gcloud beta active-directory peerings delete

NAME
gcloud beta active-directory peerings delete - delete a Managed Microsoft Active Directory domain peering
SYNOPSIS
gcloud beta active-directory peerings delete PEERING [--async] [GCLOUD_WIDE_FLAG]
DESCRIPTION
(BETA) Delete a Managed Microsoft Active Directory (AD) domain peering.

This command can fail for the following reasons:

  • The active account does not have permission to access the given AD domain.
  • The domain peering is no longer existed.
EXAMPLES
The following command deletes an AD domain peering with the name my-peering.
gcloud beta active-directory peerings delete my-peering
POSITIONAL ARGUMENTS
Peering resource - Name of the managed Managed Microsoft AD domain peering you want to delete. This represents a Cloud resource. (NOTE) Some attributes are not given arguments in this group but can be set in other ways.

To set the project attribute:

  • provide the argument peering on the command line with a fully specified name;
  • set the property core/project;
  • provide the argument --project on the command line.

This must be specified.

PEERING
ID of the peering or fully qualified identifier for the peering.

To set the peering attribute:

  • provide the argument peering on the command line.
FLAGS
--async
Return immediately, without waiting for the operation in progress to complete.
GCLOUD WIDE FLAGS
These flags are available to all commands: --access-token-file, --account, --billing-project, --configuration, --flags-file, --flatten, --format, --help, --impersonate-service-account, --log-http, --project, --quiet, --trace-token, --user-output-enabled, --verbosity.

Run $ gcloud help for details.

API REFERENCE
This command uses the managedidentities/v1beta1 API. The full documentation for this API can be found at: https://cloud.google.com/managed-microsoft-ad/
NOTES
This command is currently in beta and might change without notice. These variants are also available:
gcloud active-directory peerings delete
gcloud alpha active-directory peerings delete