- HTTP request
- Path parameters
- Request body
- Response body
- Authorization scopes
- IAM Permissions
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Returns the specified firewall.
HTTP request
GET https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/{project}/global/firewalls/{firewall}
The URL uses gRPC Transcoding syntax.
Path parameters
Parameters | |
---|---|
project |
Project ID for this request. |
firewall |
Name of the firewall rule to return. |
Request body
The request body must be empty.
Response body
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.
If successful, the response body contains data with the following structure:
JSON representation |
---|
{ "kind": string, "id": string, "creationTimestamp": string, "name": string, "description": string, "network": string, "priority": integer, "sourceRanges": [ string ], "destinationRanges": [ string ], "sourceTags": [ string ], "targetTags": [ string ], "sourceServiceAccounts": [ string ], "targetServiceAccounts": [ string ], "allowed": [ { "IPProtocol": string, "ports": [ string ] } ], "denied": [ { "IPProtocol": string, "ports": [ string ] } ], "direction": enum, "logConfig": { "enable": boolean, "metadata": enum }, "disabled": boolean, "selfLink": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
kind |
[Output Only] Type of the resource. Always |
id |
[Output Only] The unique identifier for the resource. This identifier is defined by the server. |
creation |
[Output Only] Creation timestamp in RFC3339 text format. |
name |
Name of the resource; provided by the client when the resource is created. The name must be 1-63 characters long, and comply with RFC1035. Specifically, the name must be 1-63 characters long and match the regular expression |
description |
An optional description of this resource. Provide this field when you create the resource. |
network |
URL of the network resource for this firewall rule. If not specified when creating a firewall rule, the global/networks/default
|
priority |
Priority for this rule. This is an integer between |
source |
If source ranges are specified, the firewall rule applies only to traffic that has a source IP address in these ranges. These ranges must be expressed in CIDR format. One or both of |
destination |
If destination ranges are specified, the firewall rule applies only to traffic that has destination IP address in these ranges. These ranges must be expressed in CIDR format. Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported. |
source |
If source tags are specified, the firewall rule applies only to traffic with source IPs that match the primary network interfaces of VM instances that have the tag and are in the same VPC network. Source tags cannot be used to control traffic to an instance's external IP address, it only applies to traffic between instances in the same virtual network. Because tags are associated with instances, not IP addresses. One or both of |
target |
A list of tags that controls which instances the firewall rule applies to. If |
source |
If source service accounts are specified, the firewall rules apply only to traffic originating from an instance with a service account in this list. Source service accounts cannot be used to control traffic to an instance's external IP address because service accounts are associated with an instance, not an IP address. |
target |
A list of service accounts indicating sets of instances located in the network that may make network connections as specified in |
allowed[] |
The list of ALLOW rules specified by this firewall. Each rule specifies a protocol and port-range tuple that describes a permitted connection. |
allowed[]. |
The IP protocol to which this rule applies. The protocol type is required when creating a firewall rule. This value can either be one of the following well known protocol strings ( |
allowed[]. |
An optional list of ports to which this rule applies. This field is only applicable for the UDP or TCP protocol. Each entry must be either an integer or a range. If not specified, this rule applies to connections through any port. Example inputs include: |
denied[] |
The list of DENY rules specified by this firewall. Each rule specifies a protocol and port-range tuple that describes a denied connection. |
denied[]. |
The IP protocol to which this rule applies. The protocol type is required when creating a firewall rule. This value can either be one of the following well known protocol strings ( |
denied[]. |
An optional list of ports to which this rule applies. This field is only applicable for the UDP or TCP protocol. Each entry must be either an integer or a range. If not specified, this rule applies to connections through any port. Example inputs include: |
direction |
Direction of traffic to which this firewall applies, either |
log |
This field denotes the logging options for a particular firewall rule. If logging is enabled, logs will be exported to Cloud Logging. |
log |
This field denotes whether to enable logging for a particular firewall rule. |
log |
This field can only be specified for a particular firewall rule if logging is enabled for that rule. This field denotes whether to include or exclude metadata for firewall logs. |
disabled |
Denotes whether the firewall rule is disabled. When set to true, the firewall rule is not enforced and the network behaves as if it did not exist. If this is unspecified, the firewall rule will be enabled. |
self |
[Output Only] Server-defined URL for the resource. |
Authorization scopes
Requires one of the following OAuth scopes:
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/compute.readonly
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/compute
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform
For more information, see the Authentication Overview.
IAM Permissions
In addition to any permissions specified on the fields above, authorization requires one or more of the following IAM permissions:
compute.firewalls.get
To find predefined roles that contain those permissions, see Compute Engine IAM Roles.