TargetHttpsProxy(mapping=None, *, ignore_unknown_fields=False, **kwargs)
Represents a Target HTTPS Proxy resource. Google Compute Engine has
two Target HTTPS Proxy resources: *
Global </compute/docs/reference/rest/v1/targetHttpsProxies>
*
Regional </compute/docs/reference/rest/v1/regionTargetHttpsProxies>
A target HTTPS proxy is a component of Google Cloud HTTPS load
balancers. * targetHttpProxies are used by global external
Application Load Balancers, classic Application Load Balancers,
cross-region internal Application Load Balancers, and Traffic
Director. * regionTargetHttpProxies are used by regional internal
Application Load Balancers and regional external Application Load
Balancers. Forwarding rules reference a target HTTPS proxy, and the
target proxy then references a URL map. For more information, read
Using Target Proxies and Forwarding rule concepts.
.. _oneof: https://proto-plus-python.readthedocs.io/en/stable/fields.html#oneofs-mutually-exclusive-fields
Attributes |
|
---|---|
Name | Description |
authorization_policy |
str
Optional. A URL referring to a networksecurity.AuthorizationPolicy resource that describes how the proxy should authorize inbound traffic. If left blank, access will not be restricted by an authorization policy. Refer to the AuthorizationPolicy resource for additional details. authorizationPolicy only applies to a global TargetHttpsProxy attached to globalForwardingRules with the loadBalancingScheme set to INTERNAL_SELF_MANAGED. Note: This field currently has no impact. This field is a member of oneof _ _authorization_policy .
|
certificate_map |
str
URL of a certificate map that identifies a certificate map associated with the given target proxy. This field can only be set for Global external Application Load Balancer or Classic Application Load Balancer. For other products use Certificate Manager Certificates instead. If set, sslCertificates will be ignored. Accepted format is //certificatemanager.googleapis.com/projects/{project }/locations/{location}/certificateMaps/{resourceName}. This field is a member of oneof _ _certificate_map .
|
creation_timestamp |
str
[Output Only] Creation timestamp in RFC3339 text format. This field is a member of oneof _ _creation_timestamp .
|
description |
str
An optional description of this resource. Provide this property when you create the resource. This field is a member of oneof _ _description .
|
fingerprint |
str
Fingerprint of this resource. A hash of the contents stored in this object. This field is used in optimistic locking. This field will be ignored when inserting a TargetHttpsProxy. An up-to-date fingerprint must be provided in order to patch the TargetHttpsProxy; otherwise, the request will fail with error 412 conditionNotMet. To see the latest fingerprint, make a get() request to retrieve the TargetHttpsProxy. This field is a member of oneof _ _fingerprint .
|
http_keep_alive_timeout_sec |
int
Specifies how long to keep a connection open, after completing a response, while there is no matching traffic (in seconds). If an HTTP keep-alive is not specified, a default value (610 seconds) will be used. For global external Application Load Balancers, the minimum allowed value is 5 seconds and the maximum allowed value is 1200 seconds. For classic Application Load Balancers, this option is not supported. This field is a member of oneof _ _http_keep_alive_timeout_sec .
|
id |
int
[Output Only] The unique identifier for the resource. This identifier is defined by the server. This field is a member of oneof _ _id .
|
kind |
str
[Output Only] Type of resource. Always compute#targetHttpsProxy for target HTTPS proxies. This field is a member of oneof _ _kind .
|
name |
str
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 [a-z]([-a-z0-9]*[a-z0-9])? which means the first
character must be a lowercase letter, and all following
characters must be a dash, lowercase letter, or digit,
except the last character, which cannot be a dash.
This field is a member of oneof _ _name .
|
proxy_bind |
bool
This field only applies when the forwarding rule that references this target proxy has a loadBalancingScheme set to INTERNAL_SELF_MANAGED. When this field is set to true, Envoy proxies set up inbound traffic interception and bind to the IP address and port specified in the forwarding rule. This is generally useful when using Traffic Director to configure Envoy as a gateway or middle proxy (in other words, not a sidecar proxy). The Envoy proxy listens for inbound requests and handles requests when it receives them. The default is false. This field is a member of oneof _ _proxy_bind .
|
quic_override |
str
Specifies the QUIC override policy for this TargetHttpsProxy resource. This setting determines whether the load balancer attempts to negotiate QUIC with clients. You can specify NONE, ENABLE, or DISABLE. - When quic-override is set to NONE, Google manages whether QUIC is used. - When quic-override is set to ENABLE, the load balancer uses QUIC when possible. - When quic-override is set to DISABLE, the load balancer doesn't use QUIC. - If the quic-override flag is not specified, NONE is implied. Check the QuicOverride enum for the list of possible values. This field is a member of oneof _ _quic_override .
|
region |
str
[Output Only] URL of the region where the regional TargetHttpsProxy resides. This field is not applicable to global TargetHttpsProxies. This field is a member of oneof _ _region .
|
self_link |
str
[Output Only] Server-defined URL for the resource. This field is a member of oneof _ _self_link .
|
server_tls_policy |
str
Optional. A URL referring to a networksecurity.ServerTlsPolicy resource that describes how the proxy should authenticate inbound traffic. serverTlsPolicy only applies to a global TargetHttpsProxy attached to globalForwardingRules with the loadBalancingScheme set to INTERNAL_SELF_MANAGED or EXTERNAL or EXTERNAL_MANAGED. For details which ServerTlsPolicy resources are accepted with INTERNAL_SELF_MANAGED and which with EXTERNAL, EXTERNAL_MANAGED loadBalancingScheme consult ServerTlsPolicy documentation. If left blank, communications are not encrypted. This field is a member of oneof _ _server_tls_policy .
|
ssl_certificates |
MutableSequence[str]
URLs to SslCertificate resources that are used to authenticate connections between users and the load balancer. At least one SSL certificate must be specified. SslCertificates do not apply when the load balancing scheme is set to INTERNAL_SELF_MANAGED. The URLs should refer to a SSL Certificate resource or Certificate Manager Certificate resource. Mixing Classic Certificates and Certificate Manager Certificates is not allowed. Certificate Manager Certificates must include the certificatemanager API. Certificate Manager Certificates are not supported by Global external Application Load Balancer or Classic Application Load Balancer, use certificate_map instead. Currently, you may specify up to 15 Classic SSL Certificates. Certificate Manager Certificates accepted formats are: - //certificatemanager.googleapis.com/projects/{project}/locations/{ location}/certificates/{resourceName}. - https://certificatemanager.googleapis.com/v1alpha1/projects/{project }/locations/{location}/certificates/{resourceName}. |
ssl_policy |
str
URL of SslPolicy resource that will be associated with the TargetHttpsProxy resource. If not set, the TargetHttpsProxy resource has no SSL policy configured. This field is a member of oneof _ _ssl_policy .
|
tls_early_data |
str
Specifies whether TLS 1.3 0-RTT Data ("Early Data") should be accepted for this service. Early Data allows a TLS resumption handshake to include the initial application payload (a HTTP request) alongside the handshake, reducing the effective round trips to "zero". This applies to TLS 1.3 connections over TCP (HTTP/2) as well as over UDP (QUIC/h3). This can improve application performance, especially on networks where interruptions may be common, such as on mobile. Requests with Early Data will have the "Early-Data" HTTP header set on the request, with a value of "1", to allow the backend to determine whether Early Data was included. Note: TLS Early Data may allow requests to be replayed, as the data is sent to the backend before the handshake has fully completed. Applications that allow idempotent HTTP methods to make non-idempotent changes, such as a GET request updating a database, should not accept Early Data on those requests, and reject requests with the "Early-Data: 1" HTTP header by returning a HTTP 425 (Too Early) status code, in order to remain RFC compliant. The default value is DISABLED. Check the TlsEarlyData enum for the list of possible values. This field is a member of oneof _ _tls_early_data .
|
url_map |
str
A fully-qualified or valid partial URL to the UrlMap resource that defines the mapping from URL to the BackendService. For example, the following are all valid URLs for specifying a URL map: - https://www.googleapis.compute/v1/projects/project/global/urlMaps/ url-map - projects/project/global/urlMaps/url-map - global/urlMaps/url-map This field is a member of oneof _ _url_map .
|
Classes
QuicOverride
QuicOverride(value)
Specifies the QUIC override policy for this TargetHttpsProxy resource. This setting determines whether the load balancer attempts to negotiate QUIC with clients. You can specify NONE, ENABLE, or DISABLE. - When quic-override is set to NONE, Google manages whether QUIC is used. - When quic-override is set to ENABLE, the load balancer uses QUIC when possible. - When quic-override is set to DISABLE, the load balancer doesn't use QUIC. - If the quic-override flag is not specified, NONE is implied.
TlsEarlyData
TlsEarlyData(value)
Specifies whether TLS 1.3 0-RTT Data ("Early Data") should be accepted for this service. Early Data allows a TLS resumption handshake to include the initial application payload (a HTTP request) alongside the handshake, reducing the effective round trips to "zero". This applies to TLS 1.3 connections over TCP (HTTP/2) as well as over UDP (QUIC/h3). This can improve application performance, especially on networks where interruptions may be common, such as on mobile. Requests with Early Data will have the "Early-Data" HTTP header set on the request, with a value of "1", to allow the backend to determine whether Early Data was included. Note: TLS Early Data may allow requests to be replayed, as the data is sent to the backend before the handshake has fully completed. Applications that allow idempotent HTTP methods to make non-idempotent changes, such as a GET request updating a database, should not accept Early Data on those requests, and reject requests with the "Early-Data: 1" HTTP header by returning a HTTP 425 (Too Early) status code, in order to remain RFC compliant. The default value is DISABLED.