Optional. The filter to list result by.
General filter string syntax:
<field> <operator> <value> (<logical connector>)
<field> can be "name", "address", "port" or "metadata.<key>" for map field.
<operator> can be "<, >, <=, >=, !=, =, :". Of which ":" means HAS, and
is roughly the same as "=".
<value> must be the same data type as field.
<logical connector> can be "AND, OR, NOT".
Examples of valid filters:
"metadata.owner" returns Endpoints that have a label with the key "owner"
this is the same as "metadata:owner".
"metadata.protocol=gRPC" returns Endpoints that have key/value
"protocol=gRPC".
"address=192.108.1.105" returns Endpoints that have this address.
"port>8080" returns Endpoints that have port number larger than 8080.
"name>projects/my-project/locations/us-east/namespaces/my-namespace/services/my-service/endpoints/endpoint-c"
returns Endpoints that have name that is alphabetically later than the
string, so "endpoint-e" will be returned but "endpoint-a" will not be.
"metadata.owner!=sd AND metadata.foo=bar" returns Endpoints that have
"owner" in label key but value is not "sd" AND have key/value foo=bar.
"doesnotexist.foo=bar" returns an empty list. Note that Endpoint doesn't
have a field called "doesnotexist". Since the filter does not match any
Endpoints, it returns no results.
Optional. The filter to list result by.
General filter string syntax:
<field> <operator> <value> (<logical connector>)
<field> can be "name", "address", "port" or "metadata.<key>" for map field.
<operator> can be "<, >, <=, >=, !=, =, :". Of which ":" means HAS, and
is roughly the same as "=".
<value> must be the same data type as field.
<logical connector> can be "AND, OR, NOT".
Examples of valid filters:
"metadata.owner" returns Endpoints that have a label with the key "owner"
this is the same as "metadata:owner".
"metadata.protocol=gRPC" returns Endpoints that have key/value
"protocol=gRPC".
"address=192.108.1.105" returns Endpoints that have this address.
"port>8080" returns Endpoints that have port number larger than 8080.
"name>projects/my-project/locations/us-east/namespaces/my-namespace/services/my-service/endpoints/endpoint-c"
returns Endpoints that have name that is alphabetically later than the
string, so "endpoint-e" will be returned but "endpoint-a" will not be.
"metadata.owner!=sd AND metadata.foo=bar" returns Endpoints that have
"owner" in label key but value is not "sd" AND have key/value foo=bar.
"doesnotexist.foo=bar" returns an empty list. Note that Endpoint doesn't
have a field called "doesnotexist". Since the filter does not match any
Endpoints, it returns no results.