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@googleapis/cloudasset

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// Copyright 2020 Google LLC // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. // You may obtain a copy of the License at // // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 // // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and // limitations under the License. /* eslint-disable @typescript-eslint/no-explicit-any */ /* eslint-disable @typescript-eslint/no-unused-vars */ /* eslint-disable @typescript-eslint/no-empty-interface */ /* eslint-disable @typescript-eslint/no-namespace */ /* eslint-disable no-irregular-whitespace */ import { OAuth2Client, JWT, Compute, UserRefreshClient, BaseExternalAccountClient, GaxiosResponseWithHTTP2, GoogleConfigurable, createAPIRequest, MethodOptions, StreamMethodOptions, GlobalOptions, GoogleAuth, BodyResponseCallback, APIRequestContext, } from 'googleapis-common'; import {Readable} from 'stream'; export namespace cloudasset_v1p5beta1 { export interface Options extends GlobalOptions { version: 'v1p5beta1'; } interface StandardParameters { /** * Auth client or API Key for the request */ auth?: | string | OAuth2Client | JWT | Compute | UserRefreshClient | BaseExternalAccountClient | GoogleAuth; /** * V1 error format. */ '$.xgafv'?: string; /** * OAuth access token. */ access_token?: string; /** * Data format for response. */ alt?: string; /** * JSONP */ callback?: string; /** * Selector specifying which fields to include in a partial response. */ fields?: string; /** * API key. Your API key identifies your project and provides you with API access, quota, and reports. Required unless you provide an OAuth 2.0 token. */ key?: string; /** * OAuth 2.0 token for the current user. */ oauth_token?: string; /** * Returns response with indentations and line breaks. */ prettyPrint?: boolean; /** * Available to use for quota purposes for server-side applications. Can be any arbitrary string assigned to a user, but should not exceed 40 characters. */ quotaUser?: string; /** * Legacy upload protocol for media (e.g. "media", "multipart"). */ uploadType?: string; /** * Upload protocol for media (e.g. "raw", "multipart"). */ upload_protocol?: string; } /** * Cloud Asset API * * The Cloud Asset API manages the history and inventory of Google Cloud resources. * * @example * ```js * const {google} = require('googleapis'); * const cloudasset = google.cloudasset('v1p5beta1'); * ``` */ export class Cloudasset { context: APIRequestContext; assets: Resource$Assets; constructor(options: GlobalOptions, google?: GoogleConfigurable) { this.context = { _options: options || {}, google, }; this.assets = new Resource$Assets(this.context); } } /** * Represents the metadata of the longrunning operation for the AnalyzeIamPolicyLongrunning RPC. */ export interface Schema$AnalyzeIamPolicyLongrunningMetadata { /** * Output only. The time the operation was created. */ createTime?: string | null; } /** * A response message for AssetService.AnalyzeIamPolicyLongrunning. */ export interface Schema$AnalyzeIamPolicyLongrunningResponse {} /** * An asset in Google Cloud. An asset can be any resource in the Google Cloud [resource hierarchy](https://cloud.google.com/resource-manager/docs/cloud-platform-resource-hierarchy), a resource outside the Google Cloud resource hierarchy (such as Google Kubernetes Engine clusters and objects), or a policy (e.g. IAM policy). See [Supported asset types](https://cloud.google.com/asset-inventory/docs/supported-asset-types) for more information. */ export interface Schema$Asset { /** * Please also refer to the [access level user guide](https://cloud.google.com/access-context-manager/docs/overview#access-levels). */ accessLevel?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1AccessLevel; /** * Please also refer to the [access policy user guide](https://cloud.google.com/access-context-manager/docs/overview#access-policies). */ accessPolicy?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1AccessPolicy; /** * The ancestry path of an asset in Google Cloud [resource hierarchy](https://cloud.google.com/resource-manager/docs/cloud-platform-resource-hierarchy), represented as a list of relative resource names. An ancestry path starts with the closest ancestor in the hierarchy and ends at root. If the asset is a project, folder, or organization, the ancestry path starts from the asset itself. Example: `["projects/123456789", "folders/5432", "organizations/1234"]` */ ancestors?: string[] | null; /** * The type of the asset. Example: `compute.googleapis.com/Disk` See [Supported asset types](https://cloud.google.com/asset-inventory/docs/supported-asset-types) for more information. */ assetType?: string | null; /** * A representation of the IAM policy set on a Google Cloud resource. There can be a maximum of one IAM policy set on any given resource. In addition, IAM policies inherit their granted access scope from any policies set on parent resources in the resource hierarchy. Therefore, the effectively policy is the union of both the policy set on this resource and each policy set on all of the resource's ancestry resource levels in the hierarchy. See [this topic](https://cloud.google.com/iam/help/allow-policies/inheritance) for more information. */ iamPolicy?: Schema$Policy; /** * The full name of the asset. Example: `//compute.googleapis.com/projects/my_project_123/zones/zone1/instances/instance1` See [Resource names](https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/resource_names#full_resource_name) for more information. */ name?: string | null; /** * A representation of an [organization policy](https://cloud.google.com/resource-manager/docs/organization-policy/overview#organization_policy). There can be more than one organization policy with different constraints set on a given resource. */ orgPolicy?: Schema$GoogleCloudOrgpolicyV1Policy[]; /** * A representation of the resource. */ resource?: Schema$Resource; /** * Please also refer to the [service perimeter user guide](https://cloud.google.com/vpc-service-controls/docs/overview). */ servicePerimeter?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1ServicePerimeter; } /** * Specifies the audit configuration for a service. The configuration determines which permission types are logged, and what identities, if any, are exempted from logging. An AuditConfig must have one or more AuditLogConfigs. If there are AuditConfigs for both `allServices` and a specific service, the union of the two AuditConfigs is used for that service: the log_types specified in each AuditConfig are enabled, and the exempted_members in each AuditLogConfig are exempted. Example Policy with multiple AuditConfigs: { "audit_configs": [ { "service": "allServices", "audit_log_configs": [ { "log_type": "DATA_READ", "exempted_members": [ "user:jose@example.com" ] \}, { "log_type": "DATA_WRITE" \}, { "log_type": "ADMIN_READ" \} ] \}, { "service": "sampleservice.googleapis.com", "audit_log_configs": [ { "log_type": "DATA_READ" \}, { "log_type": "DATA_WRITE", "exempted_members": [ "user:aliya@example.com" ] \} ] \} ] \} For sampleservice, this policy enables DATA_READ, DATA_WRITE and ADMIN_READ logging. It also exempts `jose@example.com` from DATA_READ logging, and `aliya@example.com` from DATA_WRITE logging. */ export interface Schema$AuditConfig { /** * The configuration for logging of each type of permission. */ auditLogConfigs?: Schema$AuditLogConfig[]; /** * Specifies a service that will be enabled for audit logging. For example, `storage.googleapis.com`, `cloudsql.googleapis.com`. `allServices` is a special value that covers all services. */ service?: string | null; } /** * Provides the configuration for logging a type of permissions. Example: { "audit_log_configs": [ { "log_type": "DATA_READ", "exempted_members": [ "user:jose@example.com" ] \}, { "log_type": "DATA_WRITE" \} ] \} This enables 'DATA_READ' and 'DATA_WRITE' logging, while exempting jose@example.com from DATA_READ logging. */ export interface Schema$AuditLogConfig { /** * Specifies the identities that do not cause logging for this type of permission. Follows the same format of Binding.members. */ exemptedMembers?: string[] | null; /** * The log type that this config enables. */ logType?: string | null; } /** * Associates `members`, or principals, with a `role`. */ export interface Schema$Binding { /** * The condition that is associated with this binding. If the condition evaluates to `true`, then this binding applies to the current request. If the condition evaluates to `false`, then this binding does not apply to the current request. However, a different role binding might grant the same role to one or more of the principals in this binding. To learn which resources support conditions in their IAM policies, see the [IAM documentation](https://cloud.google.com/iam/help/conditions/resource-policies). */ condition?: Schema$Expr; /** * Specifies the principals requesting access for a Google Cloud resource. `members` can have the following values: * `allUsers`: A special identifier that represents anyone who is on the internet; with or without a Google account. * `allAuthenticatedUsers`: A special identifier that represents anyone who is authenticated with a Google account or a service account. Does not include identities that come from external identity providers (IdPs) through identity federation. * `user:{emailid\}`: An email address that represents a specific Google account. For example, `alice@example.com` . * `serviceAccount:{emailid\}`: An email address that represents a Google service account. For example, `my-other-app@appspot.gserviceaccount.com`. * `serviceAccount:{projectid\}.svc.id.goog[{namespace\}/{kubernetes-sa\}]`: An identifier for a [Kubernetes service account](https://cloud.google.com/kubernetes-engine/docs/how-to/kubernetes-service-accounts). For example, `my-project.svc.id.goog[my-namespace/my-kubernetes-sa]`. * `group:{emailid\}`: An email address that represents a Google group. For example, `admins@example.com`. * `domain:{domain\}`: The G Suite domain (primary) that represents all the users of that domain. For example, `google.com` or `example.com`. * `principal://iam.googleapis.com/locations/global/workforcePools/{pool_id\}/subject/{subject_attribute_value\}`: A single identity in a workforce identity pool. * `principalSet://iam.googleapis.com/locations/global/workforcePools/{pool_id\}/group/{group_id\}`: All workforce identities in a group. * `principalSet://iam.googleapis.com/locations/global/workforcePools/{pool_id\}/attribute.{attribute_name\}/{attribute_value\}`: All workforce identities with a specific attribute value. * `principalSet://iam.googleapis.com/locations/global/workforcePools/{pool_id\}/x`: All identities in a workforce identity pool. * `principal://iam.googleapis.com/projects/{project_number\}/locations/global/workloadIdentityPools/{pool_id\}/subject/{subject_attribute_value\}`: A single identity in a workload identity pool. * `principalSet://iam.googleapis.com/projects/{project_number\}/locations/global/workloadIdentityPools/{pool_id\}/group/{group_id\}`: A workload identity pool group. * `principalSet://iam.googleapis.com/projects/{project_number\}/locations/global/workloadIdentityPools/{pool_id\}/attribute.{attribute_name\}/{attribute_value\}`: All identities in a workload identity pool with a certain attribute. * `principalSet://iam.googleapis.com/projects/{project_number\}/locations/global/workloadIdentityPools/{pool_id\}/x`: All identities in a workload identity pool. * `deleted:user:{emailid\}?uid={uniqueid\}`: An email address (plus unique identifier) representing a user that has been recently deleted. For example, `alice@example.com?uid=123456789012345678901`. If the user is recovered, this value reverts to `user:{emailid\}` and the recovered user retains the role in the binding. * `deleted:serviceAccount:{emailid\}?uid={uniqueid\}`: An email address (plus unique identifier) representing a service account that has been recently deleted. For example, `my-other-app@appspot.gserviceaccount.com?uid=123456789012345678901`. If the service account is undeleted, this value reverts to `serviceAccount:{emailid\}` and the undeleted service account retains the role in the binding. * `deleted:group:{emailid\}?uid={uniqueid\}`: An email address (plus unique identifier) representing a Google group that has been recently deleted. For example, `admins@example.com?uid=123456789012345678901`. If the group is recovered, this value reverts to `group:{emailid\}` and the recovered group retains the role in the binding. * `deleted:principal://iam.googleapis.com/locations/global/workforcePools/{pool_id\}/subject/{subject_attribute_value\}`: Deleted single identity in a workforce identity pool. For example, `deleted:principal://iam.googleapis.com/locations/global/workforcePools/my-pool-id/subject/my-subject-attribute-value`. */ members?: string[] | null; /** * Role that is assigned to the list of `members`, or principals. For example, `roles/viewer`, `roles/editor`, or `roles/owner`. For an overview of the IAM roles and permissions, see the [IAM documentation](https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/roles-overview). For a list of the available pre-defined roles, see [here](https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/understanding-roles). */ role?: string | null; } /** * Represents a textual expression in the Common Expression Language (CEL) syntax. CEL is a C-like expression language. The syntax and semantics of CEL are documented at https://github.com/google/cel-spec. Example (Comparison): title: "Summary size limit" description: "Determines if a summary is less than 100 chars" expression: "document.summary.size() < 100" Example (Equality): title: "Requestor is owner" description: "Determines if requestor is the document owner" expression: "document.owner == request.auth.claims.email" Example (Logic): title: "Public documents" description: "Determine whether the document should be publicly visible" expression: "document.type != 'private' && document.type != 'internal'" Example (Data Manipulation): title: "Notification string" description: "Create a notification string with a timestamp." expression: "'New message received at ' + string(document.create_time)" The exact variables and functions that may be referenced within an expression are determined by the service that evaluates it. See the service documentation for additional information. */ export interface Schema$Expr { /** * Optional. Description of the expression. This is a longer text which describes the expression, e.g. when hovered over it in a UI. */ description?: string | null; /** * Textual representation of an expression in Common Expression Language syntax. */ expression?: string | null; /** * Optional. String indicating the location of the expression for error reporting, e.g. a file name and a position in the file. */ location?: string | null; /** * Optional. Title for the expression, i.e. a short string describing its purpose. This can be used e.g. in UIs which allow to enter the expression. */ title?: string | null; } /** * An asset in Google Cloud. An asset can be any resource in the Google Cloud [resource hierarchy](https://cloud.google.com/resource-manager/docs/cloud-platform-resource-hierarchy), a resource outside the Google Cloud resource hierarchy (such as Google Kubernetes Engine clusters and objects), or a policy (e.g. IAM policy). See [Supported asset types](https://cloud.google.com/asset-inventory/docs/supported-asset-types) for more information. */ export interface Schema$GoogleCloudAssetV1p7beta1Asset { /** * Please also refer to the [access level user guide](https://cloud.google.com/access-context-manager/docs/overview#access-levels). */ accessLevel?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1AccessLevel; /** * Please also refer to the [access policy user guide](https://cloud.google.com/access-context-manager/docs/overview#access-policies). */ accessPolicy?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1AccessPolicy; /** * The ancestry path of an asset in Google Cloud [resource hierarchy](https://cloud.google.com/resource-manager/docs/cloud-platform-resource-hierarchy), represented as a list of relative resource names. An ancestry path starts with the closest ancestor in the hierarchy and ends at root. If the asset is a project, folder, or organization, the ancestry path starts from the asset itself. Example: `["projects/123456789", "folders/5432", "organizations/1234"]` */ ancestors?: string[] | null; /** * The type of the asset. Example: `compute.googleapis.com/Disk` See [Supported asset types](https://cloud.google.com/asset-inventory/docs/supported-asset-types) for more information. */ assetType?: string | null; /** * A representation of the IAM policy set on a Google Cloud resource. There can be a maximum of one IAM policy set on any given resource. In addition, IAM policies inherit their granted access scope from any policies set on parent resources in the resource hierarchy. Therefore, the effectively policy is the union of both the policy set on this resource and each policy set on all of the resource's ancestry resource levels in the hierarchy. See [this topic](https://cloud.google.com/iam/help/allow-policies/inheritance) for more information. */ iamPolicy?: Schema$Policy; /** * The full name of the asset. Example: `//compute.googleapis.com/projects/my_project_123/zones/zone1/instances/instance1` See [Resource names](https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/resource_names#full_resource_name) for more information. */ name?: string | null; /** * A representation of an [organization policy](https://cloud.google.com/resource-manager/docs/organization-policy/overview#organization_policy). There can be more than one organization policy with different constraints set on a given resource. */ orgPolicy?: Schema$GoogleCloudOrgpolicyV1Policy[]; /** * The related assets of the asset of one relationship type. One asset only represents one type of relationship. */ relatedAssets?: Schema$GoogleCloudAssetV1p7beta1RelatedAssets; /** * A representation of the resource. */ resource?: Schema$GoogleCloudAssetV1p7beta1Resource; /** * Please also refer to the [service perimeter user guide](https://cloud.google.com/vpc-service-controls/docs/overview). */ servicePerimeter?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1ServicePerimeter; /** * The last update timestamp of an asset. update_time is updated when create/update/delete operation is performed. */ updateTime?: string | null; } /** * An asset identify in Google Cloud which contains its name, type and ancestors. An asset can be any resource in the Google Cloud [resource hierarchy](https://cloud.google.com/resource-manager/docs/cloud-platform-resource-hierarchy), a resource outside the Google Cloud resource hierarchy (such as Google Kubernetes Engine clusters and objects), or a policy (e.g. IAM policy). See [Supported asset types](https://cloud.google.com/asset-inventory/docs/supported-asset-types) for more information. */ export interface Schema$GoogleCloudAssetV1p7beta1RelatedAsset { /** * The ancestors of an asset in Google Cloud [resource hierarchy](https://cloud.google.com/resource-manager/docs/cloud-platform-resource-hierarchy), represented as a list of relative resource names. An ancestry path starts with the closest ancestor in the hierarchy and ends at root. Example: `["projects/123456789", "folders/5432", "organizations/1234"]` */ ancestors?: string[] | null; /** * The full name of the asset. Example: `//compute.googleapis.com/projects/my_project_123/zones/zone1/instances/instance1` See [Resource names](https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/resource_names#full_resource_name) for more information. */ asset?: string | null; /** * The type of the asset. Example: `compute.googleapis.com/Disk` See [Supported asset types](https://cloud.google.com/asset-inventory/docs/supported-asset-types) for more information. */ assetType?: string | null; } /** * The detailed related assets with the `relationship_type`. */ export interface Schema$GoogleCloudAssetV1p7beta1RelatedAssets { /** * The peer resources of the relationship. */ assets?: Schema$GoogleCloudAssetV1p7beta1RelatedAsset[]; /** * The detailed relation attributes. */ relationshipAttributes?: Schema$GoogleCloudAssetV1p7beta1RelationshipAttributes; } /** * The relationship attributes which include `type`, `source_resource_type`, `target_resource_type` and `action`. */ export interface Schema$GoogleCloudAssetV1p7beta1RelationshipAttributes { /** * The detail of the relationship, e.g. `contains`, `attaches` */ action?: string | null; /** * The source asset type. Example: `compute.googleapis.com/Instance` */ sourceResourceType?: string | null; /** * The target asset type. Example: `compute.googleapis.com/Disk` */ targetResourceType?: string | null; /** * The unique identifier of the relationship type. Example: `INSTANCE_TO_INSTANCEGROUP` */ type?: string | null; } /** * A representation of a Google Cloud resource. */ export interface Schema$GoogleCloudAssetV1p7beta1Resource { /** * The content of the resource, in which some sensitive fields are removed and may not be present. */ data?: {[key: string]: any} | null; /** * The URL of the discovery document containing the resource's JSON schema. Example: `https://www.googleapis.com/discovery/v1/apis/compute/v1/rest` This value is unspecified for resources that do not have an API based on a discovery document, such as Cloud Bigtable. */ discoveryDocumentUri?: string | null; /** * The JSON schema name listed in the discovery document. Example: `Project` This value is unspecified for resources that do not have an API based on a discovery document, such as Cloud Bigtable. */ discoveryName?: string | null; /** * The location of the resource in Google Cloud, such as its zone and region. For more information, see https://cloud.google.com/about/locations/. */ location?: string | null; /** * The full name of the immediate parent of this resource. See [Resource Names](https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/resource_names#full_resource_name) for more information. For Google Cloud assets, this value is the parent resource defined in the [IAM policy hierarchy](https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/overview#policy_hierarchy). Example: `//cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com/projects/my_project_123` For third-party assets, this field may be set differently. */ parent?: string | null; /** * The REST URL for accessing the resource. An HTTP `GET` request using this URL returns the resource itself. Example: `https://cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com/v1/projects/my-project-123` This value is unspecified for resources without a REST API. */ resourceUrl?: string | null; /** * The API version. Example: `v1` */ version?: string | null; } /** * Used in `policy_type` to specify how `boolean_policy` will behave at this resource. */ export interface Schema$GoogleCloudOrgpolicyV1BooleanPolicy { /** * If `true`, then the `Policy` is enforced. If `false`, then any configuration is acceptable. Suppose you have a `Constraint` `constraints/compute.disableSerialPortAccess` with `constraint_default` set to `ALLOW`. A `Policy` for that `Constraint` exhibits the following behavior: - If the `Policy` at this resource has enforced set to `false`, serial port connection attempts will be allowed. - If the `Policy` at this resource has enforced set to `true`, serial port connection attempts will be refused. - If the `Policy` at this resource is `RestoreDefault`, serial port connection attempts will be allowed. - If no `Policy` is set at this resource or anywhere higher in the resource hierarchy, serial port connection attempts will be allowed. - If no `Policy` is set at this resource, but one exists higher in the resource hierarchy, the behavior is as if the`Policy` were set at this resource. The following examples demonstrate the different possible layerings: Example 1 (nearest `Constraint` wins): `organizations/foo` has a `Policy` with: {enforced: false\} `projects/bar` has no `Policy` set. The constraint at `projects/bar` and `organizations/foo` will not be enforced. Example 2 (enforcement gets replaced): `organizations/foo` has a `Policy` with: {enforced: false\} `projects/bar` has a `Policy` with: {enforced: true\} The constraint at `organizations/foo` is not enforced. The constraint at `projects/bar` is enforced. Example 3 (RestoreDefault): `organizations/foo` has a `Policy` with: {enforced: true\} `projects/bar` has a `Policy` with: {RestoreDefault: {\}\} The constraint at `organizations/foo` is enforced. The constraint at `projects/bar` is not enforced, because `constraint_default` for the `Constraint` is `ALLOW`. */ enforced?: boolean | null; } /** * Used in `policy_type` to specify how `list_policy` behaves at this resource. `ListPolicy` can define specific values and subtrees of Cloud Resource Manager resource hierarchy (`Organizations`, `Folders`, `Projects`) that are allowed or denied by setting the `allowed_values` and `denied_values` fields. This is achieved by using the `under:` and optional `is:` prefixes. The `under:` prefix is used to denote resource subtree values. The `is:` prefix is used to denote specific values, and is required only if the value contains a ":". Values prefixed with "is:" are treated the same as values with no prefix. Ancestry subtrees must be in one of the following formats: - "projects/", e.g. "projects/tokyo-rain-123" - "folders/", e.g. "folders/1234" - "organizations/", e.g. "organizations/1234" The `supports_under` field of the associated `Constraint` defines whether ancestry prefixes can be used. You can set `allowed_values` and `denied_values` in the same `Policy` if `all_values` is `ALL_VALUES_UNSPECIFIED`. `ALLOW` or `DENY` are used to allow or deny all values. If `all_values` is set to either `ALLOW` or `DENY`, `allowed_values` and `denied_values` must be unset. */ export interface Schema$GoogleCloudOrgpolicyV1ListPolicy { /** * List of values allowed at this resource. Can only be set if `all_values` is set to `ALL_VALUES_UNSPECIFIED`. */ allowedValues?: string[] | null; /** * The policy all_values state. */ allValues?: string | null; /** * List of values denied at this resource. Can only be set if `all_values` is set to `ALL_VALUES_UNSPECIFIED`. */ deniedValues?: string[] | null; /** * Determines the inheritance behavior for this `Policy`. By default, a `ListPolicy` set at a resource supersedes any `Policy` set anywhere up the resource hierarchy. However, if `inherit_from_parent` is set to `true`, then the values from the effective `Policy` of the parent resource are inherited, meaning the values set in this `Policy` are added to the values inherited up the hierarchy. Setting `Policy` hierarchies that inherit both allowed values and denied values isn't recommended in most circumstances to keep the configuration simple and understandable. However, it is possible to set a `Policy` with `allowed_values` set that inherits a `Policy` with `denied_values` set. In this case, the values that are allowed must be in `allowed_values` and not present in `denied_values`. For example, suppose you have a `Constraint` `constraints/serviceuser.services`, which has a `constraint_type` of `list_constraint`, and with `constraint_default` set to `ALLOW`. Suppose that at the Organization level, a `Policy` is applied that restricts the allowed API activations to {`E1`, `E2`\}. Then, if a `Policy` is applied to a project below the Organization that has `inherit_from_parent` set to `false` and field all_values set to DENY, then an attempt to activate any API will be denied. The following examples demonstrate different possible layerings for `projects/bar` parented by `organizations/foo`: Example 1 (no inherited values): `organizations/foo` has a `Policy` with values: {allowed_values: "E1" allowed_values:"E2"\} `projects/bar` has `inherit_from_parent` `false` and values: {allowed_values: "E3" allowed_values: "E4"\} The accepted values at `organizations/foo` are `E1`, `E2`. The accepted values at `projects/bar` are `E3`, and `E4`. Example 2 (inherited values): `organizations/foo` has a `Policy` with values: {allowed_values: "E1" allowed_values:"E2"\} `projects/bar` has a `Policy` with values: {value: "E3" value: "E4" inherit_from_parent: true\} The accepted values at `organizations/foo` are `E1`, `E2`. The accepted values at `projects/bar` are `E1`, `E2`, `E3`, and `E4`. Example 3 (inheriting both allowed and denied values): `organizations/foo` has a `Policy` with values: {allowed_values: "E1" allowed_values: "E2"\} `projects/bar` has a `Policy` with: {denied_values: "E1"\} The accepted values at `organizations/foo` are `E1`, `E2`. The value accepted at `projects/bar` is `E2`. Example 4 (RestoreDefault): `organizations/foo` has a `Policy` with values: {allowed_values: "E1" allowed_values:"E2"\} `projects/bar` has a `Policy` with values: {RestoreDefault: {\}\} The accepted values at `organizations/foo` are `E1`, `E2`. The accepted values at `projects/bar` are either all or none depending on the value of `constraint_default` (if `ALLOW`, all; if `DENY`, none). Example 5 (no policy inherits parent policy): `organizations/foo` has no `Policy` set. `projects/bar` has no `Policy` set. The accepted values at both levels are either all or none depending on the value of `constraint_default` (if `ALLOW`, all; if `DENY`, none). Example 6 (ListConstraint allowing all): `organizations/foo` has a `Policy` with values: {allowed_values: "E1" allowed_values: "E2"\} `projects/bar` has a `Policy` with: {all: ALLOW\} The accepted values at `organizations/foo` are `E1`, E2`. Any value is accepted at `projects/bar`. Example 7 (ListConstraint allowing none): `organizations/foo` has a `Policy` with values: {allowed_values: "E1" allowed_values: "E2"\} `projects/bar` has a `Policy` with: {all: DENY\} The accepted values at `organizations/foo` are `E1`, E2`. No value is accepted at `projects/bar`. Example 10 (allowed and denied subtrees of Resource Manager hierarchy): Given the following resource hierarchy O1-\>{F1, F2\}; F1-\>{P1\}; F2-\>{P2, P3\}, `organizations/foo` has a `Policy` with values: {allowed_values: "under:organizations/O1"\} `projects/bar` has a `Policy` with: {allowed_values: "under:projects/P3"\} {denied_values: "under:folders/F2"\} The accepted values at `organizations/foo` are `organizations/O1`, `folders/F1`, `folders/F2`, `projects/P1`, `projects/P2`, `projects/P3`. The accepted values at `projects/bar` are `organizations/O1`, `folders/F1`, `projects/P1`. */ inheritFromParent?: boolean | null; /** * Optional. The Google Cloud Console will try to default to a configuration that matches the value specified in this `Policy`. If `suggested_value` is not set, it will inherit the value specified higher in the hierarchy, unless `inherit_from_parent` is `false`. */ suggestedValue?: string | null; } /** * Defines a Cloud Organization `Policy` which is used to specify `Constraints` for configurations of Cloud Platform resources. */ export interface Schema$GoogleCloudOrgpolicyV1Policy { /** * For boolean `Constraints`, whether to enforce the `Constraint` or not. */ booleanPolicy?: Schema$GoogleCloudOrgpolicyV1BooleanPolicy; /** * The name of the `Constraint` the `Policy` is configuring, for example, `constraints/serviceuser.services`. A [list of available constraints](/resource-manager/docs/organization-policy/org-policy-constraints) is available. Immutable after creation. */ constraint?: string | null; /** * An opaque tag indicating the current version of the `Policy`, used for concurrency control. When the `Policy` is returned from either a `GetPolicy` or a `ListOrgPolicy` request, this `etag` indicates the version of the current `Policy` to use when executing a read-modify-write loop. When the `Policy` is returned from a `GetEffectivePolicy` request, the `etag` will be unset. When the `Policy` is used in a `SetOrgPolicy` method, use the `etag` value that was returned from a `GetOrgPolicy` request as part of a read-modify-write loop for concurrency control. Not setting the `etag`in a `SetOrgPolicy` request will result in an unconditional write of the `Policy`. */ etag?: string | null; /** * List of values either allowed or disallowed. */ listPolicy?: Schema$GoogleCloudOrgpolicyV1ListPolicy; /** * Restores the default behavior of the constraint; independent of `Constraint` type. */ restoreDefault?: Schema$GoogleCloudOrgpolicyV1RestoreDefault; /** * The time stamp the `Policy` was previously updated. This is set by the server, not specified by the caller, and represents the last time a call to `SetOrgPolicy` was made for that `Policy`. Any value set by the client will be ignored. */ updateTime?: string | null; /** * Version of the `Policy`. Default version is 0; */ version?: number | null; } /** * Ignores policies set above this resource and restores the `constraint_default` enforcement behavior of the specific `Constraint` at this resource. Suppose that `constraint_default` is set to `ALLOW` for the `Constraint` `constraints/serviceuser.services`. Suppose that organization foo.com sets a `Policy` at their Organization resource node that restricts the allowed service activations to deny all service activations. They could then set a `Policy` with the `policy_type` `restore_default` on several experimental projects, restoring the `constraint_default` enforcement of the `Constraint` for only those projects, allowing those projects to have all services activated. */ export interface Schema$GoogleCloudOrgpolicyV1RestoreDefault {} /** * An `AccessLevel` is a label that can be applied to requests to Google Cloud services, along with a list of requirements necessary for the label to be applied. */ export interface Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1AccessLevel { /** * A `BasicLevel` composed of `Conditions`. */ basic?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1BasicLevel; /** * A `CustomLevel` written in the Common Expression Language. */ custom?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1CustomLevel; /** * Description of the `AccessLevel` and its use. Does not affect behavior. */ description?: string | null; /** * Identifier. Resource name for the `AccessLevel`. Format: `accessPolicies/{access_policy\}/accessLevels/{access_level\}`. The `access_level` component must begin with a letter, followed by alphanumeric characters or `_`. Its maximum length is 50 characters. After you create an `AccessLevel`, you cannot change its `name`. */ name?: string | null; /** * Human readable title. Must be unique within the Policy. */ title?: string | null; } /** * `AccessPolicy` is a container for `AccessLevels` (which define the necessary attributes to use Google Cloud services) and `ServicePerimeters` (which define regions of services able to freely pass data within a perimeter). An access policy is globally visible within an organization, and the restrictions it specifies apply to all projects within an organization. */ export interface Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1AccessPolicy { /** * Output only. An opaque identifier for the current version of the `AccessPolicy`. This will always be a strongly validated etag, meaning that two Access Policies will be identical if and only if their etags are identical. Clients should not expect this to be in any specific format. */ etag?: string | null; /** * Output only. Identifier. Resource name of the `AccessPolicy`. Format: `accessPolicies/{access_policy\}` */ name?: string | null; /** * Required. The parent of this `AccessPolicy` in the Cloud Resource Hierarchy. Currently immutable once created. Format: `organizations/{organization_id\}` */ parent?: string | null; /** * The scopes of the AccessPolicy. Scopes define which resources a policy can restrict and where its resources can be referenced. For example, policy A with `scopes=["folders/123"]` has the following behavior: - ServicePerimeter can only restrict projects within `folders/123`. - ServicePerimeter within policy A can only reference access levels defined within policy A. - Only one policy can include a given scope; thus, attempting to create a second policy which includes `folders/123` will result in an error. If no scopes are provided, then any resource within the organization can be restricted. Scopes cannot be modified after a policy is created. Policies can only have a single scope. Format: list of `folders/{folder_number\}` or `projects/{project_number\}` */ scopes?: string[] | null; /** * Required. Human readable title. Does not affect behavior. */ title?: string | null; } /** * Identification for an API Operation. */ export interface Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1ApiOperation { /** * API methods or permissions to allow. Method or permission must belong to the service specified by `service_name` field. A single MethodSelector entry with `*` specified for the `method` field will allow all methods AND permissions for the service specified in `service_name`. */ methodSelectors?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1MethodSelector[]; /** * The name of the API whose methods or permissions the IngressPolicy or EgressPolicy want to allow. A single ApiOperation with `service_name` field set to `*` will allow all methods AND permissions for all services. */ serviceName?: string | null; } /** * `BasicLevel` is an `AccessLevel` using a set of recommended features. */ export interface Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1BasicLevel { /** * How the `conditions` list should be combined to determine if a request is granted this `AccessLevel`. If AND is used, each `Condition` in `conditions` must be satisfied for the `AccessLevel` to be applied. If OR is used, at least one `Condition` in `conditions` must be satisfied for the `AccessLevel` to be applied. Default behavior is AND. */ combiningFunction?: string | null; /** * Required. A list of requirements for the `AccessLevel` to be granted. */ conditions?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1Condition[]; } /** * A condition necessary for an `AccessLevel` to be granted. The Condition is an AND over its fields. So a Condition is true if: 1) the request IP is from one of the listed subnetworks AND 2) the originating device complies with the listed device policy AND 3) all listed access levels are granted AND 4) the request was sent at a time allowed by the DateTimeRestriction. */ export interface Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1Condition { /** * Device specific restrictions, all restrictions must hold for the Condition to be true. If not specified, all devices are allowed. */ devicePolicy?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1DevicePolicy; /** * CIDR block IP subnetwork specification. May be IPv4 or IPv6. Note that for a CIDR IP address block, the specified IP address portion must be properly truncated (i.e. all the host bits must be zero) or the input is considered malformed. For example, "192.0.2.0/24" is accepted but "192.0.2.1/24" is not. Similarly, for IPv6, "2001:db8::/32" is accepted whereas "2001:db8::1/32" is not. The originating IP of a request must be in one of the listed subnets in order for this Condition to be true. If empty, all IP addresses are allowed. */ ipSubnetworks?: string[] | null; /** * The request must be made by one of the provided user or service accounts. Groups are not supported. Syntax: `user:{emailid\}` `serviceAccount:{emailid\}` If not specified, a request may come from any user. */ members?: string[] | null; /** * Whether to negate the Condition. If true, the Condition becomes a NAND over its non-empty fields. Any non-empty field criteria evaluating to false will result in the Condition to be satisfied. Defaults to false. */ negate?: boolean | null; /** * The request must originate from one of the provided countries/regions. Must be valid ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 codes. */ regions?: string[] | null; /** * A list of other access levels defined in the same `Policy`, referenced by resource name. Referencing an `AccessLevel` which does not exist is an error. All access levels listed must be granted for the Condition to be true. Example: "`accessPolicies/MY_POLICY/accessLevels/LEVEL_NAME"` */ requiredAccessLevels?: string[] | null; /** * The request must originate from one of the provided VPC networks in Google Cloud. Cannot specify this field together with `ip_subnetworks`. */ vpcNetworkSources?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1VpcNetworkSource[]; } /** * `CustomLevel` is an `AccessLevel` using the Cloud Common Expression Language to represent the necessary conditions for the level to apply to a request. See CEL spec at: https://github.com/google/cel-spec */ export interface Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1CustomLevel { /** * Required. A Cloud CEL expression evaluating to a boolean. */ expr?: Schema$Expr; } /** * `DevicePolicy` specifies device specific restrictions necessary to acquire a given access level. A `DevicePolicy` specifies requirements for requests from devices to be granted access levels, it does not do any enforcement on the device. `DevicePolicy` acts as an AND over all specified fields, and each repeated field is an OR over its elements. Any unset fields are ignored. For example, if the proto is { os_type : DESKTOP_WINDOWS, os_type : DESKTOP_LINUX, encryption_status: ENCRYPTED\}, then the DevicePolicy will be true for requests originating from encrypted Linux desktops and encrypted Windows desktops. */ export interface Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1DevicePolicy { /** * Allowed device management levels, an empty list allows all management levels. */ allowedDeviceManagementLevels?: string[] | null; /** * Allowed encryptions statuses, an empty list allows all statuses. */ allowedEncryptionStatuses?: string[] | null; /** * Allowed OS versions, an empty list allows all types and all versions. */ osConstraints?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1OsConstraint[]; /** * Whether the device needs to be approved by the customer admin. */ requireAdminApproval?: boolean | null; /** * Whether the device needs to be corp owned. */ requireCorpOwned?: boolean | null; /** * Whether or not screenlock is required for the DevicePolicy to be true. Defaults to `false`. */ requireScreenlock?: boolean | null; } /** * Defines the conditions under which an EgressPolicy matches a request. Conditions based on information about the source of the request. Note that if the destination of the request is also protected by a ServicePerimeter, then that ServicePerimeter must have an IngressPolicy which allows access in order for this request to succeed. */ export interface Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1EgressFrom { /** * A list of identities that are allowed access through [EgressPolicy]. Identities can be an individual user, service account, Google group, or third-party identity. For third-party identity, only single identities are supported and other identity types are not supported. The `v1` identities that have the prefix `user`, `group`, `serviceAccount`, and `principal` in https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/principal-identifiers#v1 are supported. */ identities?: string[] | null; /** * Specifies the type of identities that are allowed access to outside the perimeter. If left unspecified, then members of `identities` field will be allowed access. */ identityType?: string | null; /** * Whether to enforce traffic restrictions based on `sources` field. If the `sources` fields is non-empty, then this field must be set to `SOURCE_RESTRICTION_ENABLED`. */ sourceRestriction?: string | null; /** * Sources that this EgressPolicy authorizes access from. If this field is not empty, then `source_restriction` must be set to `SOURCE_RESTRICTION_ENABLED`. */ sources?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1EgressSource[]; } /** * Policy for egress from perimeter. EgressPolicies match requests based on `egress_from` and `egress_to` stanzas. For an EgressPolicy to match, both `egress_from` and `egress_to` stanzas must be matched. If an EgressPolicy matches a request, the request is allowed to span the ServicePerimeter boundary. For example, an EgressPolicy can be used to allow VMs on networks within the ServicePerimeter to access a defined set of projects outside the perimeter in certain contexts (e.g. to read data from a Cloud Storage bucket or query against a BigQuery dataset). EgressPolicies are concerned with the *resources* that a request relates as well as the API services and API actions being used. They do not related to the direction of data movement. More detailed documentation for this concept can be found in the descriptions of EgressFrom and EgressTo. */ export interface Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1EgressPolicy { /** * Defines conditions on the source of a request causing this EgressPolicy to apply. */ egressFrom?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1EgressFrom; /** * Defines the conditions on the ApiOperation and destination resources that cause this EgressPolicy to apply. */ egressTo?: Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1EgressTo; /** * Optional. Human-readable title for the egress rule. The title must be unique within the perimeter and can not exceed 100 characters. Within the access policy, the combined length of all rule titles must not exceed 240,000 characters. */ title?: string | null; } /** * The source that EgressPolicy authorizes access from inside the ServicePerimeter to somewhere outside the ServicePerimeter boundaries. */ export interface Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1EgressSource { /** * An AccessLevel resource name that allows protected resources inside the ServicePerimeters to access outside the ServicePerimeter boundaries. AccessLevels listed must be in the same policy as this ServicePerimeter. Referencing a nonexistent AccessLevel will cause an error. If an AccessLevel name is not specified, only resources within the perimeter can be accessed through Google Cloud calls with request origins within the perimeter. Example: `accessPolicies/MY_POLICY/accessLevels/MY_LEVEL`. If a single `*` is specified for `access_level`, then all EgressSources will be allowed. */ accessLevel?: string | null; /** * A Google Cloud resource from the service perimeter that you want to allow to access data outside the perimeter. This field supports only projects. The project format is `projects/{project_number\}`. You can't use `*` in this field to allow all Google Cloud resources. */ resource?: string | null; } /** * Defines the conditions under which an EgressPolicy matches a request. Conditions are based on information about the ApiOperation intended to be performed on the `resources` specified. Note that if the destination of the request is also protected by a ServicePerimeter, then that ServicePerimeter must have an IngressPolicy which allows access in order for this request to succeed. The request must match `operations` AND `resources` fields in order to be allowed egress out of the perimeter. */ export interface Schema$GoogleIdentityAccesscontextmanagerV1EgressTo { /** * A list of external resources that are allowed to be accessed. Only AWS and Azure resources are supported. For Amazon S3, the supported formats are s3://BUCKET_NAME, s3a://BUCKET_NAME, and s3n://BUCKET_NAME. For Azure Storage, the supported format is azure://myaccount.blob.core.windo