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72 lines
3.2 KiB
72 lines
3.2 KiB
type: google.api.Service
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config_version: 1
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name: longrunning.googleapis.com
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title: Long Running Operations API
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apis:
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- name: google.longrunning.Operations
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types:
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- name: google.longrunning.OperationInfo
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documentation:
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overview: |-
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# Long Running Operation API
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This package contains the definition of Long Running Operation (LRO)
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interface. It is a standard interface that API services can implement for
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managing asynchronous operations.
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## What are Long Running Operations?
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A Long Running Operation (LRO) is a way of representing an action that may
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take a significant amount of time to complete. For example, an API call that
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starts exporting a large amount of data could take quite a while to complete
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and is therefore best represented as an LRO. A common rule of thumb is to
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think of LROs as "API promises" that represent the result of some on-going
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action.
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## Using LROs
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If an API method could potentially take long time to finish, the method
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should return a long running operation instead of a direct response. This
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means that even if there are situations where the response could be
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immediate, the API should still return an LRO -- it just may be already
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marked as completed. For example, if a data export operation is called on an
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empty resource, the operation itself may be possible to execute immediately,
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and would result in an already completed LRO.
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Additionally, the operation should be managed using the LRO interface, which
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allows clients to poll the operation for status updates or cancel it
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entirely.
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Finally, an LRO represents an action and as a result, the operation is not
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created directly. Instead, the operation comes into existence as a
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side-effect of the action it represents. For example, an RPC called
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`ExportData` would create and return an LRO. This means that there should
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never be an RPC called `CreateOperation`.
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This also means that any permissions on the operation would be based on
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action it represents. Any immediate side effects of starting the operation
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must be visible in the service as soon as the LRO is returned. For example,
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if an LRO is returned when creating a resource, that resource should be
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visible in the API immediately, but be in a non-final state until the LRO is
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completed.
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## LROs versus Jobs
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A job is a common design pattern often used in data processing that tends to
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be used to represent some contained piece of work that would be stored,
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re-run, and modified over time. Jobs also typically interact with multiple
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resources and are created, deleted, and updated directly as independent
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resources.
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Jobs can also offer support for more complex actions such as pausing and
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resuming an individual job, where each action could return an LRO as a
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response.
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In general, if an action may take a while but it represents a single piece
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of work, it's best to represent the response as an LRO. If the action is
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something more complex (for example, it involves lots of resources and can't
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be created as a byproduct of a single action), it may make more sense to
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represent it as a job.
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