The Cloud Storage XML API uses several standard HTTP headers as well as several extension (custom) HTTP headers. Several of the HTTP methods also support query string parameters. The headers and parameters are described below.
HTTP headers and query string parameters summary
The XML API uses the following standard HTTP headers:
The XML API uses the following extension (custom) HTTP headers:
The XML API uses the following query string parameters:
Standard HTTP headers
Authorization
A request header that contains a string used to authenticate requests.
Valid Values | One of the following:
|
Example | Authorization: Bearer ya29.AHES6ZRVmB7fkLtd1XTmq6mo0S1wqZZi3-Lh_s- ... |
Details | For more information about how to use this header, see
Authentication.
To create a sample OAuth 2.0 access token for testing, you can use the OAuth 2.0 playground. Note: If your requests are being routed
through a proxy, you may need to check with your network administrator
to ensure that the |
Cache-Control
A request and response header that specifies the cache-control setting.
Valid Values | Any valid cache-control value (see the specification). |
Example | Cache-Control: public, max-age=6000 |
Details | You should specify cache-control only for objects that are accessible to
all anonymous users. To be anonymously accessible, an object's ACL must
grant READ or FULL_CONTROL permission to
AllUsers . If an object is accessible to all anonymous users
and you do not specify a cache-control setting, Cloud Storage
applies a cache-control setting of 3600 seconds. When serving via XML,
Cloud Storage respects the cache-control of the object as set by
its metadata. |
Content-Disposition
A request and response header that specifies presentational information about the data being transmitted.
Valid Values | Any valid content disposition value (see the specification). |
Example | Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=FILENAME |
Details | If you set the Content-Disposition header when uploading an object, it
will be served at download time (and subsequently interpreted by web
browsers and other HTTP clients). A common use for Content-Disposition is
setting it to
attachment;filename=FILENAMEt ,
typically causing the web browser to open a "Save As..." dialog box. |
Content-Encoding
A request and response header that specifies the compression algorithm for an object.
Valid Values | Any valid compression algorithm (see the specification). |
Example | Content-Encoding: gzip |
Details | Cloud Storage does not compress objects and only decompresses
objects in certain scenarios. If
you use this header to specify a compression type algorithm (for example,
deflate ), Cloud Storage preserves the header as
object metadata, but does not
compress or decompress the object. |
Content-Language
Language code of the content.
Valid Values | A string of up to 100 characters. See the ISO 639-1 column of Codes for the Representation of Names of Languages for a list of language codes. |
Example | Content-Language: en |
Content-Length
The length (in bytes) of the request or response body.
Valid Values | Any value of zero or greater. |
Example | Content-Length: 1234 |
Details | This is required for all requests except those that use chunked transfer
encoding (see the
specification).
If you do not use chunked transfer encoding and you do not include the
Content-Length header in a request, the request fails and
Cloud Storage responds with a 411 Length Required status
code. |
Content-MD5
The MD5 digest of the request body.
Valid Values | A valid MD5 digest. |
Example | Content-MD5: iB94gawbwUSiZy5FuruIOQ== |
Details | See the
specification.
Cloud Storage can use this to check the integrity of a
PUT operation. |
Content-Range
A request or response header that specifies a byte range.
Valid Values | Any valid byte range. |
Example | Content-Range: bytes 456-987/1234 |
Details | When appearing in a response, the When included as part of a resumable
upload request, Byte ranges are inclusive; that is, For additional details, particularly regarding download responses, see the specification. |
Content-Type
The MIME type of the request or response.
Valid Values | Any valid MIME type (see the specification). |
Example | Content-Type: text/html |
Details | If you do not specify a content type when you upload an object, the
Cloud Storage system defaults to
application/octet-stream
when it serves the object. |
Date
The date and time of the request or response.
Valid Values | A date and time represented in conventional HTTP format (see the specification). |
Example | Date: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 11:11:11 GMT |
Details | When used to create
signed URLs using
the V2 signing process, the format should be in conventional HTTP format;
see section 7.1.1.2 of
the specification. When using the V4 signing process, the format
should be in the ISO
8601 basic format YYYYMMDD'T'HHMMSS'Z' . |
ETag
A response header that contains the entity tag of the object being accessed.
Valid Values | A string of characters enclosed by quotes. For more information, see Object metadata. |
Examples | ETag: "39a59594290b0f9a30662a56d695b71d" ETag: "-CKicn4fknbUCEAE=" |
Details | See the specification. |
Host
A request header that specifies the URI for Cloud Storage.
Valid Values | A valid format for the URI. |
Example | Host: storage.googleapis.com |
Details | For more information about valid URIs, see Request Endpoints and the host specification. |
If-Match
A request header that specifies an entity tag (ETag).
Valid Values | A valid entity tag. |
Example | If-Match: "881f7881ac1bc144a2672e45babb8839" |
Details | You can use this header with the HEAD Object and GET Object methods. If the ETag you specify with this header is the same as the ETag for the object, then the metadata or the object is returned. If the ETag you specify with this header is different than the ETag for the object, then the metadata or the object is not returned and Cloud Storage returns a 412 Precondition Failed error code. For more details, see the specification. |
If-Modified-Since
A request header that specifies a date and time.
Valid Values | A date and time represented in conventional HTTP format. |
Example | If-Modified-Since: Fri, 19 Feb 2010 22:04:23 GMT |
Details | You can use this header with the HEAD Object and GET Object methods. If
an object has been modified later than the date and time you specify with
this header, then the metadata or the object is returned. If an object has
been modified earlier than the date and time you specify with this header,
then the metadata or the object is not returned and Cloud Storage
returns a 304 Not
Modified status code.
For more information about the If-Modified-Since header, see the specification. For more detail about HTTP date formats, see the specification, Section 7.1.1.2. |
If-None-Match
A request header that specifies an entity tag (ETag).
Valid Values | A valid entity tag. |
Example | If-None-Match: "881f7881ac1bc144a2672e45babb8839" |
Details | You can use this header with the HEAD Object and GET Object methods. If the ETag you specify with this header is different from the ETag for the object, then the metadata or the object is returned. If the ETag you specify with this header is the same as the ETag of the object, then the metadata or the object is not returned and Cloud Storage returns a 304 Not Modified status code. For more details, see the specification. |
If-Unmodified-Since
A request header that specifies a date and time.
Valid Values | A date and time represented in conventional HTTP format. |
Example | If-Unmodified-Since: Fri, 19 Feb 2010 22:04:23 GMT |
Details | You can use this header with the HEAD Object and GET Object methods. If
the object has not been modified later than the date you specify with this
header, then the metadata or the object is returned. If the object has
been modified later than the date you specify with this header, then the
metadata or the object is not returned and Cloud Storage returns
a 412 Precondition
Failed error code.
For more information about the If-Unmodified-Since header, see the specification. For more information about HTTP date formats, see the specification, Section 7.1.1.2. |
Last-Modified
A response header that contains the date and time that the object was last modified.
Valid Values | A date and time represented in conventional HTTP format. |
Example | Last-Modified: Fri, 19 Feb 2010 22:04:23 GMT |
Details | For more information about the Last-Modified header, see the specification. For more information about HTTP date formats, see the specification, Section 7.1.1.2. |
Location
A response header used for several purposes:
- In response to initiating a resumable upload it provides you with a session URI for a resumable upload operation.
- In response to completing a multipart upload it provides you with an endpoint for accessing the assembled object.
- In response to a Cookie-based authentication request it provides you with a unique web origin response URL for the request.
- In response to a JSON API download request made at a URL other than
www.googleapis.com/download
it provides a redirect to the JSON API URL where the download can be made.
Valid Values | Any valid URI. |
Example | Location: https://example.storage.googleapis.com/?upload_id=tvA0...rot |
Details | The Location response header is returned when you initiate
a resumable upload. |
Range
A request header indicating the range of bytes that you want returned, and a response header indicating the range of bytes that have been uploaded to the Cloud Storage system.
Valid Values | A single, contiguous range of bytes. |
Examples | Range: bytes=0-1999 (first 2000 bytes)Range: bytes=-2000 (last 2000 bytes)Range: bytes=2000- (from byte 2000 to end of file) |
Details |
When included as a header in a request for object data, only the
specified range of bytes for the object gets returned, which is useful
when downloading an object in parallel requests or when resuming an
interrupted download. A valid and successful request results in a
206 Partial
Content response code. Multiple byte ranges in a single request are
not accepted, and in certain
circumstances the When returned as part of a response associated with a resumable upload,
Byte ranges are inclusive. For example, |
Transfer-Encoding
A request and response header that specifies if transfer-encoding had been applied to the message body.
Valid Values | chunked |
Example | Transfer-Encoding: chunked |
Details | This header specifies if the message body of a request or response has
been chunked. If it is, the server serves the content in a series of
chunks, with a final chunk that has a length of zero. If you specify
Transfer-Encoding: Chunked , you do not need to specify a
Content-Length . This can be useful if you do not know the
length of the message body in advance, such as when doing a streaming
upload. For more details about Transfer-Encodings, see the
specification.
For more details about chunked transfer encoding, see the
specification. |
Extension (custom) HTTP headers
x-goog-acl
A request header that applies predefined ACLs to a bucket or object when you upload it or create it.
Valid Values | For buckets: project-private , private ,
public-read , public-read-write ,
authenticated-read
For objects: |
Example | x-goog-acl: private |
Details | When a user uploads an object or creates a bucket without specifying
any ACLs, the private ACL is applied. |
x-goog-allowed-resources
A request header that restricts the resources the request is allowed to act on.
Valid Values | An RFC 4648 Base64-encoded string of the organization restriction definition. |
Example | x-goog-allowed-resources: ewogInJlc291cmNlcyI6IFsib3JnYW5pemF0aW9ucy8xMjM0NTY3ODkiLCAib3JnYW5pemF0aW9ucy8xMDExMTIxMzE0Il0sCiAib3B0aW9ucyI6ICJzdHJpY3QiCn0K |
Details | This request header prevents a request from proceeding unless each resource in the request is within an organization specified by the header. For more information, see Introduction to organization restrictions. |
x-goog-api-version
This header is deprecated and is not used.
x-goog-bucket-object-lock-enabled
A request header that enables object retention configurations for a new bucket.
Valid Values | true |
Example | x-goog-bucket-object-lock-enabled: true |
Details | This request header can only be used when creating a new bucket. When
the header is included and set to true , objects added to the
bucket can be configured to have a retention configuration. Values other
than true cause this header to be ignored. |
x-goog-bucket-retention-period
A request header that adds a retention policy to a new bucket.
Valid Values | An integer between 1 and 3,155,760,000. |
Example | x-goog-bucket-retention-period: 32000 |
Details | This request header can only be used when creating a new bucket. When the header is included, the new bucket gains an unlocked retention policy with a duration, in seconds, determined by this header's value. |
x-goog-bypass-governance-retention
A request header that enables you to shorten, remove, or lock a retention configuration for an object.
Valid Values | true |
Example | x-goog-bypass-governance-retention: true |
Details | This request header is used as part of a request to change an existing
retention configuration on an object. This header must be set to
true in order to remove the retention configuration, make the
retention configuration shorter, or set the mode of the retention
configuration to COMPLIANCE . Note that a retention
configuration cannot be removed or shortened if its mode is set to
COMPLIANCE . |
x-goog-custom-audit-KEY
A request header that adds custom information to audit logs generated by Cloud Audit Logs.
Valid Values | Any valid header name and value. The KEY in the header name
can contain up to 64 characters. The value can contain up to 1,200 characters. |
Example | x-goog-custom-audit-job: test-job-id |
Details | Each request can contain up to four header entries. Custom information
is added to the
metadata
field of the protoPayload in the audit log entry. |
x-goog-component-count
A response header that indicates the number of components that make up a composite object.
Valid Values | An integer greater than or equal to 1. |
Example | x-goog-component-count: 32 |
Details | This response header is only returned when the accessed object is a composite object. The header returns the number of components that make up the object. |
x-goog-content-length-range
A PUT
request header. When used, Cloud Storage only accepts the
request if the size of the request's content is within the header's specified
range.
Valid Values | A MIN,MAX pair |
Example | x-goog-content-length-range: 0,256 |
Details | The values for content size are inclusive and given in bytes. If the
size of the request's content is in the specified range, it's delivered as
requested. If the size of the request's content is outside the specified
range, the request fails and a 400 Bad Request code is
returned in the response. If the x-goog-content-length-range
is used in a request other than PUT , the header is silently
ignored. |
x-goog-content-sha256
A request header that contains a hash of the request body.
Valid Values | A lowercase, hex-encoded, SHA-256 hash or
UNSIGNED-PAYLOAD |
Example | x-goog-content-sha256:e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855 |
Details | This header is required for requests that use a
signature in the
Authorization header.
x-goog-content-sha256 must match the value you used for the
payload
portion of your canonical request. Note that requests that initiate a
resumable upload ignore the
x-goog-content-sha256 header, but the header is still
required. |
x-goog-copy-source
A request header that specifies the source bucket and object for a copy operation.
Valid Values | A /BUCKET_NAME/OBJECT_NAME
path |
Example | x-goog-copy-source: travel-maps/paris.jpg |
Details | This request header specifies the path to the source object. A valid
path must include the bucket and object, separated by a slash (/). Note
that the source object path must be a legal URL, so should generally be
percent encoded.
You must have If the source and destination objects are the same (including the generation), the copy is treated as an update of the metadata. For details on controlling the update/replace behavior, see x-goog-metadata-directive. |
x-goog-copy-source-generation
A request header that specifies the generation of the object to copy.
Valid Values | Any positive number (64 bit value) |
Example | x-goog-copy-source-generation: 1360044097839000 |
Details | This request header can be used with
x-goog-copy-source to specify the generation of
the object to copy from. It's not valid without the
x-goog-copy-source header. If no such generation
of the source object exists, Cloud Storage returns a
404 Not Found status
code.
If the source and destination objects are the same (including the generation), the copy is treated as an update of the metadata. For details on controlling the update/replace behavior, see x-goog-metadata-directive. |
x-goog-copy-source-if-generation-match
A request header that specifies the corresponding copy request will only be
executed if the source object x-goog-generation
matches
the specified value. This header is only valid when used with
x-goog-copy-source
.
Valid Values | Any positive number (64 bit value) |
Example | x-goog-copy-source-if-generation-match: 1360044097835000 |
Details | This request header can be used to conditionally copy the source object
only if it has the specified generation. If the generation does not match,
Cloud Storage returns a
412 Precondition
Failed error code.
For more information, see Request preconditions. |
x-goog-copy-source-if-match
A request header that specifies the conditions for a copy operation.
Valid Values | An entity tag (ETag) |
Example | x-goog-copy-source-if-match: 53fc311c15eda0a031809982ccf92aac |
Details | Only a single entity tag (not a comma-separated list of entity tags) can
be specified. This request header can be used only if you are performing a
copy operation with the x-goog-copy-source request header. If
the ETag you specify with this request header matches the ETag of the
source object, then the copy operation proceeds. If the ETag does not
match, Cloud Storage returns a
412 Precondition
Failed error code. |
x-goog-copy-source-if-metageneration-match
A request header that specifies the corresponding request will only be allowed
if the metageneration
of the source object matches the value of this header.
Valid Values | Any positive number (64 bit value) |
Example | x-goog-copy-source-if-metageneration-match: 4 |
Details | If the source object metageneration matches the
x-goog-copy-source-if-metageneration-match header, the
request will be completed successfully and Cloud Storage returns
a HTTP 200 OK status. If the metageneration does not match,
Cloud Storage returns a
412 Precondition
Failed error code.
This value can only be used with
x-goog-copy-source-if-generation-match
or x-goog-copy-source-generation, and
trying to use it without either of them will result in a
For more information, see Request preconditions. |
x-goog-copy-source-if-modified-since
A request header that specifies the conditions for a copy operation.
Valid Values | A date and time represented in conventional HTTP format. |
Example | x-goog-copy-source-if-modified-since: Fri, 19 Feb 2010 14:05:04 GMT |
Details | This request header can be used only if you are performing a copy
operation with the x-goog-copy-source request header. If the
date and time you specify is earlier than the Last-Modified
date of the source object, then the object is copied. If the date and time
is later, Cloud Storage returns a
412 Precondition
Failed error code.
For more information about the If-Modified-Since HTTP header (which, other than the copy source, applies to this use case), see the specification. For more information about HTTP date formats, see the specification, Section 7.1.1.2 |
x-goog-copy-source-if-none-match
A request header that specifies the conditions for a copy operation.
Valid Values | An entity tag (ETag) |
Example | x-goog-copy-source-if-none-match: 53fc311c15eda0a031809982ccf92aac |
Details | This request header can be used only if you are performing a copy
operation with the x-goog-copy-source request header. If the
ETag you specify with this request header does not match the ETag of the
source object, then the copy operation proceeds. If the ETag matches,
Cloud Storage returns a
412 Precondition
Failed error code. For more information about the If-None-Match HTTP
header (which, other than the copy source, applies to this use case), see
the specification. |
x-goog-copy-source-if-unmodified-since
A request header that specifies the conditions for a copy operation.
Valid Values | A date and time represented in conventional HTTP format. |
Example | x-goog-copy-source-if-unmodified-since: Fri, 19 Feb 2010 14:05:04 GMT |
Details | This request header can be used only if you are performing a copy
operation with the x-goog-copy-source request header. If the
date and time you specify is later than the Last-Modified
date of the source object, then the object is copied. If the date and time
is earlier, Cloud Storage returns a
412 Precondition
Failed error code.
For more information about the If-Unmodified-Since HTTP header (which, other than the copy source, applies to this use case), see the specification. For more information about HTTP date formats, see the specification, Section 7.1.1.2. |
x-goog-custom-time
A request and response header for custom timestamp object metadata.
Valid Values | A date and time represented in RFC 3339 format. |
Example | x-goog-custom-time: 2020-04-12T23:20:50.52Z |
Details | This header can be included during object PUT or POST requests. The value you specify in the header is stored with the object and gets returned in a response header when you make a GET or HEAD request on the object. The custom time for an object is typically used with Object Lifecycle Management. |
x-goog-date
A request header that specifies a time stamp for authenticated requests.
Valid Values | A date and time represented in conventional HTTP format. |
Example | x-goog-date: Fri, 19 Feb 2010 14:05:04 GMT |
Details | When used to create
signed URLs using
the V2 signing process, the format should be in conventional HTTP format;
see section 7.1.1.2 of the
specification. When using the V4 signing process, the format should be
in the ISO 8601 basic
format YYYYMMDD'T'HHMMSS'Z' . |
x-goog-encryption-algorithm
A request and response header that specifies the encryption algorithm to use.
Valid Values | AES256 |
Example | x-goog-encryption-algorithm: AES256 |
Details | This request and response header is used when you provide customer-supplied encryption keys. |
x-goog-encryption-key
A request header that specifies an AES-256 encryption key.
Valid Values | An RFC 4648 Base64-encoded string of a valid AES-256 encryption key |
Example | x-goog-encryption-key: NwbyGGmcKAX4FxGpOERG2Ap33m5NVOgmXznSGTEvG0I= |
Details | This request header is used when you provide customer-supplied encryption keys. |
x-goog-encryption-key-sha256
A request and response header that specifies the SHA256 hash of the encryption key.
Valid Values | An RFC 4648 Base64-encoded string of a valid SHA256 hash for an encryption key |
Example | x-goog-encryption-key-sha256: +eBzkZBt1Mj2CZx69L3c8yXoZB6DtRLlSvXMJB9JGIQ= |
Details | This request header is used when you provide customer-supplied encryption keys. |
x-goog-encryption-kms-key-name
A request and response header that specifies a Cloud KMS encryption key.
Valid Values | A Cloud KMS encryption key resource. |
Example | x-goog-encryption-kms-key-name: projects/my-project/locations/LOCATION_NAME/keyRings/KEYRING_NAME/cryptoKeys/KEY_NAME |
Details | This request header is used when you want to encrypt a specific object with a customer-managed encryption key. When you do so, the header appears in the response and includes the key version as part of the returned value. |
x-goog-expiration
A response header that specifies when the accessed object will be deleted, per the lifecycle configuration.
Valid Values | A date and time represented in conventional HTTP format. |
Example | x-goog-expiration: Tue, 25 June 2013 00:00:00 GMT |
Details | This response header is only returned for objects in a bucket with lifecycle management enabled if certain conditions are met. For more information, see object lifecycle behavior. |
x-goog-generation
A response header that indicates which version of the object data you are accessing.
Valid Values | Any positive number (64 bit value) |
Example | x-goog-generation: 1360044097835000 |
Details | Whenever an object is created or replaced, Cloud Storage
automatically assigns a generation to it. The generation changes whenever
object data is replaced. However, there is no defined relationship
between the generations on different objects.
For more information, see generation and metageneration numbers. |
x-goog-if-generation-match
A request header that specifies the corresponding request is only allowed if the
x-goog-generation
of the object matches the value of this header.
Valid Values | Zero or any positive number (64 bit value) |
Example | x-goog-if-generation-match: 1360044097835000 |
Details | If the object generation matches the
x-goog-if-generation-match header, the request will be
completed successfully and Cloud Storage returns a
HTTP 200 OK status. If the generation does not match,
Cloud Storage returns a HTTP 412 Precondition Failed
error code.
If you set the For more information, see Request preconditions. |
x-goog-if-metageneration-match
A request header that specifies the corresponding request is only allowed if the
x-goog-metageneration
of the object or bucket matches the value of this
header.
Valid Values | Any positive number (64 bit value) |
Example | x-goog-if-metageneration-match: 4 |
Details | If the metageneration of the requested resource matches the
x-goog-if-metageneration-match header, the request proceeds
as it normally would. If the metageneration does not match,
Cloud Storage returns a HTTP 412 Precondition Failed
error code.
For object requests, this header should only be used in conjunction with x-goog-if-generation-match to ensure updates to metadata are in fact performed against the generation of the object you are planning to update and hence allows you to perform read-modify-write operations safely. For more information, see Request preconditions. |
x-goog-interop-list-objects-format
A request header that enables an interoperability fix to the GET bucket response.
Valid Values | enabled | disabled . |
|||||||||||||||
Example | x-goog-interop-list-objects-format: enabled |
|||||||||||||||
Details | Only use with the If you specify If you specify
|
x-goog-metadata-directive
A request header that specifies metadata handling during a copy operation.
Note that object ACLs, when present, are never copied. If applicable, the new
object receives ACLs specified in the x-goog-acl
request header or
the default object ACLs set for the bucket that contains the new object.
Valid Values | COPY | REPLACE |
Example | x-goog-metadata-directive: REPLACE |
Details | Only used with the If you specify If you specify When copying an object such it rewrites the source object, you must
include |
x-goog-metageneration
A response header that indicates which version of the object metadata you are accessing.
Valid Values | Any positive number (64 bit value) |
Example | x-goog-metageneration: 1 |
Details | Whenever an object is created or replaced, Cloud Storage
automatically assigns a metageneration of 1. The metageneration increases
whenever object metadata is updated (ACL update, or other metadata
updates). This means that a larger metageneration always implies a newer
version of the object metadata. However, there is no defined relationship
between different generations on different objects, nor even different
generations of the same object. Each generation of the object has its own
metageneration version that only pertains to its generation.
For more information, see generation and metageneration numbers. |
x-goog-hash
A request and response header for expressing an object's MD5 and/or CRC32C base64-encoded checksums. As a request header for upload requests, the supplied hashes are validated against the values calculated by Cloud Storage.
Valid Values | Either md5=BASE64_ENCODED_MD5 or
crc32c=BASE64_ENCODED_CRC32C . Specify CRC32c
values in big-endian byte order. Also, note that
HTTP considers comma
separated header values as equivalent to separate headers with
identical keys. |
Examples | x-goog-hash: crc32c=n03x6A== x-goog-hash: md5=Ojk9c3dhfxgoKVVHYwFbHQ== x-goog-hash: crc32c=n03x6A==,md5=Ojk9c3dhfxgoKVVHYwFbHQ== |
Details | Cloud Storage stores MD5 hashes for all non-composite objects. CRC32Cs are available for all objects. |
x-goog-meta-KEY
A request and response header that lets you define custom metadata for an object.
Valid Values | Any valid header name and value, with a maximum combined size of 8 KiB. |
Example | x-goog-meta-reviewer: jane |
Details | To use this header you append your custom header name to the
x-goog-meta- prefix and then add the header and its
associated value to your PUT or POST request. For example, if your objects
are associated with various projects, you can add the project-specific
information to your object metadata by creating several request headers,
such as: x-goog-meta-project-name ,
x-goog-meta-project-number , and
x-goog-meta-project-manager . You could then set a value for
these request headers during a PUT or POST request as shown in the
following example:
PUT /kitten.jpg HTTP/1.1 Host: my-bucket.storage.googleapis.com Date: Wed, 17 Jun 2020 11:11:11 GMT Content-Type: image/jpg Content-Length: 554 Authorization: Bearer 1/zVNpoQNsOSxZKqOZgckhpQ x-goog-meta-project-name: Sales Projections x-goog-meta-project-number: 878973 x-goog-meta-project-manager: W. Loman
|
x-goog-object-lock-mode
A request and response header for the mode associated with an object's retention configuration.
Valid Values | GOVERNANCE or COMPLIANCE |
Example | x-goog-object-lock-mode: COMPLIANCE |
Details | This header can be included in requests that upload, copy, or compose an
object. The value you specify in the header is stored as part of the
object's metadata. A value of GOVERNANCE corresponds to the
object's retention configuration being unlocked and a value of
COMPLIANCE corresponds to the object's retention
configuration being locked. If this header is specified in a request, the
request must also include the
x-goog-object-lock-retain-until-date header. This header gets
returned as part of the response when you make a HEAD request or object
download GET request if the requested object has a retention
configuration. |
x-goog-object-lock-retain-until-date
A request and response header indicating the time until which an object subject to a retention configuration remains immutable.
Valid Values | A date and time represented in RFC 3339 format. |
Example | x-goog-object-lock-retain-until-date: 2028-04-12T23:20:50.52Z |
Details | This header can be included in requests that upload, copy, or compose an
object. The value you specify in the header is stored as part of the
object's metadata and indicates the earliest point in time that the object
can be deleted or replaced. If this header is specified in a request, the
request must also include the x-goog-object-lock-mode header.
This header gets returned as part of the response when you make a HEAD
request or object download GET request if the requested object has a
retention configuration. |
x-goog-project-id
A request header that specifies which project you are working on.
Valid Values | Any valid project number or name. |
Examples | x-goog-project-id: 000111222333 x-goog-project-id: my-project-name x-goog-project-id: example.com:my-google-apps-for-work-project-name |
Details | This request header tells Cloud Storage which project to create
a bucket in or which project to list buckets for.
This header is optional for creating and listing buckets if you have set a default project for interoperable access. |
x-goog-resumable
A request header that initiates a resumable upload operation.
Valid Values | start |
Example | x-goog-resumable: start |
Details | This request header notifies the Cloud Storage system that you want to initiate a resumable upload. The header can be used only with a POST Object request and can be used only for resumable uploads. |
x-goog-storage-class
A request and response header that indicates the storage class of an object.
Valid Values | STANDARD , NEARLINE , COLDLINE ,
ARCHIVE , MULTI_REGIONAL ,
REGIONAL |
Example | x-goog-storage-class: NEARLINE |
Details | This header can be included in PUT Object and
POST Object requests in order to set an object to a storage
class besides the default storage class of the associated bucket. The
header is included in all GET Object responses. |
x-goog-stored-content-encoding
A response header that indicates the content encoding of the object as stored in Cloud Storage, independent of any server-driven negotiation that might occur for individual requests for the object.
Valid Values | The content-encoding specified in the stored object's metadata or
identity . |
Example | x-goog-stored-content-encoding: gzip |
Details | If the object has no stored metadata value for
content-encoding , then the value of this header is
identity . |
x-goog-stored-content-length
A response header that indicates the content length (in bytes) of the object as stored in Cloud Storage, independent of any server-driven negotiation that might occur for individual requests for the object.
Valid Values | Any byte value of zero or greater. |
Example | x-goog-stored-content-length: 350 |
Details | None |
x-goog-user-project
A request header that specifies a user project to bill for access charges associated with the request.
Valid Values | The Project ID for an existing Google Cloud project |
Example | x-goog-user-project: my-project |
Details | The project specified in the header is billed for charges associated with the request. This header is used, for example, when making requests to buckets that have Requester Pays enabled. |
x-guploader-uploadid
A response header returned for Cloud Storage requests.
Valid Values | A string of characters. |
Example | x-guploader-uploadid: ADPycdvYczN-TgGGp1mvqlCLVKg2m0Cp9niWTV2kc8MLJG6W6Xw7aPMYj1YU8Pxskb5C9lUM8hVEtBG6DubMif3xhXkgTpfhpg |
Details | The x-guploader-uploadid header is a unique identifier
provided in Cloud Storage responses. This value can be helpful
when troubleshooting with Google Cloud support. |
Query string parameters
In the examples of query string parameters described in this section, the URIs
are not shown but are assumed to be relative to storage.googleapis.com
. As
described in Request Endpoints, you can also specify the bucket name as
part of the hostname, for example,
BUCKET-NAME.storage.googleapis.com
. If
you are specifying the bucket as part of the hostname, then do not include the
bucket name as part of the URI path. For example, the following are equivalent
for getting the ACL of an object:
https://storage.googleapis.com/BUCKET-NAME/object-name?acl
https://BUCKET-NAME.storage.googleapis.com/object-name?acl
AccessKeyId
A query string parameter that enables you to identify which HMAC key you want to update or delete.
Valid Values | An access ID associated with an HMAC key. |
Example | /?Action=UpdateAccessKey&AccessKeyId=GOOG1EXAMPLE&Status=Inactive /?Action=DeleteAccessKey&AccessKeyId=GOOG1EXAMPLE |
Details | The AccessKeyId query string parameter allows you to
specify which HMAC key you are updating or deleting. You must use
AccessKeyId in conjunction with the
Action query parameter. For information
on how to retrieve the access ID for your HMAC key, see
Getting
HMAC key information. |
acl
A query string parameter that enables you to retrieve or change the access control list for a bucket or object.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME?acl /BUCKET_NAME/OBJECT_NAME?acl |
Details | Optional for the following requests: PUT Bucket, PUT Object, GET Bucket, GET Object. If sending a PUT request, you must include an XML document in the request body that specifies the ACLs you want to apply. You cannot use any additional subresources with this query parameter. |
Action
A query string parameter that enables you to identify which HMAC key operation to perform.
Valid Values | ListAccessKeys , CreateAccessKey ,
UpdateAccessKey , DeleteAccessKey |
Example | /?Action=ListAccessKeys |
Details | The Action query string parameter allows you to specify
which HMAC key operation to perform:
list ,
create ,
update ,
or delete . |
billing
A query string parameter that allows you to enable, disable, or check the status of the Requester Pays feature for a bucket.
Valid Values | Within the request body: Enabled , Disabled . |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME?billing |
Details | Optional for the following requests: GET Bucket ,
PUT Bucket . When used in a GET Bucket request,
the current status of the Requester Pays feature is returned in the
response body. When used in a PUT Bucket request, the request
body should contain a <BillingConfiguration> element
that specifies whether to enable or disable the feature. You cannot use
any additional subresources with this query parameter. For more
information on setting the Requester Pays feature using the XML API, see
Set Bucket
Metadata. |
compose
A query string parameter that enables you to compose a sequence of existing objects into a new composite object (used only with the XML API).
Valid Values | none |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME/OBJECT_NAME?compose |
Details | Optional for PUT Object requests. A ComposeRequest XML document must be supplied in the request body. You cannot use any additional subresources with this query parameter. |
continuation-token
A token that indicates where you want a list of objects to start.
Valid Values | A NextContinuationToken value provided in the response
body of a previous listing request. |
Example | ?continuation-token=CglibHViLmdvc2g= |
Details | When using continuation-token , the request must also
include list-type=2 as a query string parameter.
The |
cors
A query string parameter that enables you to retrieve or change the Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) for a bucket.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME?cors |
Details | Optional for the following requests: PUT Bucket, GET Bucket. If sending a PUT request, you must include an XML document in the request body that specifies the CORS you want to apply. You cannot use any additional subresources with this query parameter. |
customPlacementConfig
A query string parameter that lets you set or retrieve the regions that make up a configurable dual-region. If the bucket was created as a region, multi-region, or predefined dual-region, the returned custom placement configuration is empty.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME?customPlacementConfig |
Details | Optional for GET Bucket requests. Required for PUT Bucket requests for configurable dual-regions. If sending a PUT request, you must include an XML document in the request body that specifies the regions you want to use. |
defaultObjectAcl
A query string parameter that enables you to retrieve or change the default object access control list for a bucket.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME?defaultObjectAcl |
Details | Optional for PUT Bucket and GET Bucket requests. If sending a PUT request, you must include an XML document in the request body that specifies the ACL that applies by default to new objects added to the bucket. You cannot use any additional subresources with this query parameter. See Setting default object ACLs for more information. |
delimiter
A character or group of characters that is used to restrict a list of objects or multipart uploads during a GET Bucket request.
Valid Values | Any Unicode character or characters. |
Example | /?delimiter=/ |
Details | The
You can use a The |
encoding-type
A query string parameter to URL-encode object names in responses to object listing requests.
Valid Values | url |
Example | /bucket?encoding-type=url |
Details | Optional when listing objects in a bucket. When included in the request, returned object names are URL-encoded. This is useful if any of your object names include Unicode characters that XML 1.0 cannot parse. |
encryption
A query string parameter that enables you to retrieve an object's encryption information.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /object?encryption |
Details | Optional for GET
Object requests. When the queried object is encrypted by a
customer-supplied encryption key, the encryption algorithm and the key's
SHA-256 are returned in an Encryption element. When the
queried object is encrypted by a customer-managed encryption key, the
Cloud Key Management Service key resource is returned in an Encryption
element. In all other cases, an empty Encryption element is
returned.
You cannot use any additional subresources with this query parameter. |
encryptionConfig
A query string parameter that enables you to set or retrieve the default customer-managed encryption key that a bucket uses.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /bucket?encryptionConfig |
Details | Optional for GET
Bucket requests. When the queried bucket has a default
customer-managed encryption key set on it, the name of the key resource is
returned within an EncryptionConfiguration element.
Optional for PUT
Bucket requests. When the request includes a customer-managed
encryption key resource in the request body, that key becomes the default
encryption key for the bucket. When the request includes an empty
|
fetch-owner
A boolean used in object listing requests to indicate if object owner information can be included in the response.
Valid Values | true or false |
Example | ?fetch-owner=true |
Details | When using fetch-owner , the request must also include
list-type=2 as a query string parameter.
The default value for |
generation
A value that indicates which generation of the object to fetch.
Valid Values | Any positive number (64 bit value) |
Example | ?generation=1360887759327000 |
Details | The generation query string parameter allows you to specify
which version of the object to operate on. |
generation-marker
A value that indicates the generation number at which you want a list of objects to start.
Valid Values | Any positive number (64 bit value) |
Example | ?generation-marker=1360887759327000 |
Details | When using generation-marker , the request cannot include
list-type=2 as a query string parameter.
The |
key-marker
A string that indicates where you want a list of objects or ongoing multipart uploads to start.
Valid Values | Any string. |
Example | ?uploads&key-marker=myobject.jpeg |
Details | When listing multipart uploads, the When listing objects, |
lifecycle
A query string parameter that enables you to retrieve or change the lifecycle management policies for a bucket.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME?lifecycle |
Details | Optional for the following requests: PUT Bucket, GET Bucket. If sending a PUT request, you must include an XML document in the request body that specifies the lifecycle configuration. You cannot use any additional subresources with this query parameter. |
list-type
An indicator of which version of object listing your request is using.
Valid Values | 1 or 2 |
Example | ?list-type=2 |
Details | The XML API has two formats for listing objects in a bucket.
list-type indicates which format is being used in the
current request, as well as how the response should be handled.
The default value for list-type is 1 .
For more information, see the List objects reference documentation. |
location
A query string parameter that enables you to retrieve the location constraint for a bucket.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME?location |
Details | Optional for the following requests: GET Bucket. Returned values
can include the name of a region, predefined dual-region, or
multi-region. For buckets located in
configurable
dual-regions, additional location information can be obtained by
making a request that uses the
?customPlacementConfig
query parameter. |
logging
A query string parameter that enables you to retrieve or change the logging configuration for a bucket.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME?logging |
Details | Optional for the following requests: PUT Bucket, GET Bucket. If sending a PUT request, you must include an XML document in the request body that specifies the logging configuration. You cannot use any additional subresources with this query parameter. |
marker
A string that indicates where you want a list of objects to start.
Valid Values | Any string. |
Example | ?marker=test |
Details | When using marker , the request cannot include
list-type=2 as a query string parameter.
The |
Marker
A page token that enables you to list subsequent pages of HMAC keys.
Valid Values | A string provided in a previous list response if
IsTruncated is true . |
Example | ?Action=ListAccessKeys&Marker=AERPALERN/NEXT/TOKEN |
Details | The Marker query string parameter is a continuation token,
used to page through large result sets when listing HMAC keys for a given
project. If IsTruncated is true in a previous
list response, use the provided Marker token in
subsequent list requests until IsTruncated is
false . You must use Marker in conjunction with
the Action query parameter. For more
information, see GET HMAC
Key. |
max-keys
An integer that limits the number of objects returned in a single result "page".
Valid Values | Any number greater than 0. |
Example | ?max-keys=100 |
Details | The max-keys query string parameter is an integer that
specifies the maximum number of objects you want returned in a list of
objects. If a request can return more objects than max-keys
allows, the IsTruncated response element contains a
True value.
The recommended upper value for |
max-parts
A number that limits how many parts of a multipart upload can be returned in the response.
Valid Values | An integer greater than or equal to 0. |
Example | ?uploadId=VALID_ID&max-parts=10 |
Details | The max-parts query string parameter is an integer that
specifies the maximum number of parts you want returned in a request to
list the uploaded
parts of a multipart upload. If max-parts=0 , then the
response omits all Part elements.
If a request can return more parts than |
max-uploads
A number that limits how many multipart uploads are returned in the response.
Valid Values | An integer greater than or equal to 0 |
Example | ?uploads&max-uploads=10 |
Details | The max-uploads query string parameter is an integer that
specifies the maximum number of multipart uploads you want returned in a
request to list the
ongoing multipart uploads in a bucket. If max-uploads=0 ,
then the response omits all Upload elements.
If a request can return more uploads than |
MaxItems
An integer that limits the number of HMAC keys returned in a single result page.
Valid Values | Any number greater than 0. |
Example | ?Action=ListAccessKeys&MaxItems=100 |
Details | The MaxItems query string parameter is an integer that
specifies the maximum number of HMAC keys returned in a single result
page. If a request can return more keys than MaxItems allows,
the IsTruncated response element contains a true
value. You must use MaxItems in conjunction with the
Action query parameter. The service may
return fewer results than the specified maximum. |
object-lock
A query string parameter that enables you to retrieve the object retention configuration of a bucket.
Valid Values | none |
Example | ?object-lock |
Details | Optional for GET Bucket requests. If object retention is not enabled for the bucket, a request using this query string parameter fails with a 404 response. You cannot use any additional subresources with this parameter. |
part-number-marker
A number that indicates where you want a list of multipart upload parts to start.
Valid Values | An integer greater than or equal to 0 |
Example | ?uploadId=VALID_ID&part-number-marker=10 |
Details | The part-number-marker query string parameter is an integer
that specifies which part you want a
list of parts
to begin after. The list of parts returned are those that are greater
than the part-number-marker . |
partNumber
A number that defines a piece of an XML API multipart upload.
Valid Values | A integer greater than 0 and up to 10,000. |
Example | ?uploadId=VALID_ID&partNumber=1 |
Details | The partNumber query string parameter is used in a
PUT Object
request for a multipart upload. The partNumber defines
where the current part is ordered in the overall object. |
prefix
A string that restricts a list of objects or multipart uploads based on the prefix of the object's name.
Valid Values | Any valid prefix. |
Example | ?prefix=/europe/france |
Details | The prefix query string parameter is a string of Unicode
characters that restricts the listing.
You can use the |
response-content-disposition
A query string parameter that allows content-disposition to be overridden for authenticated GET requests.
Valid Values | URL-encoded header to return instead of the content-disposition of the underlying object. |
Example | ?response-content-disposition=attachment%3B%20filename%3D%22foo%22 |
Details | Allows authenticated GET requests to override the content-disposition
returned in the headers.
For more information, see the specification. |
response-content-type
A query string parameter that allows content-type to be overridden for authenticated GET requests.
Valid Values | URL-encoded header to return instead of the content-type of the underlying object. |
Example | ?response-content-type=text%2Fhtml |
Details | Allows authenticated GET requests to override the content-disposition
returned in the headers.
For more information, see the specification. |
retention
A query string parameter that allows you to set, modify, or check the status of an existing object's retention configuration.
Valid Values | None |
Example | /OBJECT_NAME?retention |
Details | Optional for the following requests: GET Object ,
PUT Object . When used in a GET Object request,
the object's current retention configuration is returned in the response
body if it exists, and the requests fails with a
404 Not Found response otherwise. When used in a
PUT Object request, you must include an XML document in the
request body that specifies the
retention configuration. |
start-after
A string that indicates where you want a list of objects to start.
Valid Values | Any string. |
Example | ?start-after=test |
Details | When using start-after , the request must also include
list-type=2 as a query string parameter.
The |
Status
A query string parameter that allows you to enable or disable an HMAC key.
Valid Values | Active , Inactive |
Example | ?Action=UpdateAccessKey&AccessKeyId=GOOG1EXAMPLE&Status=Inactive |
Details | The Status query string parameter allows you to change the
status of an HMAC key between Active and
Inactive . You must use Status in conjunction
with the Action and
AccessKeyId query parameters. |
storageClass
A query string parameter that enables you to set or retrieve the default storage class of a bucket.
Valid Values | Within the request body: STANDARD , NEARLINE ,
ARCHIVE , COLDLINE , MULTI_REGIONAL ,
REGIONAL , DURABLE_REDUCED_AVAILABILITY |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME?storageClass |
Details | Optional for the following requests: GET Bucket ,
PUT Bucket . When used in a GET Bucket request,
the default storage class of the specified bucket is returned in the
response body. When used in a PUT Bucket request, the request
body should contain a <StorageClass> element that
specifies the default storage class you want to assign to the bucket. For
more information on setting the default storage class of a bucket using
the XML API, see Set
Bucket Metadata. |
tagging
A query string parameter that enables you to set or retrieve the labels applied to a bucket.
Valid Values | Within the request body: A label, given as a key:value pair. |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME?tagging |
Details | Optional for the following requests: GET Bucket ,
PUT Bucket . When used in a GET Bucket request,
the labels applied to the specified bucket are returned in the response
body. When used in a PUT Bucket request, the request body
should contain a <Tagging> element that specifies the
labels you want to apply to the bucket. For more information on applying
labels using the XML API, see
Set Bucket
Metadata. |
upload_id
A query string parameter that specifies that upload ID for a resumable upload
operation. The upload_id
is part of the session URI, but you should save the
entire session URI because it uniquely defines the request URI for subsequent
resumable uploads operations. The session URI is obtained from the
Location
response header.
Valid Values | Any valid upload ID. |
Example | /?upload_id=tvA0ExBntDaOKdxL46u1NkHxNb...B2Uowrot |
Details | An upload ID expires after one week. We recommend that you start a
resumable upload as soon as you obtain the upload ID, and that you resume
an interrupted upload shortly after the interruption occurred.
If you use an expired upload ID in a request, you will receive a 404 Not Found status code. In this case, you will have to re-initiate the resumable upload, obtain a new upload ID, and start the upload from the beginning using the new upload ID. The upload ID is bound to the location it was created, so if you create in one location and use it in another location, your performance will suffer. The upload ID is a Bearer token, meaning possession of this token acts as an authenticator. Thus, you should be careful not to leak upload IDs. |
upload-id-marker
A value that indicates the upload at which you want a list of multipart uploads to start.
Valid Values | A NextUploadIdMarker returned in a previous listing request. |
Example | ?uploads&key-marker=myobject.jpeg&upload-id-marker=VXBsb2FkIElEIGZvciBlbHZpbmcncyBteS1tb3ZpZS5tMnRzIHVwbG9hZA |
Details | The upload-id-marker query string parameter marks the
starting point for a list of ongoing multipart uploads in a bucket. In
order to fully specify an object and upload, upload-id-marker
can only be used in conjunction with key-marker . Any ongoing
multipart uploads for key-marker with an
upload-id greater than upload-id-marker are
returned in the list, and any ongoing multipart uploads for objects that
are lexicographically greater than key-marker are also
returned in the list. |
uploadId
A string that identifies the multipart upload the request applies to.
Valid Values | An UploadId returned in a request to initiate a
multipart upload. |
Example | /?uploadId=VXBsb2FkIElEIGZvciBlbHZpbmcncyBteS1tb3ZpZS5tMnRzIHVwbG9hZA |
Details | The uploadId query string parameter is used to identify a
multipart upload after you have
initiated the
upload. For example, you use an uploadId when making a
PUT Object request to
upload a part for
an object.
A multipart upload ID differs from a resumable upload ID in several important ways:
|
uploads
A query string parameter used to initiate an XML API multipart upload or retrieve a list of multipart uploads in progress for a bucket.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /OBJECT_NAME?uploads |
Details | When used in a POST Object request, the request initiates
an XML multipart upload and returns an upload ID, which you use in
subsequent PUT requests to upload the data.
When used in a |
UserName
A query string parameter that enables you to identify the service account for which you want to create, update, or list an HMAC key.
Valid Values | A valid service account email address. |
Example | /?Action=CreateAccessKey&UserName=serviceAccount@proj.iam.gserviceaccount.com |
Details | UserName is required for creating an HMAC key and optional
for updating a key or listing keys associated with a project. You must use
UserName in conjunction with the
Action query parameter. |
userProject
A query string parameter that specifies a project ID to bill for access charges associated with the request.
Valid Values | Any valid project ID. |
Example | ?userProject=example-project |
Details | The project specified in this parameter is billed for charges associated
with the request. userProject is used, for example, when
making requests to buckets that have
Requester Pays enabled.
Generally, XML requests that require a project ID should supply one in
the |
version-id-marker
A value that indicates the generation number at which you want a list of objects to start.
Valid Values | Any positive number (64 bit value) |
Example | ?version-id-marker=1360887759327000 |
Details | When using version-id-marker , the request cannot include
list-type=2 as a query string parameter.
The |
versioning
A query string parameter that enables you to retrieve or change versioning configuration of a bucket.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /OBJECT_NAME?versioning |
Details | Optional for the following requests: PUT Bucket, GET Bucket. If sending a PUT request, you must include an XML document in the request body that specifies the Versioning Configuration you want to apply. You cannot use any additional subresources with this query parameter. |
versions
A query string parameter that enables you to retrieve all generation of objects in a versioned bucket.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME?versions=True |
Details | Optional for the following requests: GET Bucket. |
websiteConfig
A query string parameter that enables you to retrieve or change a bucket's website configuration.
Valid Values | none |
Example | /BUCKET_NAME?websiteConfig |
Details | Optional for the following requests: PUT Bucket, GET Bucket. If sending a PUT request, you must include an XML document in the request body that specifies the Website Configuration you want to apply. You cannot use any additional subresources with this query parameter. |
X-Goog-Algorithm
A query string parameter to determine the V4 signed URL algorithm.
Valid Values | GOOG4-RSA-SHA256 GOOG4-HMAC-SHA256 AWS4-HMAC-SHA256 |
Details | Used specifically for V4 signed requests such as signed URLs. |
X-Goog-Credential
A query string parameter to determine the credential type used.
Valid Values | Service_Account_Email/Date/Region/goog4_request Google_HMAC_Access_Key_ID/Date/Region/goog4_request AWS_HMAC_Access_Key_ID/Date/Region/aws4_request |
Example | Using a Google Service Account:
example%40example-project.iam.gserviceaccount.com%2F20181026%2Fus-central1%2Fstorage%2Fgoog4_request Using HMAC: GOOGTS7C7FUP3AIRVJTE2BCD%2F20181026%2Fus-central1%2Fstorage%2Fgoog4_request |
Details | Used specifically for V4 signed requests such as signed URLs. |
X-Goog-Custom-Audit-KEY
A query string parameter to pass custom metadata to be included in audit logs.
Valid Values | Any entry in the form x-goog-custom-audit-KEY=VALUE |
Example | x-goog-custom-audit-jobID=Job123 |
Details | Each KEY can contain up to 64 characters, while each
VALUE can contain up to 1,200 characters. Each KEY
can only contain alphanumeric characters and dashes. Each request can
contain up to 4 audit entries.
Add custom
information to audit logs. |
X-Goog-Date (Query Parameter)
The date and time the signed URL became usable.
Valid Values | Any date that follows: YYYYMMDD'T'HHMMSS'Z' |
Example | ?X-Goog-Date=20181026T181309Z |
Details | Format used is the ISO 8601 basic format YYYYMMDD'T'HHMMSS'Z'. |
X-Goog-Expires
A query string parameter to determine how long a V4 signed URL is active.
Valid Values | 1 second up to and including 604800 seconds |
Example | ?X-Goog-Expires=900 |
Details | The length of time the signed URL remained valid, measured in seconds from the value in X-Goog-Date (Query Parameter). Maximum value is 7 days or 604800 seconds. |
X-Goog-SignedHeaders
A query string parameter to determine the headers signed in a V4 signed URL.
Valid Values | The only required header is host. Any header that is signed in a V4 signed URL signature should must be in this list. |
Examples | ?X-Goog-SignedHeaders=host ?X-Goog-SignedHeaders=host,x-goog-acl |
Details | Headers that had to be included as part of any request that used the signed URL. |
X-Goog-Signature
A query string parameter with the value of a V4 signed URL signature.
Valid Values | Signature of the signed URL. |
Example | ?X-Goog-Signature=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 |
Details | The authentication string that allowed requests using this signed URL to access the designated resource. |