Java idiomatic client for Google Cloud Resource Manager.
Note: This client is a work-in-progress, and may occasionally make backwards-incompatible changes.
If you are using Maven, add this to your pom.xml file
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.cloud</groupId>
<artifactId>google-cloud-resourcemanager</artifactId>
<version>0.48.0-alpha</version>
</dependency>
If you are using Gradle, add this to your dependencies
compile 'com.google.cloud:google-cloud-resourcemanager:0.48.0-alpha'
If you are using SBT, add this to your dependencies
libraryDependencies += "com.google.cloud" % "google-cloud-resourcemanager" % "0.48.0-alpha"
ResourceManagerExample
is a simple command line interface for the Cloud Resource Manager. Read more about using the application on the ResourceManagerExample
docs page.
Unlike other google-cloud
service libraries, google-cloud-resourcemanager
only accepts Google Cloud SDK credentials at this time. If you are having trouble authenticating, it may be that you have other types of credentials that override your Google Cloud SDK credentials. See more about Google Cloud SDK credentials and credential precedence in the global README's Authentication section.
Google Cloud Resource Manager provides a programmatic way to manage your Google Cloud Platform projects. With this API, you can do the following:
- Get a list of all projects associated with an account.
- Create new projects.
- Update existing projects.
- Delete projects.
- Undelete projects that you don't want to delete.
Be sure to activate the Google Cloud Resource Manager API on the Developer's Console to use Resource Manager from your project.
See the Resource Manager client library docs to learn how to interact with the Cloud Resource Manager using this client Library.
You will need to set up the local development environment by installing the Google Cloud SDK and running the following command in command line: gcloud auth login
.
Note: You don't need a project ID to use this service. If you have a project ID set in the Google Cloud SDK, you can unset it by typing
gcloud config unset project
in command line.
You'll need to obtain the google-cloud-resourcemanager
library. See the Quickstart section to add google-cloud-resourcemanager
as a dependency in your code.
To make authenticated requests to Google Cloud Resource Manager, you must create a service object with Google Cloud SDK credentials. You can then make API calls by calling methods on the Resource Manager service object. The simplest way to authenticate is to use Application Default Credentials. These credentials are automatically inferred from your environment, so you only need the following code to create your service object:
import com.google.cloud.resourcemanager.ResourceManager;
import com.google.cloud.resourcemanager.ResourceManagerOptions;
ResourceManager resourceManager = ResourceManagerOptions.getDefaultInstance().getService();
You can load a project if you know its project ID and have read permissions to the project. To get a project, add the following import at the top of your file:
import com.google.cloud.resourcemanager.Project;
Then use the following code to get the project:
String projectId = "my-globally-unique-project-id"; // Change to a unique project ID
Project project = resourceManager.get(projectId);
All you need to create a project is a globally unique project ID. You can also optionally attach a non-unique name and labels to your project. Read more about naming guidelines for project IDs, names, and labels here. To create a project, add the following imports at the top of your file:
import com.google.cloud.resourcemanager.Project;
import com.google.cloud.resourcemanager.ProjectInfo;
Then add the following code to create a project (be sure to change projectId
to your own unique
project ID).
String projectId = "my-globally-unique-project-id"; // Change to a unique project ID
Project project = resourceManager.create(ProjectInfo.newBuilder(projectId).build());
Note that the return value from create
is a Project
that includes additional read-only
information, like creation time, project number, and lifecycle state. Read more about these fields
on the Projects page.
Project
, a subclass of ProjectInfo
, adds a layer of service-related functionality over
ProjectInfo
.
To edit a project, create a new ProjectInfo
object and pass it in to the Project.replace
method.
For example, to add a label to a project to denote that it's launch status is "in development", add
the following code:
Project newProject = project.toBuilder()
.addLabel("launch-status", "in-development")
.build()
.replace();
Note that the values of the project you pass in to replace
overwrite the server's values for
non-read-only fields, namely projectName
and labels
. For example, if you create a project with
projectName
"some-project-name" and subsequently call replace using a ProjectInfo
object that
didn't set the projectName
, then the server will unset the project's name. The server ignores any
attempted changes to the read-only fields projectNumber
, lifecycleState
, and createTime
.
The projectId
cannot change.
Suppose that we want a list of all projects for which we have read permissions. Add the following import:
import java.util.Iterator;
Then add the following code to print a list of projects you can view:
Iterator<Project> projectIterator = resourceManager.list().iterateAll();
System.out.println("Projects I can view:");
while (projectIterator.hasNext()) {
System.out.println(projectIterator.next().getProjectId());
}
You can edit Google Cloud IAM (Identity and Access Management) policies on the project-level using this library as well. We recommend using the read-modify-write pattern to make policy changes. This entails reading the project's current policy, updating it locally, and then sending the modified policy for writing, as shown in the snippet below. First, add these imports:
import com.google.cloud.Identity;
import com.google.cloud.Policy;
import com.google.cloud.Role;
Assuming you have completed the steps above to create the ResourceManager
service object and load
a project from the server, you just need to add the following code:
// Get the project's policy
Policy policy = project.getPolicy();
// Add a viewer
Policy.Builder modifiedPolicy = policy.toBuilder();
Identity newViewer = Identity.user("<insert user's email address here>");
modifiedPolicy.addIdentity(Role.viewer(), newViewer);
// Write policy
Policy updatedPolicy = project.replacePolicy(modifiedPolicy.build());
Note that the policy you pass in to replacePolicy
overwrites the original policy. For example, if
the original policy has two bindings and you call replacePolicy
with a new policy containing only
one binding, the two original bindings are lost.
We put together all the code shown above into three programs. The programs assume that you are running from your own desktop and used the Google Cloud SDK to authenticate yourself.
The first program creates a project if it does not exist. Complete source code can be found at GetOrCreateProject.java.
The second program updates a project if it exists and lists all projects the user has permission to view. Complete source code can be found at UpdateAndListProjects.java.
The third program modifies the IAM policy associated with a project using the read-modify-write pattern. Complete source code can be found at ModifyPolicy.java
Resource Manager uses HTTP for the transport layer.
Java 7 or above is required for using this client.
This library follows Semantic Versioning.
It is currently in major version zero (0.y.z
), which means that anything
may change at any time and the public API should not be considered
stable.
This library has tools to help write tests for code that uses Resource Manager.
See TESTING to read more about testing.
Contributions to this library are always welcome and highly encouraged.
See CONTRIBUTING for more information on how to get started.
Apache 2.0 - See LICENSE for more information.