |
| # rules: |
| # - selector: "*" |
| # allow_unregistered_calls: true |
| # |
| # Example of a method that wants to allow unregistered calls. |
| # |
| # usage: |
| # rules: |
| # - selector: "google.example.library.v1.LibraryService.CreateBook" |
| # allow_unregistered_calls: true |
| "selector": "A String", # Selects the methods to which this rule applies. Use '*' to indicate all |
| # methods in all APIs. |
| # |
| # Refer to selector for syntax details. |
| "skipServiceControl": True or False, # If true, the selected method should skip service control and the control |
| # plane features, such as quota and billing, will not be available. |
| # This flag is used by Google Cloud Endpoints to bypass checks for internal |
| # methods, such as service health check methods. |
| "allowUnregisteredCalls": True or False, # If true, the selected method allows unregistered calls, e.g. calls |
| # that don't identify any user or application. |
| }, |
| ], |
| "producerNotificationChannel": "A String", # The full resource name of a channel used for sending notifications to the |
| # service producer. |
| # |
| # Google Service Management currently only supports |
| # [Google Cloud Pub/Sub](https://cloud.google.com/pubsub) as a notification |
| # channel. To use Google Cloud Pub/Sub as the channel, this must be the name |
| # of a Cloud Pub/Sub topic that uses the Cloud Pub/Sub topic name format |
| # documented in https://cloud.google.com/pubsub/docs/overview. |
| "requirements": [ # Requirements that must be satisfied before a consumer project can use the |
| # service. Each requirement is of the form <service.name>/<requirement-id>; |
| # for example 'serviceusage.googleapis.com/billing-enabled'. |
| "A String", |
| ], |
| }, |
| "title": "A String", # The product title for this service. |
| "endpoints": [ # Configuration for network endpoints. Contains only the names and aliases |
| # of the endpoints. |
| { # `Endpoint` describes a network endpoint that serves a set of APIs. |
| # A service may expose any number of endpoints, and all endpoints share the |
| # same service configuration, such as quota configuration and monitoring |
| # configuration. |
| # |
| # Example service configuration: |
| # |
| # name: library-example.googleapis.com |
| # endpoints: |
| # # Below entry makes 'google.example.library.v1.Library' |
| # # API be served from endpoint address library-example.googleapis.com. |
| # # It also allows HTTP OPTIONS calls to be passed to the backend, for |
| # # it to decide whether the subsequent cross-origin request is |
| # # allowed to proceed. |
| # - name: library-example.googleapis.com |
| # allow_cors: true |
| "allowCors": True or False, # Allowing |
| # [CORS](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-origin_resource_sharing), aka |
| # cross-domain traffic, would allow the backends served from this endpoint to |
| # receive and respond to HTTP OPTIONS requests. The response will be used by |
| # the browser to determine whether the subsequent cross-origin request is |
| # allowed to proceed. |
| "target": "A String", # The specification of an Internet routable address of API frontend that will |
| # handle requests to this [API |
| # Endpoint](https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/glossary). It should be |
| # either a valid IPv4 address or a fully-qualified domain name. For example, |
| # "8.8.8.8" or "myservice.appspot.com". |
| "features": [ # The list of features enabled on this endpoint. |
| "A String", |
| ], |
| "name": "A String", # The canonical name of this endpoint. |
| "aliases": [ # DEPRECATED: This field is no longer supported. Instead of using aliases, |
| # please specify multiple google.api.Endpoint for each of the intended |
| # aliases. |
| # |
| # Additional names that this endpoint will be hosted on. |
| "A String", |
| ], |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| "name": "A String", # The resource name of the consumer and service. |
| # |
| # A valid name would be: |
| # - projects/123/services/serviceusage.googleapis.com |
| "parent": "A String", # The resource name of the consumer. |
| # |
| # A valid name would be: |
| # - projects/123 |
| }</pre> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="method"> |
| <code class="details" id="list">list(parent, pageToken=None, x__xgafv=None, pageSize=None, filter=None)</code> |
| <pre>List all services available to the specified project, and the current |
| state of those services with respect to the project. The list includes |
| all public services, all services for which the calling user has the |
| `servicemanagement.services.bind` permission, and all services that have |
| already been enabled on the project. The list can be filtered to |
| only include services in a specific state, for example to only include |
| services enabled on the project. |
| |
| Args: |
| parent: string, Parent to search for services on. |
| |
| An example name would be: |
| `projects/123` |
| where `123` is the project number (not project ID). (required) |
| pageToken: string, Token identifying which result to start with, which is returned by a |
| previous list call. |
| x__xgafv: string, V1 error format. |
| Allowed values |
| 1 - v1 error format |
| 2 - v2 error format |
| pageSize: integer, Requested size of the next page of data. |
| Requested page size cannot exceed 200. |
| If not set, the default page size is 50. |
| filter: string, Only list services that conform to the given filter. |
| The allowed filter strings are `state:ENABLED` and `state:DISABLED`. |
| |
| Returns: |
| An object of the form: |
| |
| { # Response message for the `ListServices` method. |
| "services": [ # The available services for the requested project. |
| { # A service that is available for use by the consumer. |
| "state": "A String", # Whether or not the service has been enabled for use by the consumer. |
| "config": { # The configuration of the service. # The service configuration of the available service. |
| # Some fields may be filtered out of the configuration in responses to |
| # the `ListServices` method. These fields are present only in responses to |
| # the `GetService` method. |
| "name": "A String", # The DNS address at which this service is available. |
| # |
| # An example DNS address would be: |
| # `calendar.googleapis.com`. |
| "apis": [ # A list of API interfaces exported by this service. Contains only the names, |
| # versions, and method names of the interfaces. |
| { # Api is a light-weight descriptor for an API Interface. |
| # |
| # Interfaces are also described as "protocol buffer services" in some contexts, |
| # such as by the "service" keyword in a .proto file, but they are different |
| # from API Services, which represent a concrete implementation of an interface |
| # as opposed to simply a description of methods and bindings. They are also |
| # sometimes simply referred to as "APIs" in other contexts, such as the name of |
| # this message itself. See https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/glossary for |
| # detailed terminology. |
| "name": "A String", # The fully qualified name of this interface, including package name |
| # followed by the interface's simple name. |
| "sourceContext": { # `SourceContext` represents information about the source of a # Source context for the protocol buffer service represented by this |
| # message. |
| # protobuf element, like the file in which it is defined. |
| "fileName": "A String", # The path-qualified name of the .proto file that contained the associated |
| # protobuf element. For example: `"google/protobuf/source_context.proto"`. |
| }, |
| "mixins": [ # Included interfaces. See Mixin. |
| { # Declares an API Interface to be included in this interface. The including |
| # interface must redeclare all the methods from the included interface, but |
| # documentation and options are inherited as follows: |
| # |
| # - If after comment and whitespace stripping, the documentation |
| # string of the redeclared method is empty, it will be inherited |
| # from the original method. |
| # |
| # - Each annotation belonging to the service config (http, |
| # visibility) which is not set in the redeclared method will be |
| # inherited. |
| # |
| # - If an http annotation is inherited, the path pattern will be |
| # modified as follows. Any version prefix will be replaced by the |
| # version of the including interface plus the root path if |
| # specified. |
| # |
| # Example of a simple mixin: |
| # |
| # package google.acl.v1; |
| # service AccessControl { |
| # // Get the underlying ACL object. |
| # rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl) { |
| # option (google.api.http).get = "/v1/{resource=**}:getAcl"; |
| # } |
| # } |
| # |
| # package google.storage.v2; |
| # service Storage { |
| # // rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl); |
| # |
| # // Get a data record. |
| # rpc GetData(GetDataRequest) returns (Data) { |
| # option (google.api.http).get = "/v2/{resource=**}"; |
| # } |
| # } |
| # |
| # Example of a mixin configuration: |
| # |
| # apis: |
| # - name: google.storage.v2.Storage |
| # mixins: |
| # - name: google.acl.v1.AccessControl |
| # |
| # The mixin construct implies that all methods in `AccessControl` are |
| # also declared with same name and request/response types in |
| # `Storage`. A documentation generator or annotation processor will |
| # see the effective `Storage.GetAcl` method after inherting |
| # documentation and annotations as follows: |
| # |
| # service Storage { |
| # // Get the underlying ACL object. |
| # rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl) { |
| # option (google.api.http).get = "/v2/{resource=**}:getAcl"; |
| # } |
| # ... |
| # } |
| # |
| # Note how the version in the path pattern changed from `v1` to `v2`. |
| # |
| # If the `root` field in the mixin is specified, it should be a |
| # relative path under which inherited HTTP paths are placed. Example: |
| # |
| # apis: |
| # - name: google.storage.v2.Storage |
| # mixins: |
| # - name: google.acl.v1.AccessControl |
| # root: acls |
| # |
| # This implies the following inherited HTTP annotation: |
| # |
| # service Storage { |
| # // Get the underlying ACL object. |
| # rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl) { |
| # option (google.api.http).get = "/v2/acls/{resource=**}:getAcl"; |
| # } |
| # ... |
| # } |
| "root": "A String", # If non-empty specifies a path under which inherited HTTP paths |
| # are rooted. |
| "name": "A String", # The fully qualified name of the interface which is included. |
| }, |
| ], |
| "syntax": "A String", # The source syntax of the service. |
| "version": "A String", # A version string for this interface. If specified, must have the form |
| # `major-version.minor-version`, as in `1.10`. If the minor version is |
| # omitted, it defaults to zero. If the entire version field is empty, the |
| # major version is derived from the package name, as outlined below. If the |
| # field is not empty, the version in the package name will be verified to be |
| # consistent with what is provided here. |
| # |
| # The versioning schema uses [semantic |
| # versioning](http://semver.org) where the major version number |
| # indicates a breaking change and the minor version an additive, |
| # non-breaking change. Both version numbers are signals to users |
| # what to expect from different versions, and should be carefully |
| # chosen based on the product plan. |
| # |
| # The major version is also reflected in the package name of the |
| # interface, which must end in `v<major-version>`, as in |
| # `google.feature.v1`. For major versions 0 and 1, the suffix can |
| # be omitted. Zero major versions must only be used for |
| # experimental, non-GA interfaces. |
| "options": [ # Any metadata attached to the interface. |
| { # A protocol buffer option, which can be attached to a message, field, |
| # enumeration, etc. |
| "name": "A String", # The option's name. For protobuf built-in options (options defined in |
| # descriptor.proto), this is the short name. For example, `"map_entry"`. |
| # For custom options, it should be the fully-qualified name. For example, |
| # `"google.api.http"`. |
| "value": { # The option's value packed in an Any message. If the value is a primitive, |
| # the corresponding wrapper type defined in google/protobuf/wrappers.proto |
| # should be used. If the value is an enum, it should be stored as an int32 |
| # value using the google.protobuf.Int32Value type. |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| }, |
| ], |
| "methods": [ # The methods of this interface, in unspecified order. |
| { # Method represents a method of an API interface. |
| "name": "A String", # The simple name of this method. |
| "requestStreaming": True or False, # If true, the request is streamed. |
| "responseTypeUrl": "A String", # The URL of the output message type. |
| "requestTypeUrl": "A String", # A URL of the input message type. |
| "responseStreaming": True or False, # If true, the response is streamed. |
| "syntax": "A String", # The source syntax of this method. |
| "options": [ # Any metadata attached to the method. |
| { # A protocol buffer option, which can be attached to a message, field, |
| # enumeration, etc. |
| "name": "A String", # The option's name. For protobuf built-in options (options defined in |
| # descriptor.proto), this is the short name. For example, `"map_entry"`. |
| # For custom options, it should be the fully-qualified name. For example, |
| # `"google.api.http"`. |
| "value": { # The option's value packed in an Any message. If the value is a primitive, |
| # the corresponding wrapper type defined in google/protobuf/wrappers.proto |
| # should be used. If the value is an enum, it should be stored as an int32 |
| # value using the google.protobuf.Int32Value type. |
| "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. |
| }, |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| ], |
| "documentation": { # `Documentation` provides the information for describing a service. # Additional API documentation. Contains only the summary and the |
| # documentation URL. |
| # |
| # Example: |
| # <pre><code>documentation: |
| # summary: > |
| # The Google Calendar API gives access |
| # to most calendar features. |
| # pages: |
| # - name: Overview |
| # content: (== include google/foo/overview.md ==) |
| # - name: Tutorial |
| # content: (== include google/foo/tutorial.md ==) |
| # subpages; |
| # - name: Java |
| # content: (== include google/foo/tutorial_java.md ==) |
| # rules: |
| # - selector: google.calendar.Calendar.Get |
| # description: > |
| # ... |
| # - selector: google.calendar.Calendar.Put |
| # description: > |
| # ... |
| # </code></pre> |
| # Documentation is provided in markdown syntax. In addition to |
| # standard markdown features, definition lists, tables and fenced |
| # code blocks are supported. Section headers can be provided and are |
| # interpreted relative to the section nesting of the context where |
| # a documentation fragment is embedded. |
| # |
| # Documentation from the IDL is merged with documentation defined |
| # via the config at normalization time, where documentation provided |
| # by config rules overrides IDL provided. |
| # |
| # A number of constructs specific to the API platform are supported |
| # in documentation text. |
| # |
| # In order to reference a proto element, the following |
| # notation can be used: |
| # <pre><code>[fully.qualified.proto.name][]</code></pre> |
| # To override the display text used for the link, this can be used: |
| # <pre><code>[display text][fully.qualified.proto.name]</code></pre> |
| # Text can be excluded from doc using the following notation: |
| # <pre><code>(-- internal comment --)</code></pre> |
| # |
| # A few directives are available in documentation. Note that |
| # directives must appear on a single line to be properly |
| # identified. The `include` directive includes a markdown file from |
| # an external source: |
| # <pre><code>(== include path/to/file ==)</code></pre> |
| # The `resource_for` directive marks a message to be the resource of |
| # a collection in REST view. If it is not specified, tools attempt |
| # to infer the resource from the operations in a collection: |
| # <pre><code>(== resource_for v1.shelves.books ==)</code></pre> |
| # The directive `suppress_warning` does not directly affect documentation |
| # and is documented together with service config validation. |
| "rules": [ # A list of documentation rules that apply to individual API elements. |
| # |
| # **NOTE:** All service configuration rules follow "last one wins" order. |
| { # A documentation rule provides information about individual API elements. |
| "description": "A String", # Description of the selected API(s). |
| "deprecationDescription": "A String", # Deprecation description of the selected element(s). It can be provided if |
| # an element is marked as `deprecated`. |
| "selector": "A String", # The selector is a comma-separated list of patterns. Each pattern is a |
| # qualified name of the element which may end in "*", indicating a wildcard. |
| # Wildcards are only allowed at the end and for a whole component of the |
| # qualified name, i.e. "foo.*" is ok, but not "foo.b*" or "foo.*.bar". A |
| # wildcard will match one or more components. To specify a default for all |
| # applicable elements, the whole pattern "*" is used. |
| }, |
| ], |
| "overview": "A String", # Declares a single overview page. For example: |
| # <pre><code>documentation: |
| # summary: ... |
| # overview: (== include overview.md ==) |
| # </code></pre> |
| # This is a shortcut for the following declaration (using pages style): |
| # <pre><code>documentation: |
| # summary: ... |
| # pages: |
| # - name: Overview |
| # content: (== include overview.md ==) |
| # </code></pre> |
| # Note: you cannot specify both `overview` field and `pages` field. |
| "pages": [ # The top level pages for the documentation set. |
| { # Represents a documentation page. A page can contain subpages to represent |
| # nested documentation set structure. |
| "content": "A String", # The Markdown content of the page. You can use <code>(== include {path} |
| # ==)</code> to include content from a Markdown file. |
| "subpages": [ # Subpages of this page. The order of subpages specified here will be |
| # honored in the generated docset. |
| # Object with schema name: Page |
| ], |
| "name": "A String", # The name of the page. It will be used as an identity of the page to |
| # generate URI of the page, text of the link to this page in navigation, |
| # etc. The full page name (start from the root page name to this page |
| # concatenated with `.`) can be used as reference to the page in your |
| # documentation. For example: |
| # <pre><code>pages: |
| # - name: Tutorial |
| # content: (== include tutorial.md ==) |
| # subpages: |
| # - name: Java |
| # content: (== include tutorial_java.md ==) |
| # </code></pre> |
| # You can reference `Java` page using Markdown reference link syntax: |
| # `Java`. |
| }, |
| ], |
| "documentationRootUrl": "A String", # The URL to the root of documentation. |
| "summary": "A String", # A short summary of what the service does. Can only be provided by |
| # plain text. |
| }, |
| "quota": { # Quota configuration helps to achieve fairness and budgeting in service # Quota configuration. |
| # usage. |
| # |
| # The metric based quota configuration works this way: |
| # - The service configuration defines a set of metrics. |
| # - For API calls, the quota.metric_rules maps methods to metrics with |
| # corresponding costs. |
| # - The quota.limits defines limits on the metrics, which will be used for |
| # quota checks at runtime. |
| # |
| # An example quota configuration in yaml format: |
| # |
| # quota: |
| # limits: |
| # |
| # - name: apiWriteQpsPerProject |
| # metric: library.googleapis.com/write_calls |
| # unit: "1/min/{project}" # rate limit for consumer projects |
| # values: |
| # STANDARD: 10000 |
| # |
| # |
| # # The metric rules bind all methods to the read_calls metric, |
| # # except for the UpdateBook and DeleteBook methods. These two methods |
| # # are mapped to the write_calls metric, with the UpdateBook method |
| # # consuming at twice rate as the DeleteBook method. |
| # metric_rules: |
| # - selector: "*" |
| # metric_costs: |
| # library.googleapis.com/read_calls: 1 |
| # - selector: google.example.library.v1.LibraryService.UpdateBook |
| # metric_costs: |
| # library.googleapis.com/write_calls: 2 |
| # - selector: google.example.library.v1.LibraryService.DeleteBook |
| # metric_costs: |
| # library.googleapis.com/write_calls: 1 |
| # |
| # Corresponding Metric definition: |
| # |
| # metrics: |
| # - name: library.googleapis.com/read_calls |
| # display_name: Read requests |
| # metric_kind: DELTA |
| # value_type: INT64 |
| # |
| # - name: library.googleapis.com/write_calls |
| # display_name: Write requests |
| # metric_kind: DELTA |
| # value_type: INT64 |
| # |
| "metricRules": [ # List of `MetricRule` definitions, each one mapping a selected method to one |
| # or more metrics. |
| { # Bind API methods to metrics. Binding a method to a metric causes that |
| # metric's configured quota behaviors to apply to the method call. |
| "metricCosts": { # Metrics to update when the selected methods are called, and the associated |
| # cost applied to each metric. |
| # |
| # The key of the map is the metric name, and the values are the amount |
| # increased for the metric against which the quota limits are defined. |
| # The value must not be negative. |
| "a_key": "A String", |
| }, |
| "selector": "A String", # Selects the methods to which this rule applies. |
| # |
| # Refer to selector for syntax details. |
| }, |
| ], |
| "limits": [ # List of `QuotaLimit` definitions for the service. |
| { # `QuotaLimit` defines a specific limit that applies over a specified duration |
| # for a limit type. There can be at most one limit for a duration and limit |
| # type combination defined within a `QuotaGroup`. |
| "displayName": "A String", # User-visible display name for this limit. |
| # Optional. If not set, the UI will provide a default display name based on |
| # the quota configuration. This field can be used to override the default |
| # display name generated from the configuration. |
| "name": "A String", # Name of the quota limit. |
| # |
| # The name must be provided, and it must be unique within the service. The |
| # name can only include alphanumeric characters as well as '-'. |
| # |
| # The maximum length of the limit name is 64 characters. |
| "defaultLimit": "A String", # Default number of tokens that can be consumed during the specified |
| # duration. This is the number of tokens assigned when a client |
| # application developer activates the service for his/her project. |
| # |
| # Specifying a value of 0 will block all requests. This can be used if you |
| # are provisioning quota to selected consumers and blocking others. |
| # Similarly, a value of -1 will indicate an unlimited quota. No other |
| # negative values are allowed. |
| # |
| # Used by group-based quotas only. |
| "metric": "A String", # The name of the metric this quota limit applies to. The quota limits with |
| # the same metric will be checked together during runtime. The metric must be |
| # defined within the service config. |
| "values": { # Tiered limit values. You must specify this as a key:value pair, with an |
| # integer value that is the maximum number of requests allowed for the |
| # specified unit. Currently only STANDARD is supported. |
| "a_key": "A String", |
| }, |
| "maxLimit": "A String", # Maximum number of tokens that can be consumed during the specified |
| # duration. Client application developers can override the default limit up |
| # to this maximum. If specified, this value cannot be set to a value less |
| # than the default limit. If not specified, it is set to the default limit. |
| # |
| # To allow clients to apply overrides with no upper bound, set this to -1, |
| # indicating unlimited maximum quota. |
| # |
| # Used by group-based quotas only. |
| "duration": "A String", # Duration of this limit in textual notation. Example: "100s", "24h", "1d". |
| # For duration longer than a day, only multiple of days is supported. We |
| # support only "100s" and "1d" for now. Additional support will be added in |
| # the future. "0" indicates indefinite duration. |
| # |
| # Used by group-based quotas only. |
| "freeTier": "A String", # Free tier value displayed in the Developers Console for this limit. |
| # The free tier is the number of tokens that will be subtracted from the |
| # billed amount when billing is enabled. |
| # This field can only be set on a limit with duration "1d", in a billable |
| # group; it is invalid on any other limit. If this field is not set, it |
| # defaults to 0, indicating that there is no free tier for this service. |
| # |
| # Used by group-based quotas only. |
| "unit": "A String", # Specify the unit of the quota limit. It uses the same syntax as |
| # Metric.unit. The supported unit kinds are determined by the quota |
| # backend system. |
| # |
| # Here are some examples: |
| # * "1/min/{project}" for quota per minute per project. |
| # |
| # Note: the order of unit components is insignificant. |
| # The "1" at the beginning is required to follow the metric unit syntax. |
| "description": "A String", # Optional. User-visible, extended description for this quota limit. |
| # Should be used only when more context is needed to understand this limit |
| # than provided by the limit's display name (see: `display_name`). |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| "authentication": { # `Authentication` defines the authentication configuration for an API. # Auth configuration. Contains only the OAuth rules. |
| # |
| # Example for an API targeted for external use: |
| # |
| # name: calendar.googleapis.com |
| # authentication: |
| # providers: |
| # - id: google_calendar_auth |
| # jwks_uri: https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v1/certs |
| # issuer: https://securetoken.google.com |
| # rules: |
| # - selector: "*" |
| # requirements: |
| # provider_id: google_calendar_auth |
| "rules": [ # A list of authentication rules that apply to individual API methods. |
| # |
| # **NOTE:** All service configuration rules follow "last one wins" order. |
| { # Authentication rules for the service. |
| # |
| # By default, if a method has any authentication requirements, every request |
| # must include a valid credential matching one of the requirements. |
| # It's an error to include more than one kind of credential in a single |
| # request. |
| # |
| # If a method doesn't have any auth requirements, request credentials will be |
| # ignored. |
| "oauth": { # OAuth scopes are a way to define data and permissions on data. For example, # The requirements for OAuth credentials. |
| # there are scopes defined for "Read-only access to Google Calendar" and |
| # "Access to Cloud Platform". Users can consent to a scope for an application, |
| # giving it permission to access that data on their behalf. |
| # |
| # OAuth scope specifications should be fairly coarse grained; a user will need |
| # to see and understand the text description of what your scope means. |
| # |
| # In most cases: use one or at most two OAuth scopes for an entire family of |
| # products. If your product has multiple APIs, you should probably be sharing |
| # the OAuth scope across all of those APIs. |
| # |
| # When you need finer grained OAuth consent screens: talk with your product |
| # management about how developers will use them in practice. |
| # |
| # Please note that even though each of the canonical scopes is enough for a |
| # request to be accepted and passed to the backend, a request can still fail |
| # due to the backend requiring additional scopes or permissions. |
| "canonicalScopes": "A String", # The list of publicly documented OAuth scopes that are allowed access. An |
| # OAuth token containing any of these scopes will be accepted. |
| # |
| # Example: |
| # |
| # canonical_scopes: https://www.googleapis.com/auth/calendar, |
| # https://www.googleapis.com/auth/calendar.read |
| }, |
| "allowWithoutCredential": True or False, # If true, the service accepts API keys without any other credential. |
| "requirements": [ # Requirements for additional authentication providers. |
| { # User-defined authentication requirements, including support for |
| # [JSON Web Token |
| # (JWT)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-json-web-token-32). |
| "providerId": "A String", # id from authentication provider. |
| # |
| # Example: |
| # |
| # provider_id: bookstore_auth |
| "audiences": "A String", # NOTE: This will be deprecated soon, once AuthProvider.audiences is |
| # implemented and accepted in all the runtime components. |
| # |
| # The list of JWT |
| # [audiences](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-json-web-token-32#section-4.1.3). |
| # that are allowed to access. A JWT containing any of these audiences will |
| # be accepted. When this setting is absent, only JWTs with audience |
| # "https://Service_name/API_name" |
| # will be accepted. For example, if no audiences are in the setting, |
| # LibraryService API will only accept JWTs with the following audience |
| # "https://library-example.googleapis.com/google.example.library.v1.LibraryService". |
| # |
| # Example: |
| # |
| # audiences: bookstore_android.apps.googleusercontent.com, |
| # bookstore_web.apps.googleusercontent.com |
| }, |
| ], |
| "selector": "A String", # Selects the methods to which this rule applies. |
| # |
| # Refer to selector for syntax details. |
| }, |
| ], |
| "providers": [ # Defines a set of authentication providers that a service supports. |
| { # Configuration for an authentication provider, including support for |
| # [JSON Web Token |
| # (JWT)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-json-web-token-32). |
| "audiences": "A String", # The list of JWT |
| # [audiences](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-json-web-token-32#section-4.1.3). |
| # that are allowed to access. A JWT containing any of these audiences will |
| # be accepted. When this setting is absent, only JWTs with audience |
| # "https://Service_name/API_name" |
| # will be accepted. For example, if no audiences are in the setting, |
| # LibraryService API will only accept JWTs with the following audience |
| # "https://library-example.googleapis.com/google.example.library.v1.LibraryService". |
| # |
| # Example: |
| # |
| # audiences: bookstore_android.apps.googleusercontent.com, |
| # bookstore_web.apps.googleusercontent.com |
| "jwksUri": "A String", # URL of the provider's public key set to validate signature of the JWT. See |
| # [OpenID |
| # Discovery](https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-discovery-1_0.html#ProviderMetadata). |
| # Optional if the key set document: |
| # - can be retrieved from |
| # [OpenID |
| # Discovery](https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-discovery-1_0.html of |
| # the issuer. |
| # - can be inferred from the email domain of the issuer (e.g. a Google |
| # service account). |
| # |
| # Example: https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v1/certs |
| "id": "A String", # The unique identifier of the auth provider. It will be referred to by |
| # `AuthRequirement.provider_id`. |
| # |
| # Example: "bookstore_auth". |
| "authorizationUrl": "A String", # Redirect URL if JWT token is required but not present or is expired. |
| # Implement authorizationUrl of securityDefinitions in OpenAPI spec. |
| "issuer": "A String", # Identifies the principal that issued the JWT. See |
| # https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-json-web-token-32#section-4.1.1 |
| # Usually a URL or an email address. |
| # |
| # Example: https://securetoken.google.com |
| # Example: [email protected] |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| "usage": { # Configuration controlling usage of a service. # Configuration controlling usage of this service. |
| "rules": [ # A list of usage rules that apply to individual API methods. |
| # |
| # **NOTE:** All service configuration rules follow "last one wins" order. |
| { # Usage configuration rules for the service. |
| # |
| # NOTE: Under development. |
| # |
| # |
| # Use this rule to configure unregistered calls for the service. Unregistered |
| # calls are calls that do not contain consumer project identity. |
| # (Example: calls that do not contain an API key). |
| # By default, API methods do not allow unregistered calls, and each method call |
| # must be identified by a consumer project identity. Use this rule to |
| # allow/disallow unregistered calls. |
| # |
| # Example of an API that wants to allow unregistered calls for entire service. |
| # |
| # usage: |
| # rules: |
| # - selector: "*" |
| # allow_unregistered_calls: true |
| # |
| # Example of a method that wants to allow unregistered calls. |
| # |
| # usage: |
| # rules: |
| # - selector: "google.example.library.v1.LibraryService.CreateBook" |
| # allow_unregistered_calls: true |
| "selector": "A String", # Selects the methods to which this rule applies. Use '*' to indicate all |
| # methods in all APIs. |
| # |
| # Refer to selector for syntax details. |
| "skipServiceControl": True or False, # If true, the selected method should skip service control and the control |
| # plane features, such as quota and billing, will not be available. |
| # This flag is used by Google Cloud Endpoints to bypass checks for internal |
| # methods, such as service health check methods. |
| "allowUnregisteredCalls": True or False, # If true, the selected method allows unregistered calls, e.g. calls |
| # that don't identify any user or application. |
| }, |
| ], |
| "producerNotificationChannel": "A String", # The full resource name of a channel used for sending notifications to the |
| # service producer. |
| # |
| # Google Service Management currently only supports |
| # [Google Cloud Pub/Sub](https://cloud.google.com/pubsub) as a notification |
| # channel. To use Google Cloud Pub/Sub as the channel, this must be the name |
| # of a Cloud Pub/Sub topic that uses the Cloud Pub/Sub topic name format |
| # documented in https://cloud.google.com/pubsub/docs/overview. |
| "requirements": [ # Requirements that must be satisfied before a consumer project can use the |
| # service. Each requirement is of the form <service.name>/<requirement-id>; |
| # for example 'serviceusage.googleapis.com/billing-enabled'. |
| "A String", |
| ], |
| }, |
| "title": "A String", # The product title for this service. |
| "endpoints": [ # Configuration for network endpoints. Contains only the names and aliases |
| # of the endpoints. |
| { # `Endpoint` describes a network endpoint that serves a set of APIs. |
| # A service may expose any number of endpoints, and all endpoints share the |
| # same service configuration, such as quota configuration and monitoring |
| # configuration. |
| # |
| # Example service configuration: |
| # |
| # name: library-example.googleapis.com |
| # endpoints: |
| # # Below entry makes 'google.example.library.v1.Library' |
| # # API be served from endpoint address library-example.googleapis.com. |
| # # It also allows HTTP OPTIONS calls to be passed to the backend, for |
| # # it to decide whether the subsequent cross-origin request is |
| # # allowed to proceed. |
| # - name: library-example.googleapis.com |
| # allow_cors: true |
| "allowCors": True or False, # Allowing |
| # [CORS](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-origin_resource_sharing), aka |
| # cross-domain traffic, would allow the backends served from this endpoint to |
| # receive and respond to HTTP OPTIONS requests. The response will be used by |
| # the browser to determine whether the subsequent cross-origin request is |
| # allowed to proceed. |
| "target": "A String", # The specification of an Internet routable address of API frontend that will |
| # handle requests to this [API |
| # Endpoint](https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/glossary). It should be |
| # either a valid IPv4 address or a fully-qualified domain name. For example, |
| # "8.8.8.8" or "myservice.appspot.com". |
| "features": [ # The list of features enabled on this endpoint. |
| "A String", |
| ], |
| "name": "A String", # The canonical name of this endpoint. |
| "aliases": [ # DEPRECATED: This field is no longer supported. Instead of using aliases, |
| # please specify multiple google.api.Endpoint for each of the intended |
| # aliases. |
| # |
| # Additional names that this endpoint will be hosted on. |
| "A String", |
| ], |
| }, |
| ], |
| }, |
| "name": "A String", # The resource name of the consumer and service. |
| # |
| # A valid name would be: |
| # - projects/123/services/serviceusage.googleapis.com |
| "parent": "A String", # The resource name of the consumer. |
| # |
| # A valid name would be: |
| # - projects/123 |
| }, |
| ], |
| "nextPageToken": "A String", # Token that can be passed to `ListServices` to resume a paginated |
| # query. |
| }</pre> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="method"> |
| <code class="details" id="list_next">list_next(previous_request, previous_response)</code> |
| <pre>Retrieves the next page of results. |
| |
| Args: |
| previous_request: The request for the previous page. (required) |
| previous_response: The response from the request for the previous page. (required) |
| |
| Returns: |
| A request object that you can call 'execute()' on to request the next |
| page. Returns None if there are no more items in the collection. |
| </pre> |
| </div> |
| |
| </body></html> |