344 lines
14 KiB
Protocol Buffer
344 lines
14 KiB
Protocol Buffer
// Copyright 2024 Google LLC
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//
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// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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// You may obtain a copy of the License at
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//
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// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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//
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// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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// limitations under the License.
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syntax = "proto3";
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package google.rpc.context;
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import "google/protobuf/any.proto";
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import "google/protobuf/duration.proto";
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import "google/protobuf/struct.proto";
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import "google/protobuf/timestamp.proto";
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option cc_enable_arenas = true;
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option go_package = "google.golang.org/genproto/googleapis/rpc/context/attribute_context;attribute_context";
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option java_multiple_files = true;
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option java_outer_classname = "AttributeContextProto";
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option java_package = "com.google.rpc.context";
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// This message defines the standard attribute vocabulary for Google APIs.
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//
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// An attribute is a piece of metadata that describes an activity on a network
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// service. For example, the size of an HTTP request, or the status code of
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// an HTTP response.
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//
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// Each attribute has a type and a name, which is logically defined as
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// a proto message field in `AttributeContext`. The field type becomes the
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// attribute type, and the field path becomes the attribute name. For example,
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// the attribute `source.ip` maps to field `AttributeContext.source.ip`.
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//
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// This message definition is guaranteed not to have any wire breaking change.
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// So you can use it directly for passing attributes across different systems.
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//
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// NOTE: Different system may generate different subset of attributes. Please
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// verify the system specification before relying on an attribute generated
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// a system.
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message AttributeContext {
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// This message defines attributes for a node that handles a network request.
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// The node can be either a service or an application that sends, forwards,
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// or receives the request. Service peers should fill in
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// `principal` and `labels` as appropriate.
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message Peer {
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// The IP address of the peer.
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string ip = 1;
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// The network port of the peer.
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int64 port = 2;
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// The labels associated with the peer.
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map<string, string> labels = 6;
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// The identity of this peer. Similar to `Request.auth.principal`, but
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// relative to the peer instead of the request. For example, the
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// identity associated with a load balancer that forwarded the request.
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string principal = 7;
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// The CLDR country/region code associated with the above IP address.
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// If the IP address is private, the `region_code` should reflect the
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// physical location where this peer is running.
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string region_code = 8;
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}
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// This message defines attributes associated with API operations, such as
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// a network API request. The terminology is based on the conventions used
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// by Google APIs, Istio, and OpenAPI.
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message Api {
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// The API service name. It is a logical identifier for a networked API,
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// such as "pubsub.googleapis.com". The naming syntax depends on the
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// API management system being used for handling the request.
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string service = 1;
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// The API operation name. For gRPC requests, it is the fully qualified API
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// method name, such as "google.pubsub.v1.Publisher.Publish". For OpenAPI
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// requests, it is the `operationId`, such as "getPet".
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string operation = 2;
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// The API protocol used for sending the request, such as "http", "https",
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// "grpc", or "internal".
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string protocol = 3;
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// The API version associated with the API operation above, such as "v1" or
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// "v1alpha1".
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string version = 4;
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}
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// This message defines request authentication attributes. Terminology is
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// based on the JSON Web Token (JWT) standard, but the terms also
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// correlate to concepts in other standards.
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message Auth {
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// The authenticated principal. Reflects the issuer (`iss`) and subject
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// (`sub`) claims within a JWT. The issuer and subject should be `/`
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// delimited, with `/` percent-encoded within the subject fragment. For
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// Google accounts, the principal format is:
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// "https://accounts.google.com/{id}"
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string principal = 1;
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// The intended audience(s) for this authentication information. Reflects
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// the audience (`aud`) claim within a JWT. The audience
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// value(s) depends on the `issuer`, but typically include one or more of
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// the following pieces of information:
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//
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// * The services intended to receive the credential. For example,
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// ["https://pubsub.googleapis.com/", "https://storage.googleapis.com/"].
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// * A set of service-based scopes. For example,
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// ["https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform"].
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// * The client id of an app, such as the Firebase project id for JWTs
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// from Firebase Auth.
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//
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// Consult the documentation for the credential issuer to determine the
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// information provided.
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repeated string audiences = 2;
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// The authorized presenter of the credential. Reflects the optional
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// Authorized Presenter (`azp`) claim within a JWT or the
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// OAuth client id. For example, a Google Cloud Platform client id looks
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// as follows: "123456789012.apps.googleusercontent.com".
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string presenter = 3;
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// Structured claims presented with the credential. JWTs include
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// `{key: value}` pairs for standard and private claims. The following
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// is a subset of the standard required and optional claims that would
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// typically be presented for a Google-based JWT:
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//
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// {'iss': 'accounts.google.com',
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// 'sub': '113289723416554971153',
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// 'aud': ['123456789012', 'pubsub.googleapis.com'],
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// 'azp': '123456789012.apps.googleusercontent.com',
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// 'email': 'jsmith@example.com',
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// 'iat': 1353601026,
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// 'exp': 1353604926}
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//
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// SAML assertions are similarly specified, but with an identity provider
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// dependent structure.
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google.protobuf.Struct claims = 4;
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// A list of access level resource names that allow resources to be
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// accessed by authenticated requester. It is part of Secure GCP processing
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// for the incoming request. An access level string has the format:
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// "//{api_service_name}/accessPolicies/{policy_id}/accessLevels/{short_name}"
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//
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// Example:
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// "//accesscontextmanager.googleapis.com/accessPolicies/MY_POLICY_ID/accessLevels/MY_LEVEL"
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repeated string access_levels = 5;
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}
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// This message defines attributes for an HTTP request. If the actual
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// request is not an HTTP request, the runtime system should try to map
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// the actual request to an equivalent HTTP request.
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message Request {
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// The unique ID for a request, which can be propagated to downstream
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// systems. The ID should have low probability of collision
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// within a single day for a specific service.
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string id = 1;
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// The HTTP request method, such as `GET`, `POST`.
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string method = 2;
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// The HTTP request headers. If multiple headers share the same key, they
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// must be merged according to the HTTP spec. All header keys must be
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// lowercased, because HTTP header keys are case-insensitive.
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map<string, string> headers = 3;
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// The HTTP URL path, excluding the query parameters.
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string path = 4;
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// The HTTP request `Host` header value.
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string host = 5;
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// The HTTP URL scheme, such as `http` and `https`.
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string scheme = 6;
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// The HTTP URL query in the format of `name1=value1&name2=value2`, as it
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// appears in the first line of the HTTP request. No decoding is performed.
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string query = 7;
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// The timestamp when the `destination` service receives the last byte of
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// the request.
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google.protobuf.Timestamp time = 9;
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// The HTTP request size in bytes. If unknown, it must be -1.
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int64 size = 10;
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// The network protocol used with the request, such as "http/1.1",
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// "spdy/3", "h2", "h2c", "webrtc", "tcp", "udp", "quic". See
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// https://www.iana.org/assignments/tls-extensiontype-values/tls-extensiontype-values.xhtml#alpn-protocol-ids
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// for details.
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string protocol = 11;
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// A special parameter for request reason. It is used by security systems
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// to associate auditing information with a request.
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string reason = 12;
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// The request authentication. May be absent for unauthenticated requests.
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// Derived from the HTTP request `Authorization` header or equivalent.
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Auth auth = 13;
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}
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// This message defines attributes for a typical network response. It
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// generally models semantics of an HTTP response.
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message Response {
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// The HTTP response status code, such as `200` and `404`.
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int64 code = 1;
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// The HTTP response size in bytes. If unknown, it must be -1.
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int64 size = 2;
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// The HTTP response headers. If multiple headers share the same key, they
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// must be merged according to HTTP spec. All header keys must be
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// lowercased, because HTTP header keys are case-insensitive.
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map<string, string> headers = 3;
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// The timestamp when the `destination` service sends the last byte of
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// the response.
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google.protobuf.Timestamp time = 4;
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// The amount of time it takes the backend service to fully respond to a
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// request. Measured from when the destination service starts to send the
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// request to the backend until when the destination service receives the
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// complete response from the backend.
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google.protobuf.Duration backend_latency = 5;
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}
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// This message defines core attributes for a resource. A resource is an
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// addressable (named) entity provided by the destination service. For
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// example, a file stored on a network storage service.
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message Resource {
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// The name of the service that this resource belongs to, such as
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// `pubsub.googleapis.com`. The service may be different from the DNS
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// hostname that actually serves the request.
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string service = 1;
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// The stable identifier (name) of a resource on the `service`. A resource
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// can be logically identified as "//{resource.service}/{resource.name}".
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// The differences between a resource name and a URI are:
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//
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// * Resource name is a logical identifier, independent of network
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// protocol and API version. For example,
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// `//pubsub.googleapis.com/projects/123/topics/news-feed`.
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// * URI often includes protocol and version information, so it can
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// be used directly by applications. For example,
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// `https://pubsub.googleapis.com/v1/projects/123/topics/news-feed`.
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//
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// See https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/resource_names for details.
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string name = 2;
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// The type of the resource. The syntax is platform-specific because
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// different platforms define their resources differently.
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//
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// For Google APIs, the type format must be "{service}/{kind}", such as
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// "pubsub.googleapis.com/Topic".
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string type = 3;
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// The labels or tags on the resource, such as AWS resource tags and
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// Kubernetes resource labels.
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map<string, string> labels = 4;
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// The unique identifier of the resource. UID is unique in the time
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// and space for this resource within the scope of the service. It is
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// typically generated by the server on successful creation of a resource
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// and must not be changed. UID is used to uniquely identify resources
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// with resource name reuses. This should be a UUID4.
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string uid = 5;
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// Annotations is an unstructured key-value map stored with a resource that
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// may be set by external tools to store and retrieve arbitrary metadata.
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// They are not queryable and should be preserved when modifying objects.
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//
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// More info: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/annotations
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map<string, string> annotations = 6;
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// Mutable. The display name set by clients. Must be <= 63 characters.
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string display_name = 7;
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// Output only. The timestamp when the resource was created. This may
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// be either the time creation was initiated or when it was completed.
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google.protobuf.Timestamp create_time = 8;
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// Output only. The timestamp when the resource was last updated. Any
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// change to the resource made by users must refresh this value.
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// Changes to a resource made by the service should refresh this value.
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google.protobuf.Timestamp update_time = 9;
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// Output only. The timestamp when the resource was deleted.
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// If the resource is not deleted, this must be empty.
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google.protobuf.Timestamp delete_time = 10;
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// Output only. An opaque value that uniquely identifies a version or
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// generation of a resource. It can be used to confirm that the client
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// and server agree on the ordering of a resource being written.
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string etag = 11;
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// Immutable. The location of the resource. The location encoding is
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// specific to the service provider, and new encoding may be introduced
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// as the service evolves.
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//
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// For Google Cloud products, the encoding is what is used by Google Cloud
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// APIs, such as `us-east1`, `aws-us-east-1`, and `azure-eastus2`. The
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// semantics of `location` is identical to the
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// `cloud.googleapis.com/location` label used by some Google Cloud APIs.
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string location = 12;
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}
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// The origin of a network activity. In a multi hop network activity,
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// the origin represents the sender of the first hop. For the first hop,
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// the `source` and the `origin` must have the same content.
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Peer origin = 7;
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// The source of a network activity, such as starting a TCP connection.
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// In a multi hop network activity, the source represents the sender of the
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// last hop.
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Peer source = 1;
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// The destination of a network activity, such as accepting a TCP connection.
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// In a multi hop network activity, the destination represents the receiver of
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// the last hop.
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Peer destination = 2;
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// Represents a network request, such as an HTTP request.
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Request request = 3;
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// Represents a network response, such as an HTTP response.
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Response response = 4;
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// Represents a target resource that is involved with a network activity.
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// If multiple resources are involved with an activity, this must be the
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// primary one.
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Resource resource = 5;
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// Represents an API operation that is involved to a network activity.
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Api api = 6;
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// Supports extensions for advanced use cases, such as logs and metrics.
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repeated google.protobuf.Any extensions = 8;
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}
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