Cloud Asset V1 API - Class Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::ResourceSearchResult (v0.29.2)

Reference documentation and code samples for the Cloud Asset V1 API class Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::ResourceSearchResult.

A result of Resource Search, containing information of a cloud resource. Next ID: 34

Inherits

  • Object

Extended By

  • Google::Protobuf::MessageExts::ClassMethods

Includes

  • Google::Protobuf::MessageExts

Methods

#additional_attributes

def additional_attributes() -> ::Google::Protobuf::Struct
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Struct) —

    The additional searchable attributes of this resource. The attributes may vary from one resource type to another. Examples: projectId for Project, dnsName for DNS ManagedZone. This field contains a subset of the resource metadata fields that are returned by the List or Get APIs provided by the corresponding Google Cloud service (e.g., Compute Engine). see API references and supported searchable attributes to see which fields are included.

    You can search values of these fields through free text search. However, you should not consume the field programically as the field names and values may change as the Google Cloud service updates to a new incompatible API version.

    To search against the additional_attributes:

    • Use a free text query to match the attributes values. Example: to search additional_attributes = { dnsName: "foobar" }, you can issue a query foobar.

#additional_attributes=

def additional_attributes=(value) -> ::Google::Protobuf::Struct
Parameter
  • value (::Google::Protobuf::Struct) —

    The additional searchable attributes of this resource. The attributes may vary from one resource type to another. Examples: projectId for Project, dnsName for DNS ManagedZone. This field contains a subset of the resource metadata fields that are returned by the List or Get APIs provided by the corresponding Google Cloud service (e.g., Compute Engine). see API references and supported searchable attributes to see which fields are included.

    You can search values of these fields through free text search. However, you should not consume the field programically as the field names and values may change as the Google Cloud service updates to a new incompatible API version.

    To search against the additional_attributes:

    • Use a free text query to match the attributes values. Example: to search additional_attributes = { dnsName: "foobar" }, you can issue a query foobar.
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Struct) —

    The additional searchable attributes of this resource. The attributes may vary from one resource type to another. Examples: projectId for Project, dnsName for DNS ManagedZone. This field contains a subset of the resource metadata fields that are returned by the List or Get APIs provided by the corresponding Google Cloud service (e.g., Compute Engine). see API references and supported searchable attributes to see which fields are included.

    You can search values of these fields through free text search. However, you should not consume the field programically as the field names and values may change as the Google Cloud service updates to a new incompatible API version.

    To search against the additional_attributes:

    • Use a free text query to match the attributes values. Example: to search additional_attributes = { dnsName: "foobar" }, you can issue a query foobar.

#asset_type

def asset_type() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The type of this resource. Example: compute.googleapis.com/Disk.

    To search against the asset_type:

    • Specify the asset_type field in your search request.

#asset_type=

def asset_type=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) —

    The type of this resource. Example: compute.googleapis.com/Disk.

    To search against the asset_type:

    • Specify the asset_type field in your search request.
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The type of this resource. Example: compute.googleapis.com/Disk.

    To search against the asset_type:

    • Specify the asset_type field in your search request.

#attached_resources

def attached_resources() -> ::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::AttachedResource>
Returns
  • (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::AttachedResource>) — Attached resources of this resource. For example, an OSConfig Inventory is an attached resource of a Compute Instance. This field is repeated because a resource could have multiple attached resources.

    This attached_resources field is not searchable. Some attributes of the attached resources are exposed in additional_attributes field, so as to allow users to search on them.

#attached_resources=

def attached_resources=(value) -> ::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::AttachedResource>
Parameter
  • value (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::AttachedResource>) — Attached resources of this resource. For example, an OSConfig Inventory is an attached resource of a Compute Instance. This field is repeated because a resource could have multiple attached resources.

    This attached_resources field is not searchable. Some attributes of the attached resources are exposed in additional_attributes field, so as to allow users to search on them.

Returns
  • (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::AttachedResource>) — Attached resources of this resource. For example, an OSConfig Inventory is an attached resource of a Compute Instance. This field is repeated because a resource could have multiple attached resources.

    This attached_resources field is not searchable. Some attributes of the attached resources are exposed in additional_attributes field, so as to allow users to search on them.

#create_time

def create_time() -> ::Google::Protobuf::Timestamp
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Timestamp) —

    The create timestamp of this resource, at which the resource was created. The granularity is in seconds. Timestamp.nanos will always be 0. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against create_time:

    • Use a field query.
      • value in seconds since unix epoch. Example: createTime > 1609459200
      • value in date string. Example: createTime > 2021-01-01
      • value in date-time string (must be quoted). Example: createTime > "2021-01-01T00:00:00"

#create_time=

def create_time=(value) -> ::Google::Protobuf::Timestamp
Parameter
  • value (::Google::Protobuf::Timestamp) —

    The create timestamp of this resource, at which the resource was created. The granularity is in seconds. Timestamp.nanos will always be 0. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against create_time:

    • Use a field query.
      • value in seconds since unix epoch. Example: createTime > 1609459200
      • value in date string. Example: createTime > 2021-01-01
      • value in date-time string (must be quoted). Example: createTime > "2021-01-01T00:00:00"
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Timestamp) —

    The create timestamp of this resource, at which the resource was created. The granularity is in seconds. Timestamp.nanos will always be 0. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against create_time:

    • Use a field query.
      • value in seconds since unix epoch. Example: createTime > 1609459200
      • value in date string. Example: createTime > 2021-01-01
      • value in date-time string (must be quoted). Example: createTime > "2021-01-01T00:00:00"

#description

def description() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) —

    One or more paragraphs of text description of this resource. Maximum length could be up to 1M bytes. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the description:

    • Use a field query. Example: description:"important instance"
    • Use a free text query. Example: "important instance"

#description=

def description=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) —

    One or more paragraphs of text description of this resource. Maximum length could be up to 1M bytes. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the description:

    • Use a field query. Example: description:"important instance"
    • Use a free text query. Example: "important instance"
Returns
  • (::String) —

    One or more paragraphs of text description of this resource. Maximum length could be up to 1M bytes. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the description:

    • Use a field query. Example: description:"important instance"
    • Use a free text query. Example: "important instance"

#display_name

def display_name() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The display name of this resource. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the display_name:

    • Use a field query. Example: displayName:"My Instance"
    • Use a free text query. Example: "My Instance"

#display_name=

def display_name=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) —

    The display name of this resource. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the display_name:

    • Use a field query. Example: displayName:"My Instance"
    • Use a free text query. Example: "My Instance"
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The display name of this resource. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the display_name:

    • Use a field query. Example: displayName:"My Instance"
    • Use a free text query. Example: "My Instance"

#effective_tags

def effective_tags() -> ::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::EffectiveTagDetails>
Returns
  • (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::EffectiveTagDetails>) —

    The effective tags on this resource. All of the tags that are both attached to and inherited by a resource are collectively called the effective tags. For more information, see tag inheritance.

    To search against the effective_tags:

    • Use a field query. Example:
      • effectiveTagKeys:"123456789/env*"
      • effectiveTagKeys="123456789/env"
      • effectiveTagKeys:"env"
      • effectiveTagValues:"env"
      • effectiveTagValues:"env/prod"
      • effectiveTagValues:"123456789/env/prod*"
      • effectiveTagValues="123456789/env/prod"
      • effectiveTagValueIds="tagValues/456"

#effective_tags=

def effective_tags=(value) -> ::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::EffectiveTagDetails>
Parameter
  • value (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::EffectiveTagDetails>) —

    The effective tags on this resource. All of the tags that are both attached to and inherited by a resource are collectively called the effective tags. For more information, see tag inheritance.

    To search against the effective_tags:

    • Use a field query. Example:
      • effectiveTagKeys:"123456789/env*"
      • effectiveTagKeys="123456789/env"
      • effectiveTagKeys:"env"
      • effectiveTagValues:"env"
      • effectiveTagValues:"env/prod"
      • effectiveTagValues:"123456789/env/prod*"
      • effectiveTagValues="123456789/env/prod"
      • effectiveTagValueIds="tagValues/456"
Returns
  • (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::EffectiveTagDetails>) —

    The effective tags on this resource. All of the tags that are both attached to and inherited by a resource are collectively called the effective tags. For more information, see tag inheritance.

    To search against the effective_tags:

    • Use a field query. Example:
      • effectiveTagKeys:"123456789/env*"
      • effectiveTagKeys="123456789/env"
      • effectiveTagKeys:"env"
      • effectiveTagValues:"env"
      • effectiveTagValues:"env/prod"
      • effectiveTagValues:"123456789/env/prod*"
      • effectiveTagValues="123456789/env/prod"
      • effectiveTagValueIds="tagValues/456"

#folders

def folders() -> ::Array<::String>
Returns
  • (::Array<::String>) —

    The folder(s) that this resource belongs to, in the form of folders/{FOLDER_NUMBER}. This field is available when the resource belongs to one or more folders.

    To search against folders:

    • Use a field query. Example: folders:(123 OR 456)
    • Use a free text query. Example: 123
    • Specify the scope field as this folder in your search request.

#folders=

def folders=(value) -> ::Array<::String>
Parameter
  • value (::Array<::String>) —

    The folder(s) that this resource belongs to, in the form of folders/{FOLDER_NUMBER}. This field is available when the resource belongs to one or more folders.

    To search against folders:

    • Use a field query. Example: folders:(123 OR 456)
    • Use a free text query. Example: 123
    • Specify the scope field as this folder in your search request.
Returns
  • (::Array<::String>) —

    The folder(s) that this resource belongs to, in the form of folders/{FOLDER_NUMBER}. This field is available when the resource belongs to one or more folders.

    To search against folders:

    • Use a field query. Example: folders:(123 OR 456)
    • Use a free text query. Example: 123
    • Specify the scope field as this folder in your search request.

#kms_key

def kms_key() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The Cloud KMS CryptoKey name or CryptoKeyVersion name.

    This field only presents for the purpose of backward compatibility. Use the kms_keys field to retrieve Cloud KMS key information. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it and will only be populated for these resource types for backward compatible purposes.

    To search against the kms_key:

    • Use a field query. Example: kmsKey:key
    • Use a free text query. Example: key

#kms_key=

def kms_key=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) —

    The Cloud KMS CryptoKey name or CryptoKeyVersion name.

    This field only presents for the purpose of backward compatibility. Use the kms_keys field to retrieve Cloud KMS key information. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it and will only be populated for these resource types for backward compatible purposes.

    To search against the kms_key:

    • Use a field query. Example: kmsKey:key
    • Use a free text query. Example: key
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The Cloud KMS CryptoKey name or CryptoKeyVersion name.

    This field only presents for the purpose of backward compatibility. Use the kms_keys field to retrieve Cloud KMS key information. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it and will only be populated for these resource types for backward compatible purposes.

    To search against the kms_key:

    • Use a field query. Example: kmsKey:key
    • Use a free text query. Example: key

#kms_keys

def kms_keys() -> ::Array<::String>
Returns
  • (::Array<::String>) —

    The Cloud KMS CryptoKey names or CryptoKeyVersion names. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the kms_keys:

    • Use a field query. Example: kmsKeys:key
    • Use a free text query. Example: key

#kms_keys=

def kms_keys=(value) -> ::Array<::String>
Parameter
  • value (::Array<::String>) —

    The Cloud KMS CryptoKey names or CryptoKeyVersion names. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the kms_keys:

    • Use a field query. Example: kmsKeys:key
    • Use a free text query. Example: key
Returns
  • (::Array<::String>) —

    The Cloud KMS CryptoKey names or CryptoKeyVersion names. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the kms_keys:

    • Use a field query. Example: kmsKeys:key
    • Use a free text query. Example: key

#labels

def labels() -> ::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::String}
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::String}) —

    Labels associated with this resource. See Labelling and grouping Google Cloud resources for more information. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the labels:

    • Use a field query:
      • query on any label's key or value. Example: labels:prod
      • query by a given label. Example: labels.env:prod
      • query by a given label's existence. Example: labels.env:*
    • Use a free text query. Example: prod

#labels=

def labels=(value) -> ::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::String}
Parameter
  • value (::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::String}) —

    Labels associated with this resource. See Labelling and grouping Google Cloud resources for more information. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the labels:

    • Use a field query:
      • query on any label's key or value. Example: labels:prod
      • query by a given label. Example: labels.env:prod
      • query by a given label's existence. Example: labels.env:*
    • Use a free text query. Example: prod
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::String}) —

    Labels associated with this resource. See Labelling and grouping Google Cloud resources for more information. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the labels:

    • Use a field query:
      • query on any label's key or value. Example: labels:prod
      • query by a given label. Example: labels.env:prod
      • query by a given label's existence. Example: labels.env:*
    • Use a free text query. Example: prod

#location

def location() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) —

    Location can be global, regional like us-east1, or zonal like us-west1-b. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the location:

    • Use a field query. Example: location:us-west*
    • Use a free text query. Example: us-west*

#location=

def location=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) —

    Location can be global, regional like us-east1, or zonal like us-west1-b. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the location:

    • Use a field query. Example: location:us-west*
    • Use a free text query. Example: us-west*
Returns
  • (::String) —

    Location can be global, regional like us-east1, or zonal like us-west1-b. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the location:

    • Use a field query. Example: location:us-west*
    • Use a free text query. Example: us-west*

#name

def name() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The full resource name of this resource. Example: //compute.googleapis.com/projects/my_project_123/zones/zone1/instances/instance1. See Cloud Asset Inventory Resource Name Format for more information.

    To search against the name:

    • Use a field query. Example: name:instance1
    • Use a free text query. Example: instance1

#name=

def name=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) —

    The full resource name of this resource. Example: //compute.googleapis.com/projects/my_project_123/zones/zone1/instances/instance1. See Cloud Asset Inventory Resource Name Format for more information.

    To search against the name:

    • Use a field query. Example: name:instance1
    • Use a free text query. Example: instance1
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The full resource name of this resource. Example: //compute.googleapis.com/projects/my_project_123/zones/zone1/instances/instance1. See Cloud Asset Inventory Resource Name Format for more information.

    To search against the name:

    • Use a field query. Example: name:instance1
    • Use a free text query. Example: instance1

#network_tags

def network_tags() -> ::Array<::String>
Returns
  • (::Array<::String>) —

    Network tags associated with this resource. Like labels, network tags are a type of annotations used to group Google Cloud resources. See Labelling Google Cloud resources for more information. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the network_tags:

    • Use a field query. Example: networkTags:internal
    • Use a free text query. Example: internal

#network_tags=

def network_tags=(value) -> ::Array<::String>
Parameter
  • value (::Array<::String>) —

    Network tags associated with this resource. Like labels, network tags are a type of annotations used to group Google Cloud resources. See Labelling Google Cloud resources for more information. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the network_tags:

    • Use a field query. Example: networkTags:internal
    • Use a free text query. Example: internal
Returns
  • (::Array<::String>) —

    Network tags associated with this resource. Like labels, network tags are a type of annotations used to group Google Cloud resources. See Labelling Google Cloud resources for more information. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against the network_tags:

    • Use a field query. Example: networkTags:internal
    • Use a free text query. Example: internal

#organization

def organization() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The organization that this resource belongs to, in the form of organizations/{ORGANIZATION_NUMBER}. This field is available when the resource belongs to an organization.

    To search against organization:

    • Use a field query. Example: organization:123
    • Use a free text query. Example: 123
    • Specify the scope field as this organization in your search request.

#organization=

def organization=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) —

    The organization that this resource belongs to, in the form of organizations/{ORGANIZATION_NUMBER}. This field is available when the resource belongs to an organization.

    To search against organization:

    • Use a field query. Example: organization:123
    • Use a free text query. Example: 123
    • Specify the scope field as this organization in your search request.
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The organization that this resource belongs to, in the form of organizations/{ORGANIZATION_NUMBER}. This field is available when the resource belongs to an organization.

    To search against organization:

    • Use a field query. Example: organization:123
    • Use a free text query. Example: 123
    • Specify the scope field as this organization in your search request.

#parent_asset_type

def parent_asset_type() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The type of this resource's immediate parent, if there is one.

    To search against the parent_asset_type:

    • Use a field query. Example: parentAssetType:"cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com/Project"
    • Use a free text query. Example: cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com/Project

#parent_asset_type=

def parent_asset_type=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) —

    The type of this resource's immediate parent, if there is one.

    To search against the parent_asset_type:

    • Use a field query. Example: parentAssetType:"cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com/Project"
    • Use a free text query. Example: cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com/Project
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The type of this resource's immediate parent, if there is one.

    To search against the parent_asset_type:

    • Use a field query. Example: parentAssetType:"cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com/Project"
    • Use a free text query. Example: cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com/Project

#parent_full_resource_name

def parent_full_resource_name() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The full resource name of this resource's parent, if it has one. To search against the parent_full_resource_name:

    • Use a field query. Example: parentFullResourceName:"project-name"
    • Use a free text query. Example: project-name

#parent_full_resource_name=

def parent_full_resource_name=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) —

    The full resource name of this resource's parent, if it has one. To search against the parent_full_resource_name:

    • Use a field query. Example: parentFullResourceName:"project-name"
    • Use a free text query. Example: project-name
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The full resource name of this resource's parent, if it has one. To search against the parent_full_resource_name:

    • Use a field query. Example: parentFullResourceName:"project-name"
    • Use a free text query. Example: project-name

#project

def project() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The project that this resource belongs to, in the form of projects/{PROJECT_NUMBER}. This field is available when the resource belongs to a project.

    To search against project:

    • Use a field query. Example: project:12345
    • Use a free text query. Example: 12345
    • Specify the scope field as this project in your search request.

#project=

def project=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) —

    The project that this resource belongs to, in the form of projects/{PROJECT_NUMBER}. This field is available when the resource belongs to a project.

    To search against project:

    • Use a field query. Example: project:12345
    • Use a free text query. Example: 12345
    • Specify the scope field as this project in your search request.
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The project that this resource belongs to, in the form of projects/{PROJECT_NUMBER}. This field is available when the resource belongs to a project.

    To search against project:

    • Use a field query. Example: project:12345
    • Use a free text query. Example: 12345
    • Specify the scope field as this project in your search request.

#relationships

def relationships() -> ::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::RelatedResources}
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::RelatedResources}) — A map of related resources of this resource, keyed by the relationship type. A relationship type is in the format of {SourceType}{ACTION}{DestType}. Example: DISK_TO_INSTANCE, DISK_TO_NETWORK, INSTANCE_TO_INSTANCEGROUP. See supported relationship types.

#relationships=

def relationships=(value) -> ::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::RelatedResources}
Parameter
  • value (::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::RelatedResources}) — A map of related resources of this resource, keyed by the relationship type. A relationship type is in the format of {SourceType}{ACTION}{DestType}. Example: DISK_TO_INSTANCE, DISK_TO_NETWORK, INSTANCE_TO_INSTANCEGROUP. See supported relationship types.
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::RelatedResources}) — A map of related resources of this resource, keyed by the relationship type. A relationship type is in the format of {SourceType}{ACTION}{DestType}. Example: DISK_TO_INSTANCE, DISK_TO_NETWORK, INSTANCE_TO_INSTANCEGROUP. See supported relationship types.

#scc_security_marks

def scc_security_marks() -> ::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::String}
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::String}) —

    The actual content of Security Command Center security marks associated with the asset.

    To search against SCC SecurityMarks field:

    • Use a field query:
      • query by a given key value pair. Example: sccSecurityMarks.foo=bar
      • query by a given key's existence. Example: sccSecurityMarks.foo:*

#scc_security_marks=

def scc_security_marks=(value) -> ::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::String}
Parameter
  • value (::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::String}) —

    The actual content of Security Command Center security marks associated with the asset.

    To search against SCC SecurityMarks field:

    • Use a field query:
      • query by a given key value pair. Example: sccSecurityMarks.foo=bar
      • query by a given key's existence. Example: sccSecurityMarks.foo:*
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::String}) —

    The actual content of Security Command Center security marks associated with the asset.

    To search against SCC SecurityMarks field:

    • Use a field query:
      • query by a given key value pair. Example: sccSecurityMarks.foo=bar
      • query by a given key's existence. Example: sccSecurityMarks.foo:*

#state

def state() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The state of this resource. Different resources types have different state definitions that are mapped from various fields of different resource types. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    Example: If the resource is an instance provided by Compute Engine, its state will include PROVISIONING, STAGING, RUNNING, STOPPING, SUSPENDING, SUSPENDED, REPAIRING, and TERMINATED. See status definition in API Reference. If the resource is a project provided by Resource Manager, its state will include LIFECYCLE_STATE_UNSPECIFIED, ACTIVE, DELETE_REQUESTED and DELETE_IN_PROGRESS. See lifecycleState definition in API Reference.

    To search against the state:

    • Use a field query. Example: state:RUNNING
    • Use a free text query. Example: RUNNING

#state=

def state=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) —

    The state of this resource. Different resources types have different state definitions that are mapped from various fields of different resource types. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    Example: If the resource is an instance provided by Compute Engine, its state will include PROVISIONING, STAGING, RUNNING, STOPPING, SUSPENDING, SUSPENDED, REPAIRING, and TERMINATED. See status definition in API Reference. If the resource is a project provided by Resource Manager, its state will include LIFECYCLE_STATE_UNSPECIFIED, ACTIVE, DELETE_REQUESTED and DELETE_IN_PROGRESS. See lifecycleState definition in API Reference.

    To search against the state:

    • Use a field query. Example: state:RUNNING
    • Use a free text query. Example: RUNNING
Returns
  • (::String) —

    The state of this resource. Different resources types have different state definitions that are mapped from various fields of different resource types. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    Example: If the resource is an instance provided by Compute Engine, its state will include PROVISIONING, STAGING, RUNNING, STOPPING, SUSPENDING, SUSPENDED, REPAIRING, and TERMINATED. See status definition in API Reference. If the resource is a project provided by Resource Manager, its state will include LIFECYCLE_STATE_UNSPECIFIED, ACTIVE, DELETE_REQUESTED and DELETE_IN_PROGRESS. See lifecycleState definition in API Reference.

    To search against the state:

    • Use a field query. Example: state:RUNNING
    • Use a free text query. Example: RUNNING

#tag_keys

def tag_keys() -> ::Array<::String>
Returns
  • (::Array<::String>) —

    This field is only present for the purpose of backward compatibility. Use the tags field instead.

    TagKey namespaced names, in the format of {ORG_ID}/{TAG_KEY_SHORT_NAME}. To search against the tagKeys:

    • Use a field query. Example:

      • tagKeys:"123456789/env*"
      • tagKeys="123456789/env"
      • tagKeys:"env"
    • Use a free text query. Example:

      • env

#tag_keys=

def tag_keys=(value) -> ::Array<::String>
Parameter
  • value (::Array<::String>) —

    This field is only present for the purpose of backward compatibility. Use the tags field instead.

    TagKey namespaced names, in the format of {ORG_ID}/{TAG_KEY_SHORT_NAME}. To search against the tagKeys:

    • Use a field query. Example:

      • tagKeys:"123456789/env*"
      • tagKeys="123456789/env"
      • tagKeys:"env"
    • Use a free text query. Example:

      • env
Returns
  • (::Array<::String>) —

    This field is only present for the purpose of backward compatibility. Use the tags field instead.

    TagKey namespaced names, in the format of {ORG_ID}/{TAG_KEY_SHORT_NAME}. To search against the tagKeys:

    • Use a field query. Example:

      • tagKeys:"123456789/env*"
      • tagKeys="123456789/env"
      • tagKeys:"env"
    • Use a free text query. Example:

      • env

#tag_value_ids

def tag_value_ids() -> ::Array<::String>
Returns
  • (::Array<::String>) —

    This field is only present for the purpose of backward compatibility. Use the tags field instead.

    TagValue IDs, in the format of tagValues/{TAG_VALUE_ID}. To search against the tagValueIds:

    • Use a field query. Example:

      • tagValueIds="tagValues/456"
    • Use a free text query. Example:

      • 456

#tag_value_ids=

def tag_value_ids=(value) -> ::Array<::String>
Parameter
  • value (::Array<::String>) —

    This field is only present for the purpose of backward compatibility. Use the tags field instead.

    TagValue IDs, in the format of tagValues/{TAG_VALUE_ID}. To search against the tagValueIds:

    • Use a field query. Example:

      • tagValueIds="tagValues/456"
    • Use a free text query. Example:

      • 456
Returns
  • (::Array<::String>) —

    This field is only present for the purpose of backward compatibility. Use the tags field instead.

    TagValue IDs, in the format of tagValues/{TAG_VALUE_ID}. To search against the tagValueIds:

    • Use a field query. Example:

      • tagValueIds="tagValues/456"
    • Use a free text query. Example:

      • 456

#tag_values

def tag_values() -> ::Array<::String>
Returns
  • (::Array<::String>) —

    This field is only present for the purpose of backward compatibility. Use the tags field instead.

    TagValue namespaced names, in the format of {ORG_ID}/{TAG_KEY_SHORT_NAME}/{TAG_VALUE_SHORT_NAME}. To search against the tagValues:

    • Use a field query. Example:

      • tagValues:"env"
      • tagValues:"env/prod"
      • tagValues:"123456789/env/prod*"
      • tagValues="123456789/env/prod"
    • Use a free text query. Example:

      • prod

#tag_values=

def tag_values=(value) -> ::Array<::String>
Parameter
  • value (::Array<::String>) —

    This field is only present for the purpose of backward compatibility. Use the tags field instead.

    TagValue namespaced names, in the format of {ORG_ID}/{TAG_KEY_SHORT_NAME}/{TAG_VALUE_SHORT_NAME}. To search against the tagValues:

    • Use a field query. Example:

      • tagValues:"env"
      • tagValues:"env/prod"
      • tagValues:"123456789/env/prod*"
      • tagValues="123456789/env/prod"
    • Use a free text query. Example:

      • prod
Returns
  • (::Array<::String>) —

    This field is only present for the purpose of backward compatibility. Use the tags field instead.

    TagValue namespaced names, in the format of {ORG_ID}/{TAG_KEY_SHORT_NAME}/{TAG_VALUE_SHORT_NAME}. To search against the tagValues:

    • Use a field query. Example:

      • tagValues:"env"
      • tagValues:"env/prod"
      • tagValues:"123456789/env/prod*"
      • tagValues="123456789/env/prod"
    • Use a free text query. Example:

      • prod

#tags

def tags() -> ::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::Tag>
Returns
  • (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::Tag>) —

    The tags directly attached to this resource.

    To search against the tags:

    • Use a field query. Example:

      • tagKeys:"123456789/env*"
      • tagKeys="123456789/env"
      • tagKeys:"env"
      • tagValues:"env"
      • tagValues:"env/prod"
      • tagValues:"123456789/env/prod*"
      • tagValues="123456789/env/prod"
      • tagValueIds="tagValues/456"
    • Use a free text query. Example:

      • env/prod

#tags=

def tags=(value) -> ::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::Tag>
Parameter
  • value (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::Tag>) —

    The tags directly attached to this resource.

    To search against the tags:

    • Use a field query. Example:

      • tagKeys:"123456789/env*"
      • tagKeys="123456789/env"
      • tagKeys:"env"
      • tagValues:"env"
      • tagValues:"env/prod"
      • tagValues:"123456789/env/prod*"
      • tagValues="123456789/env/prod"
      • tagValueIds="tagValues/456"
    • Use a free text query. Example:

      • env/prod
Returns
  • (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::Tag>) —

    The tags directly attached to this resource.

    To search against the tags:

    • Use a field query. Example:

      • tagKeys:"123456789/env*"
      • tagKeys="123456789/env"
      • tagKeys:"env"
      • tagValues:"env"
      • tagValues:"env/prod"
      • tagValues:"123456789/env/prod*"
      • tagValues="123456789/env/prod"
      • tagValueIds="tagValues/456"
    • Use a free text query. Example:

      • env/prod

#update_time

def update_time() -> ::Google::Protobuf::Timestamp
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Timestamp) —

    The last update timestamp of this resource, at which the resource was last modified or deleted. The granularity is in seconds. Timestamp.nanos will always be 0. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against update_time:

    • Use a field query.
      • value in seconds since unix epoch. Example: updateTime < 1609459200
      • value in date string. Example: updateTime < 2021-01-01
      • value in date-time string (must be quoted). Example: updateTime < "2021-01-01T00:00:00"

#update_time=

def update_time=(value) -> ::Google::Protobuf::Timestamp
Parameter
  • value (::Google::Protobuf::Timestamp) —

    The last update timestamp of this resource, at which the resource was last modified or deleted. The granularity is in seconds. Timestamp.nanos will always be 0. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against update_time:

    • Use a field query.
      • value in seconds since unix epoch. Example: updateTime < 1609459200
      • value in date string. Example: updateTime < 2021-01-01
      • value in date-time string (must be quoted). Example: updateTime < "2021-01-01T00:00:00"
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Timestamp) —

    The last update timestamp of this resource, at which the resource was last modified or deleted. The granularity is in seconds. Timestamp.nanos will always be 0. This field is available only when the resource's Protobuf contains it.

    To search against update_time:

    • Use a field query.
      • value in seconds since unix epoch. Example: updateTime < 1609459200
      • value in date string. Example: updateTime < 2021-01-01
      • value in date-time string (must be quoted). Example: updateTime < "2021-01-01T00:00:00"

#versioned_resources

def versioned_resources() -> ::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::VersionedResource>
Returns
  • (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::VersionedResource>) — Versioned resource representations of this resource. This is repeated because there could be multiple versions of resource representations during version migration.

    This versioned_resources field is not searchable. Some attributes of the resource representations are exposed in additional_attributes field, so as to allow users to search on them.

#versioned_resources=

def versioned_resources=(value) -> ::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::VersionedResource>
Parameter
  • value (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::VersionedResource>) — Versioned resource representations of this resource. This is repeated because there could be multiple versions of resource representations during version migration.

    This versioned_resources field is not searchable. Some attributes of the resource representations are exposed in additional_attributes field, so as to allow users to search on them.

Returns
  • (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Asset::V1::VersionedResource>) — Versioned resource representations of this resource. This is repeated because there could be multiple versions of resource representations during version migration.

    This versioned_resources field is not searchable. Some attributes of the resource representations are exposed in additional_attributes field, so as to allow users to search on them.