Resource
import type { Resource } from "https://googleapis.deno.dev/v1/servicecontrol:v2.ts";
This message defines core attributes for a resource. A resource is an addressable (named) entity provided by the destination service. For example, a file stored on a network storage service.
§Properties
Annotations is an unstructured key-value map stored with a resource that may be set by external tools to store and retrieve arbitrary metadata. They are not queryable and should be preserved when modifying objects. More info: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/annotations/
Output only. The timestamp when the resource was created. This may be either the time creation was initiated or when it was completed.
Output only. The timestamp when the resource was deleted. If the resource is not deleted, this must be empty.
Output only. An opaque value that uniquely identifies a version or generation of a resource. It can be used to confirm that the client and server agree on the ordering of a resource being written.
The labels or tags on the resource, such as AWS resource tags and Kubernetes resource labels.
Immutable. The location of the resource. The location encoding is specific
to the service provider, and new encoding may be introduced as the service
evolves. For Google Cloud products, the encoding is what is used by Google
Cloud APIs, such as us-east1
, aws-us-east-1
, and azure-eastus2
. The
semantics of location
is identical to the cloud.googleapis.com/location
label used by some Google Cloud APIs.
The stable identifier (name) of a resource on the service
. A resource
can be logically identified as "//{resource.service}/{resource.name}". The
differences between a resource name and a URI are: * Resource name is a
logical identifier, independent of network protocol and API version. For
example, //pubsub.googleapis.com/projects/123/topics/news-feed
. * URI
often includes protocol and version information, so it can be used directly
by applications. For example,
https://pubsub.googleapis.com/v1/projects/123/topics/news-feed
. See
https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/resource_names for details.
The name of the service that this resource belongs to, such as
pubsub.googleapis.com
. The service may be different from the DNS hostname
that actually serves the request.
The type of the resource. The syntax is platform-specific because different platforms define their resources differently. For Google APIs, the type format must be "{service}/{kind}", such as "pubsub.googleapis.com/Topic".
The unique identifier of the resource. UID is unique in the time and space for this resource within the scope of the service. It is typically generated by the server on successful creation of a resource and must not be changed. UID is used to uniquely identify resources with resource name reuses. This should be a UUID4.