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public
class
OperationsClient
implements
BackgroundResource
Service Description: Manages long-running operations with an API service.
When an API method normally takes long time to complete, it can be designed to return Operation
to the client, and the client can use this interface to
receive the real response asynchronously by polling the operation resource, or pass the operation
resource to another API (such as Google Cloud Pub/Sub API) to receive the response. Any API
service that returns long-running operations should implement the Operations
interface so
developers can have a consistent client experience.
This class provides the ability to make remote calls to the backing service through method calls that map to API methods. Sample code to get started:
try (OperationsClient operationsClient = OperationsClient.create()) {
String name = "";
Operation response = operationsClient.getOperation(name);
}
Note: close() needs to be called on the operationsClient object to clean up resources such as threads. In the example above, try-with-resources is used, which automatically calls close().
The surface of this class includes several types of Java methods for each of the API's methods:
- A "flattened" method. With this type of method, the fields of the request type have been converted into function parameters. It may be the case that not all fields are available as parameters, and not every API method will have a flattened method entry point.
- A "request object" method. This type of method only takes one parameter, a request object, which must be constructed before the call. Not every API method will have a request object method.
- A "callable" method. This type of method takes no parameters and returns an immutable API callable object, which can be used to initiate calls to the service.
See the individual methods for example code.
Many parameters require resource names to be formatted in a particular way. To assist with these names, this class includes a format method for each type of name, and additionally a parse method to extract the individual identifiers contained within names that are returned.
This class can be customized by passing in a custom instance of OperationsSettings to create(). For example:
To customize credentials:
OperationsSettings operationsSettings =
OperationsSettings.newBuilder()
.setCredentialsProvider(FixedCredentialsProvider.create(myCredentials))
.build();
OperationsClient operationsClient =
OperationsClient.create(operationsSettings);
Implements
BackgroundResourceStatic Methods
create(OperationsSettings settings)
public
static
final
OperationsClient
create
(
OperationsSettings
settings
)
Constructs an instance of OperationsClient, using the given settings. The channels are created based on the settings passed in, or defaults for any settings that are not set.
create(OperationsStub stub)
public
static
final
OperationsClient
create
(
OperationsStub
stub
)
Constructs an instance of OperationsClient, using the given stub for making calls. This is for advanced usage - prefer to use OperationsSettings}.
Constructors
OperationsClient(OperationsSettings settings)
protected
OperationsClient
(
OperationsSettings
settings
)
Constructs an instance of OperationsClient, using the given settings. This is protected so that it is easy to make a subclass, but otherwise, the static factory methods should be preferred.
OperationsClient(OperationsStub stub)
protected
OperationsClient
(
OperationsStub
stub
)
Methods
awaitTermination(long duration, TimeUnit unit)
public
boolean
awaitTermination
(
long
duration
,
TimeUnit
unit
)
Blocks until all work has completed execution after a shutdown request, or the timeout occurs, or the current thread is interrupted, whichever happens first.
cancelOperation(String name)
public
final
void
cancelOperation
(
String
name
)
Starts asynchronous cancellation on a long-running operation. The server makes a best effort to
cancel the operation, but success is not guaranteed. If the server doesn't support this method,
it returns google.rpc.Code.UNIMPLEMENTED
. Clients can use Operations.GetOperation
or other methods to check
whether the cancellation succeeded or whether the operation completed despite cancellation. On
successful cancellation, the operation is not deleted; instead, it becomes an operation with an Operation.error
value with a google.rpc.Status.code
of 1, corresponding to Code.CANCELLED
.
Sample code:
try
(
OperationsClient
operationsClient
=
OperationsClient
.
create
())
{
String
name
=
""
;
operationsClient
.
cancelOperation
(
name
);
}
cancelOperationCallable()
public
final
UnaryCallable<CancelOperationRequest
,
Empty
>
cancelOperationCallable
()
Starts asynchronous cancellation on a long-running operation. The server makes a best effort to
cancel the operation, but success is not guaranteed. If the server doesn't support this method,
it returns google.rpc.Code.UNIMPLEMENTED
. Clients can use Operations.GetOperation
or other methods to check
whether the cancellation succeeded or whether the operation completed despite cancellation. On
successful cancellation, the operation is not deleted; instead, it becomes an operation with an Operation.error
value with a google.rpc.Status.code
of 1, corresponding to Code.CANCELLED
.
Sample code:
try
(
OperationsClient
operationsClient
=
OperationsClient
.
create
())
{
String
name
=
""
;
CancelOperationRequest
request
=
CancelOperationRequest
.
newBuilder
()
.
setName
(
name
)
.
build
();
ApiFuture<Void>
future
=
operationsClient
.
cancelOperationCallable
().
futureCall
(
request
);
// Do something
future
.
get
();
}
close()
public
final
void
close
()
deleteOperation(String name)
public
final
void
deleteOperation
(
String
name
)
Deletes a long-running operation. This method indicates that the client is no longer interested
in the operation result. It does not cancel the operation. If the server doesn't support this
method, it returns google.rpc.Code.UNIMPLEMENTED
.
Sample code:
try
(
OperationsClient
operationsClient
=
OperationsClient
.
create
())
{
String
name
=
""
;
operationsClient
.
deleteOperation
(
name
);
}
deleteOperationCallable()
public
final
UnaryCallable<DeleteOperationRequest
,
Empty
>
deleteOperationCallable
()
Deletes a long-running operation. This method indicates that the client is no longer interested
in the operation result. It does not cancel the operation. If the server doesn't support this
method, it returns google.rpc.Code.UNIMPLEMENTED
.
Sample code:
try
(
OperationsClient
operationsClient
=
OperationsClient
.
create
())
{
String
name
=
""
;
DeleteOperationRequest
request
=
DeleteOperationRequest
.
newBuilder
()
.
setName
(
name
)
.
build
();
ApiFuture<Void>
future
=
operationsClient
.
deleteOperationCallable
().
futureCall
(
request
);
// Do something
future
.
get
();
}
getOperation(String name)
public
final
Operation
getOperation
(
String
name
)
Gets the latest state of a long-running operation. Clients can use this method to poll the operation result at intervals as recommended by the API service.
Sample code:
try
(
OperationsClient
operationsClient
=
OperationsClient
.
create
())
{
String
name
=
""
;
Operation
response
=
operationsClient
.
getOperation
(
name
);
}
getOperationCallable()
public
final
UnaryCallable<GetOperationRequest
,
Operation
>
getOperationCallable
()
Gets the latest state of a long-running operation. Clients can use this method to poll the operation result at intervals as recommended by the API service.
Sample code:
try
(
OperationsClient
operationsClient
=
OperationsClient
.
create
())
{
String
name
=
""
;
GetOperationRequest
request
=
GetOperationRequest
.
newBuilder
()
.
setName
(
name
)
.
build
();
ApiFuture<Operation>
future
=
operationsClient
.
getOperationCallable
().
futureCall
(
request
);
// Do something
Operation
response
=
future
.
get
();
}
getSettings()
public
final
OperationsSettings
getSettings
()
getStub()
public
OperationsStub
getStub
()
isShutdown()
public
boolean
isShutdown
()
Returns true if this background resource has been shut down.
isTerminated()
public
boolean
isTerminated
()
Returns true if all work has completed following shut down. Note that isTerminated is never true unless either shutdown or shutdownNow was called first.
listOperations(ListOperationsRequest request)
public
final
OperationsClient
.
ListOperationsPagedResponse
listOperations
(
ListOperationsRequest
request
)
Lists operations that match the specified filter in the request. If the server doesn't support
this method, it returns UNIMPLEMENTED
.
NOTE: the name
binding below allows API services to override the binding to use different
resource name schemes, such as users/*/operations
.
Sample code:
try
(
OperationsClient
operationsClient
=
OperationsClient
.
create
())
{
String
name
=
""
;
String
filter
=
""
;
ListOperationsRequest
request
=
ListOperationsRequest
.
newBuilder
()
.
setName
(
name
)
.
setFilter
(
filter
)
.
build
();
for
(
Operation
element
:
operationsClient
.
listOperations
(
request
).
iterateAll
())
{
// doThingsWith(element);
}
}
request
listOperations(String name, String filter)
public
final
OperationsClient
.
ListOperationsPagedResponse
listOperations
(
String
name
,
String
filter
)
Lists operations that match the specified filter in the request. If the server doesn't support
this method, it returns UNIMPLEMENTED
.
NOTE: the name
binding below allows API services to override the binding to use different
resource name schemes, such as users/*/operations
.
Sample code:
try
(
OperationsClient
operationsClient
=
OperationsClient
.
create
())
{
String
name
=
""
;
String
filter
=
""
;
for
(
Operation
element
:
operationsClient
.
listOperations
(
name
,
filter
).
iterateAll
())
{
// doThingsWith(element);
}
}
listOperationsCallable()
public
final
UnaryCallable<ListOperationsRequest
,
ListOperationsResponse
>
listOperationsCallable
()
Lists operations that match the specified filter in the request. If the server doesn't support
this method, it returns UNIMPLEMENTED
.
NOTE: the name
binding below allows API services to override the binding to use different
resource name schemes, such as users/*/operations
.
Sample code:
try
(
OperationsClient
operationsClient
=
OperationsClient
.
create
())
{
String
name
=
""
;
String
filter
=
""
;
ListOperationsRequest
request
=
ListOperationsRequest
.
newBuilder
()
.
setName
(
name
)
.
setFilter
(
filter
)
.
build
();
while
(
true
)
{
ListOperationsResponse
response
=
operationsClient
.
listOperationsCallable
().
call
(
request
);
for
(
Operation
element
:
response
.
getOperationsList
())
{
// doThingsWith(element);
}
String
nextPageToken
=
response
.
getNextPageToken
();
if
(
!
Strings
.
isNullOrEmpty
(
nextPageToken
))
{
request
=
request
.
toBuilder
().
setPageToken
(
nextPageToken
).
build
();
}
else
{
break
;
}
}
}
listOperationsPagedCallable()
public
final
UnaryCallable<ListOperationsRequest
,
OperationsClient
.
ListOperationsPagedResponse
>
listOperationsPagedCallable
()
Lists operations that match the specified filter in the request. If the server doesn't support
this method, it returns UNIMPLEMENTED
.
NOTE: the name
binding below allows API services to override the binding to use different
resource name schemes, such as users/*/operations
.
Sample code:
try
(
OperationsClient
operationsClient
=
OperationsClient
.
create
())
{
String
name
=
""
;
String
filter
=
""
;
ListOperationsRequest
request
=
ListOperationsRequest
.
newBuilder
()
.
setName
(
name
)
.
setFilter
(
filter
)
.
build
();
ApiFuture<ListOperationsPagedResponse>
future
=
operationsClient
.
listOperationsPagedCallable
().
futureCall
(
request
);
// Do something
for
(
Operation
element
:
future
.
get
().
iterateAll
())
{
// doThingsWith(element);
}
}
shutdown()
public
void
shutdown
()
Initiates an orderly shutdown in which previously submitted work is finished, but no new work will be accepted. Invocation has no additional effect if already shut down.
This method does not wait for previously submitted work to complete execution. Use awaitTermination to do that.
shutdownNow()
public
void
shutdownNow
()
Attempts to stop all actively executing work and halts the processing of waiting work.
This method does not wait for actively executing work to terminate. Use awaitTermination to do that.
There are no guarantees beyond best-effort attempts to stop processing actively executing work. For example, typical implementations will cancel via Thread.interrupt(), so any task that fails to respond to interrupts may never terminate.
waitOperation(WaitOperationRequest request)
public
final
Operation
waitOperation
(
WaitOperationRequest
request
)
Waits until the specified long-running operation is done or reaches at most a specified
timeout, returning the latest state. If the operation is already done, the latest state is
immediately returned. If the timeout specified is greater than the default HTTP/RPC timeout,
the HTTP/RPC timeout is used. If the server does not support this method, it returns google.rpc.Code.UNIMPLEMENTED
. Note that this method is on a best-effort basis. It may return
the latest state before the specified timeout (including immediately), meaning even an
immediate response is no guarantee that the operation is done.
Sample code:
try
(
OperationsClient
operationsClient
=
OperationsClient
.
create
())
{
String
name
=
""
;
WaitOperationRequest
request
=
WaitOperationRequest
.
newBuilder
()
.
setName
(
name
)
.
setTimeout
(
Duration
.
ofMillis
(
100
))
.
build
();
Operation
response
=
operationsClient
.
waitOperation
(
request
);
}
request
waitOperationCallable()
public
final
UnaryCallable<WaitOperationRequest
,
Operation
>
waitOperationCallable
()
Waits until the specified long-running operation is done or reaches at most a specified
timeout, returning the latest state. If the operation is already done, the latest state is
immediately returned. If the timeout specified is greater than the default HTTP/RPC timeout,
the HTTP/RPC timeout is used. If the server does not support this method, it returns google.rpc.Code.UNIMPLEMENTED
. Note that this method is on a best-effort basis. It may return
the latest state before the specified timeout (including immediately), meaning even an
immediate response is no guarantee that the operation is done.
Sample code:
try
(
OperationsClient
operationsClient
=
OperationsClient
.
create
())
{
String
name
=
""
;
WaitOperationRequest
request
=
WaitOperationRequest
.
newBuilder
()
.
setName
(
name
)
.
setTimeout
(
Duration
.
ofMillis
(
100
))
.
build
();
ApiFuture<Operation>
future
=
operationsClient
.
waitOperationCallable
().
futureCall
(
request
);
}