Returns the items Resource.
deleteSchema(name, debugOptions_enableDebugging=None, x__xgafv=None)
Deletes the schema of a data source.
getSchema(name, debugOptions_enableDebugging=None, x__xgafv=None)
Gets the schema of a data source.
updateSchema(name, body, x__xgafv=None)
Updates the schema of a data source.
deleteSchema(name, debugOptions_enableDebugging=None, x__xgafv=None)
Deletes the schema of a data source. Args: name: string, Name of the data source to delete Schema. Format: datasources/{source_id} (required) debugOptions_enableDebugging: boolean, If you are asked by Google to help with debugging, set this field. Otherwise, ignore this field. x__xgafv: string, V1 error format. Allowed values 1 - v1 error format 2 - v2 error format Returns: An object of the form: { # This resource represents a long-running operation that is the result of a # network API call. "metadata": { # Service-specific metadata associated with the operation. It typically # contains progress information and common metadata such as create time. # Some services might not provide such metadata. Any method that returns a # long-running operation should document the metadata type, if any. "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. }, "error": { # The `Status` type defines a logical error model that is suitable for # The error result of the operation in case of failure or cancellation. # different programming environments, including REST APIs and RPC APIs. It is # used by [gRPC](https://github.com/grpc). Each `Status` message contains # three pieces of data: error code, error message, and error details. # # You can find out more about this error model and how to work with it in the # [API Design Guide](https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/errors). "message": "A String", # A developer-facing error message, which should be in English. Any # user-facing error message should be localized and sent in the # google.rpc.Status.details field, or localized by the client. "code": 42, # The status code, which should be an enum value of google.rpc.Code. "details": [ # A list of messages that carry the error details. There is a common set of # message types for APIs to use. { "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. }, ], }, "done": True or False, # If the value is `false`, it means the operation is still in progress. # If `true`, the operation is completed, and either `error` or `response` is # available. "response": { # The normal response of the operation in case of success. If the original # method returns no data on success, such as `Delete`, the response is # `google.protobuf.Empty`. If the original method is standard # `Get`/`Create`/`Update`, the response should be the resource. For other # methods, the response should have the type `XxxResponse`, where `Xxx` # is the original method name. For example, if the original method name # is `TakeSnapshot()`, the inferred response type is # `TakeSnapshotResponse`. "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. }, "name": "A String", # The server-assigned name, which is only unique within the same service that # originally returns it. If you use the default HTTP mapping, the # `name` should be a resource name ending with `operations/{unique_id}`. }
getSchema(name, debugOptions_enableDebugging=None, x__xgafv=None)
Gets the schema of a data source. Args: name: string, Name of the data source to get Schema. Format: datasources/{source_id} (required) debugOptions_enableDebugging: boolean, If you are asked by Google to help with debugging, set this field. Otherwise, ignore this field. x__xgafv: string, V1 error format. Allowed values 1 - v1 error format 2 - v2 error format Returns: An object of the form: { # The schema definition for a data source. "objectDefinitions": [ # The list of top-level objects for the data source. # The maximum number of elements is 10. { # The definition for an object within a data source. "propertyDefinitions": [ # The property definitions for the object. # The maximum number of elements is 1000. { # The definition of a property within an object. "htmlPropertyOptions": { # Options for html properties. "retrievalImportance": { # Indicates the search quality importance of the tokens within the # field when used for retrieval. Can only be set to DEFAULT or NONE. "importance": "A String", # Indicates the ranking importance given to property when it is matched # during retrieval. Once set, the token importance of a property cannot be # changed. }, "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for html properties. This is optional. # If set, describes how the property should be used as a search operator. # Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields relevant # to the type of item being searched. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # html property. For example, if operatorName is *subject* and the # property's name is *subjectLine*, then queries like # *subject:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # property named *subjectLine* matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any # html properties or text within the content field for the item. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, }, "textPropertyOptions": { # Options for text properties. "retrievalImportance": { # Indicates the search quality importance of the tokens within the # field when used for retrieval. "importance": "A String", # Indicates the ranking importance given to property when it is matched # during retrieval. Once set, the token importance of a property cannot be # changed. }, "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for text properties. This is optional. # If set, describes how the property should be used as a search operator. # Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields relevant # to the type of item being searched. "exactMatchWithOperator": True or False, # If true, the text value will be tokenized as one atomic value in # operator searches and facet matches. For example, if the operator name is # "genre" and the value is "science-fiction" the query restrictions # "genre:science" and "genre:fiction" will not match the item; # "genre:science-fiction" will. Value matching is case-sensitive # and does not remove special characters. # If false, the text will be tokenized. For example, if the value is # "science-fiction" the queries "genre:science" and "genre:fiction" will # match the item. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # text property. For example, if operatorName is *subject* and the # property's name is *subjectLine*, then queries like # *subject:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # property named *subjectLine* matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any # text properties or text within the content field for the item. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, }, "name": "A String", # The name of the property. Item indexing requests sent to the Indexing API # should set the property name # equal to this value. For example, if name is *subject_line*, then indexing # requests for document items with subject fields should set the # name for that field equal to # *subject_line*. Use the name as the identifier for the object property. # Once registered as a property for an object, you cannot re-use this name # for another property within that object. # The name must start with a letter and can only contain letters (A-Z, a-z) # or numbers (0-9). # The maximum length is 256 characters. "enumPropertyOptions": { # Options for enum properties, which allow you to define a restricted set of # strings to match user queries, set rankings for those string values, and # define an operator name to be paired with those strings so that users can # narrow results to only items with a specific value. For example, for items in # a request tracking system with priority information, you could define *p0* as # an allowable enum value and tie this enum to the operator name *priority* so # that search users could add *priority:p0* to their query to restrict the set # of results to only those items indexed with the value *p0*. "orderedRanking": "A String", # Used to specify the ordered ranking for the enumeration that determines how # the integer values provided in the possible EnumValuePairs are used to rank # results. If specified, integer values must be provided for all possible # EnumValuePair values given for this property. Can only be used if # isRepeatable # is false. "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for enum properties. This is # If set, describes how the enum should be used as a search operator. # optional. Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields # relevant to the type of item being searched. For example, if you provide no # operator for a *priority* enum property with possible values *p0* and *p1*, # a query that contains the term *p0* will return items that have *p0* as the # value of the *priority* property, as well as any items that contain the # string *p0* in other fields. If you provide an operator name for the enum, # such as *priority*, then search users can use that operator to refine # results to only items that have *p0* as this property's value, with the # query *priority:p0*. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # enum property. For example, if operatorName is *priority* and the # property's name is *priorityVal*, then queries like # *priority:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # property named *priorityVal* matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any String # properties or text within the content field for the item. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, "possibleValues": [ # The list of possible values for the enumeration property. All # EnumValuePairs must provide a string value. If you specify an integer value # for one EnumValuePair, then all possible EnumValuePairs must provide an # integer value. Both the string value and integer value must be unique over # all possible values. Once set, possible values cannot be removed or # modified. If you supply an ordered ranking and think you might insert # additional enum values in the future, leave gaps in the initial integer # values to allow adding a value in between previously registered values. # The maximum number of elements is 100. { # The enumeration value pair defines two things: a required string value and # an optional integer value. The string value defines the necessary query # term required to retrieve that item, such as *p0* for a priority item. # The integer value determines the ranking of that string value relative # to other enumerated values for the same property. For example, you might # associate *p0* with *0* and define another enum pair such as *p1* and *1*. # You must use the integer value in combination with # ordered # ranking to # set the ranking of a given value relative to other enumerated values for # the same property name. Here, a ranking order of DESCENDING for *priority* # properties results in a ranking boost for items indexed with a value of # *p0* compared to items indexed with a value of *p1*. Without a specified # ranking order, the integer value has no effect on item ranking. "stringValue": "A String", # The string value of the EnumValuePair. # The maximum length is 32 characters. "integerValue": 42, # The integer value of the EnumValuePair which must be non-negative. # Optional. }, ], }, "isReturnable": True or False, # Indicates that the property identifies data that should be returned in # search results via the Query API. If set to *true*, indicates that Query # API users can use matching property fields in results. However, storing # fields requires more space allocation and uses more bandwidth for search # queries, which impacts performance over large datasets. Set to *true* here # only if the field is needed for search results. Cannot be true for # properties whose type is an object. "isSortable": True or False, # Indicates that the property can be used for sorting. Cannot be true for # properties that are repeatable. Cannot be true for properties whose type # is object or user identifier. IsReturnable must be true to set this option. # Only supported for Boolean, Date, Double, Integer, and Timestamp # properties. "objectPropertyOptions": { # Options for object properties. "subobjectProperties": [ # The properties of the sub-object. These properties represent a nested # object. For example, if this property represents a postal address, the # subobjectProperties might be named *street*, *city*, and *state*. # The maximum number of elements is 1000. # Object with schema name: PropertyDefinition ], }, "timestampPropertyOptions": { # Options for timestamp properties. "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for timestamp properties. This is # If set, describes how the timestamp should be used as a search operator. # optional. Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields # relevant to the type of item being searched. "lessThanOperatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # timestamp property using the less-than operator. For example, if # lessThanOperatorName is *closedbefore* and the property's name is # *closeDate*, then queries like *closedbefore:<value>* will # show results only where the value of the property named *closeDate* is # earlier than *<value>*. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # timestamp property. For example, if operatorName is *closedon* and the # property's name is *closeDate*, then queries like # *closedon:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # property named *closeDate* matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any String # properties or text within the content field for the item. The operator # name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). The maximum length is 32 # characters. "greaterThanOperatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # timestamp property using the greater-than operator. For example, if # greaterThanOperatorName is *closedafter* and the property's name is # *closeDate*, then queries like *closedafter:<value>* will # show results only where the value of the property named *closeDate* is # later than *<value>*. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, }, "datePropertyOptions": { # Options for date properties. "operatorOptions": { # Optional. Provides a search operator for date properties. # If set, describes how the date should be used as a search operator. # Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields relevant # to the type of item being searched. "lessThanOperatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # date property using the less-than operator. For example, if # lessThanOperatorName is *closedbefore* and the property's name is # *closeDate*, then queries like *closedbefore:<value>* will # show results only where the value of the property named *closeDate* is # earlier than *<value>*. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the actual string required in the query in order to isolate the # date property. For example, suppose an issue tracking schema object # has a property named *closeDate* that specifies an operator with an # operatorName of *closedon*. For searches on that data, queries like # *closedon:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # *closeDate* property matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any String # properties or text within the content field for the indexed datasource. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. "greaterThanOperatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # date property using the greater-than operator. For example, if # greaterThanOperatorName is *closedafter* and the property's name is # *closeDate*, then queries like *closedafter:<value>* will # show results only where the value of the property named *closeDate* is # later than *<value>*. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, }, "displayOptions": { # The display options for a property. # Options that determine how the property is displayed in the Cloud Search # results page if it is specified to be displayed in the object's # display options # . "displayLabel": "A String", # The user friendly label for the property that will be used if the property # is specified to be displayed in ObjectDisplayOptions. If given, the display # label will be shown in front of the property values when the property is # part of the object display options. For example, if the property value is # '1', the value by itself may not be useful context for the user. If the # display name given was 'priority', then the user will see 'priority : 1' in # the search results which provides clear conext to search users. This is # OPTIONAL; if not given, only the property values will be displayed. # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, "booleanPropertyOptions": { # Options for boolean properties. "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for boolean properties. This is # If set, describes how the boolean should be used as a search operator. # optional. Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields # relevant to the type of item being searched. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # boolean property. For example, if operatorName is *closed* and the # property's name is *isClosed*, then queries like # *closed:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # property named *isClosed* matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any # String properties or text within the content field for the item. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, }, "isFacetable": True or False, # Indicates that the property can be used for generating facets. Cannot be # true for properties whose type is object. IsReturnable must be true to set # this option. # Only supported for Boolean, Enum, and Text properties. "doublePropertyOptions": { # Options for double properties. "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for double properties. This is # If set, describes how the double should be used as a search operator. # optional. Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields # relevant to the type of item being searched. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to use the # double property in sorting or as a facet. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, }, "isRepeatable": True or False, # Indicates that multiple values are allowed for the property. For example, a # document only has one description but can have multiple comments. Cannot be # true for properties whose type is a boolean. # If set to false, properties that contain more than one value will cause the # indexing request for that item to be rejected. "isWildcardSearchable": True or False, # Indicates that users can perform wildcard search for this # property. Only supported for Text properties. IsReturnable must be true to # set this option. In a given datasource maximum of 5 properties can be # marked as is_wildcard_searchable. # # Note: This is an alpha feature and is enabled for whitelisted users only. "integerPropertyOptions": { # Options for integer properties. "orderedRanking": "A String", # Used to specify the ordered ranking for the integer. Can only be used if # isRepeatable # is false. "minimumValue": "A String", # The minimum value of the property. The minimum and maximum values for the # property are used to rank results according to the # ordered ranking. # Indexing requests with values less than the minimum are accepted and # ranked with the same weight as items indexed with the minimum value. "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for integer properties. This is # If set, describes how the integer should be used as a search operator. # optional. Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields # relevant to the type of item being searched. "lessThanOperatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # integer property using the less-than operator. For example, if # lessThanOperatorName is *prioritybelow* and the property's name is # *priorityVal*, then queries like *prioritybelow:<value>* will # show results only where the value of the property named *priorityVal* is # less than *<value>*. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. "greaterThanOperatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # integer property using the greater-than operator. For example, if # greaterThanOperatorName is *priorityabove* and the property's name is # *priorityVal*, then queries like *priorityabove:<value>* will # show results only where the value of the property named *priorityVal* is # greater than *<value>*. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # integer property. For example, if operatorName is *priority* and the # property's name is *priorityVal*, then queries like # *priority:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # property named *priorityVal* matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any String # properties or text within the content field for the item. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, "maximumValue": "A String", # The maximum value of the property. The minimum and maximum values for the # property are used to rank results according to the # ordered ranking. # Indexing requests with values greater than the maximum are accepted and # ranked with the same weight as items indexed with the maximum value. }, }, ], "name": "A String", # Name for the object, which then defines its type. Item indexing requests # should set the # objectType field # equal to this value. For example, if *name* is *Document*, then indexing # requests for items of type Document should set # objectType equal to # *Document*. Each object definition must be uniquely named within a schema. # The name must start with a letter and can only contain letters (A-Z, a-z) # or numbers (0-9). # The maximum length is 256 characters. "options": { # The options for an object. # The optional object-specific options. "freshnessOptions": { # Indicates which freshness property to use when adjusting search ranking for # The freshness options for an object. # an item. Fresher, more recent dates indicate higher quality. Use the # freshness option property that best works with your data. For fileshare # documents, last modified time is most relevant. For calendar event data, # the time when the event occurs is a more relevant freshness indicator. In # this way, calendar events that occur closer to the time of the search query # are considered higher quality and ranked accordingly. "freshnessDuration": "A String", # The duration after which an object should be considered # stale. The default value is 180 days (in seconds). "freshnessProperty": "A String", # This property indicates the freshness level of the object in the index. # If set, this property must be a top-level property within the # property definitions # and it must be a # timestamp type # or # date type. # Otherwise, the Indexing API uses # updateTime # as the freshness indicator. # The maximum length is 256 characters. # # When a property is used to calculate fresheness, the value defaults # to 2 years from the current time. }, "displayOptions": { # The display options for an object. # Options that determine how the object is displayed in the Cloud Search # results page. "metalines": [ # Defines the properties that will be displayed in the metalines of the # search results. The property values will be displayed in the order given # here. If a property holds multiple values, all of the values will be # diplayed before the next properties. For this reason, it is a good practice # to specify singular properties before repeated properties in this list. All # of the properties must set # is_returnable # to true. The maximum number of metalines is 3. { # A metaline is a list of properties that are displayed along with the search # result to provide context. "properties": [ # The list of displayed properties for the metaline. The maxiumum number of # properties is 5. { # A reference to a top-level property within the object that should be # displayed in search results. The values of the chosen properties will be # displayed in the search results along with the # dislpay label # for that property if one is specified. If a display label is not specified, # only the values will be shown. "propertyName": "A String", # The name of the top-level property as defined in a property definition # for the object. If the name is not a defined property in the schema, an # error will be given when attempting to update the schema. }, ], }, ], "objectDisplayLabel": "A String", # The user friendly label to display in the search result to inidicate the # type of the item. This is OPTIONAL; if not given, an object label will not # be displayed on the context line of the search results. The maximum length # is 32 characters. }, }, }, ], "operationIds": [ # IDs of the Long Running Operations (LROs) currently running for this # schema. After modifying the schema, wait for operations to complete # before indexing additional content. "A String", ], }
updateSchema(name, body, x__xgafv=None)
Updates the schema of a data source. Args: name: string, Name of the data source to update Schema. Format: datasources/{source_id} (required) body: object, The request body. (required) The object takes the form of: { "validateOnly": True or False, # If true, the request will be validated without side effects. "debugOptions": { # Shared request debug options for all cloudsearch RPC methods. # Common debug options. "enableDebugging": True or False, # If you are asked by Google to help with debugging, set this field. # Otherwise, ignore this field. }, "schema": { # The schema definition for a data source. # The new schema for the source. "objectDefinitions": [ # The list of top-level objects for the data source. # The maximum number of elements is 10. { # The definition for an object within a data source. "propertyDefinitions": [ # The property definitions for the object. # The maximum number of elements is 1000. { # The definition of a property within an object. "htmlPropertyOptions": { # Options for html properties. "retrievalImportance": { # Indicates the search quality importance of the tokens within the # field when used for retrieval. Can only be set to DEFAULT or NONE. "importance": "A String", # Indicates the ranking importance given to property when it is matched # during retrieval. Once set, the token importance of a property cannot be # changed. }, "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for html properties. This is optional. # If set, describes how the property should be used as a search operator. # Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields relevant # to the type of item being searched. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # html property. For example, if operatorName is *subject* and the # property's name is *subjectLine*, then queries like # *subject:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # property named *subjectLine* matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any # html properties or text within the content field for the item. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, }, "textPropertyOptions": { # Options for text properties. "retrievalImportance": { # Indicates the search quality importance of the tokens within the # field when used for retrieval. "importance": "A String", # Indicates the ranking importance given to property when it is matched # during retrieval. Once set, the token importance of a property cannot be # changed. }, "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for text properties. This is optional. # If set, describes how the property should be used as a search operator. # Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields relevant # to the type of item being searched. "exactMatchWithOperator": True or False, # If true, the text value will be tokenized as one atomic value in # operator searches and facet matches. For example, if the operator name is # "genre" and the value is "science-fiction" the query restrictions # "genre:science" and "genre:fiction" will not match the item; # "genre:science-fiction" will. Value matching is case-sensitive # and does not remove special characters. # If false, the text will be tokenized. For example, if the value is # "science-fiction" the queries "genre:science" and "genre:fiction" will # match the item. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # text property. For example, if operatorName is *subject* and the # property's name is *subjectLine*, then queries like # *subject:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # property named *subjectLine* matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any # text properties or text within the content field for the item. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, }, "name": "A String", # The name of the property. Item indexing requests sent to the Indexing API # should set the property name # equal to this value. For example, if name is *subject_line*, then indexing # requests for document items with subject fields should set the # name for that field equal to # *subject_line*. Use the name as the identifier for the object property. # Once registered as a property for an object, you cannot re-use this name # for another property within that object. # The name must start with a letter and can only contain letters (A-Z, a-z) # or numbers (0-9). # The maximum length is 256 characters. "enumPropertyOptions": { # Options for enum properties, which allow you to define a restricted set of # strings to match user queries, set rankings for those string values, and # define an operator name to be paired with those strings so that users can # narrow results to only items with a specific value. For example, for items in # a request tracking system with priority information, you could define *p0* as # an allowable enum value and tie this enum to the operator name *priority* so # that search users could add *priority:p0* to their query to restrict the set # of results to only those items indexed with the value *p0*. "orderedRanking": "A String", # Used to specify the ordered ranking for the enumeration that determines how # the integer values provided in the possible EnumValuePairs are used to rank # results. If specified, integer values must be provided for all possible # EnumValuePair values given for this property. Can only be used if # isRepeatable # is false. "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for enum properties. This is # If set, describes how the enum should be used as a search operator. # optional. Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields # relevant to the type of item being searched. For example, if you provide no # operator for a *priority* enum property with possible values *p0* and *p1*, # a query that contains the term *p0* will return items that have *p0* as the # value of the *priority* property, as well as any items that contain the # string *p0* in other fields. If you provide an operator name for the enum, # such as *priority*, then search users can use that operator to refine # results to only items that have *p0* as this property's value, with the # query *priority:p0*. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # enum property. For example, if operatorName is *priority* and the # property's name is *priorityVal*, then queries like # *priority:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # property named *priorityVal* matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any String # properties or text within the content field for the item. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, "possibleValues": [ # The list of possible values for the enumeration property. All # EnumValuePairs must provide a string value. If you specify an integer value # for one EnumValuePair, then all possible EnumValuePairs must provide an # integer value. Both the string value and integer value must be unique over # all possible values. Once set, possible values cannot be removed or # modified. If you supply an ordered ranking and think you might insert # additional enum values in the future, leave gaps in the initial integer # values to allow adding a value in between previously registered values. # The maximum number of elements is 100. { # The enumeration value pair defines two things: a required string value and # an optional integer value. The string value defines the necessary query # term required to retrieve that item, such as *p0* for a priority item. # The integer value determines the ranking of that string value relative # to other enumerated values for the same property. For example, you might # associate *p0* with *0* and define another enum pair such as *p1* and *1*. # You must use the integer value in combination with # ordered # ranking to # set the ranking of a given value relative to other enumerated values for # the same property name. Here, a ranking order of DESCENDING for *priority* # properties results in a ranking boost for items indexed with a value of # *p0* compared to items indexed with a value of *p1*. Without a specified # ranking order, the integer value has no effect on item ranking. "stringValue": "A String", # The string value of the EnumValuePair. # The maximum length is 32 characters. "integerValue": 42, # The integer value of the EnumValuePair which must be non-negative. # Optional. }, ], }, "isReturnable": True or False, # Indicates that the property identifies data that should be returned in # search results via the Query API. If set to *true*, indicates that Query # API users can use matching property fields in results. However, storing # fields requires more space allocation and uses more bandwidth for search # queries, which impacts performance over large datasets. Set to *true* here # only if the field is needed for search results. Cannot be true for # properties whose type is an object. "isSortable": True or False, # Indicates that the property can be used for sorting. Cannot be true for # properties that are repeatable. Cannot be true for properties whose type # is object or user identifier. IsReturnable must be true to set this option. # Only supported for Boolean, Date, Double, Integer, and Timestamp # properties. "objectPropertyOptions": { # Options for object properties. "subobjectProperties": [ # The properties of the sub-object. These properties represent a nested # object. For example, if this property represents a postal address, the # subobjectProperties might be named *street*, *city*, and *state*. # The maximum number of elements is 1000. # Object with schema name: PropertyDefinition ], }, "timestampPropertyOptions": { # Options for timestamp properties. "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for timestamp properties. This is # If set, describes how the timestamp should be used as a search operator. # optional. Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields # relevant to the type of item being searched. "lessThanOperatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # timestamp property using the less-than operator. For example, if # lessThanOperatorName is *closedbefore* and the property's name is # *closeDate*, then queries like *closedbefore:<value>* will # show results only where the value of the property named *closeDate* is # earlier than *<value>*. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # timestamp property. For example, if operatorName is *closedon* and the # property's name is *closeDate*, then queries like # *closedon:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # property named *closeDate* matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any String # properties or text within the content field for the item. The operator # name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). The maximum length is 32 # characters. "greaterThanOperatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # timestamp property using the greater-than operator. For example, if # greaterThanOperatorName is *closedafter* and the property's name is # *closeDate*, then queries like *closedafter:<value>* will # show results only where the value of the property named *closeDate* is # later than *<value>*. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, }, "datePropertyOptions": { # Options for date properties. "operatorOptions": { # Optional. Provides a search operator for date properties. # If set, describes how the date should be used as a search operator. # Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields relevant # to the type of item being searched. "lessThanOperatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # date property using the less-than operator. For example, if # lessThanOperatorName is *closedbefore* and the property's name is # *closeDate*, then queries like *closedbefore:<value>* will # show results only where the value of the property named *closeDate* is # earlier than *<value>*. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the actual string required in the query in order to isolate the # date property. For example, suppose an issue tracking schema object # has a property named *closeDate* that specifies an operator with an # operatorName of *closedon*. For searches on that data, queries like # *closedon:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # *closeDate* property matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any String # properties or text within the content field for the indexed datasource. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. "greaterThanOperatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # date property using the greater-than operator. For example, if # greaterThanOperatorName is *closedafter* and the property's name is # *closeDate*, then queries like *closedafter:<value>* will # show results only where the value of the property named *closeDate* is # later than *<value>*. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, }, "displayOptions": { # The display options for a property. # Options that determine how the property is displayed in the Cloud Search # results page if it is specified to be displayed in the object's # display options # . "displayLabel": "A String", # The user friendly label for the property that will be used if the property # is specified to be displayed in ObjectDisplayOptions. If given, the display # label will be shown in front of the property values when the property is # part of the object display options. For example, if the property value is # '1', the value by itself may not be useful context for the user. If the # display name given was 'priority', then the user will see 'priority : 1' in # the search results which provides clear conext to search users. This is # OPTIONAL; if not given, only the property values will be displayed. # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, "booleanPropertyOptions": { # Options for boolean properties. "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for boolean properties. This is # If set, describes how the boolean should be used as a search operator. # optional. Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields # relevant to the type of item being searched. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # boolean property. For example, if operatorName is *closed* and the # property's name is *isClosed*, then queries like # *closed:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # property named *isClosed* matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any # String properties or text within the content field for the item. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, }, "isFacetable": True or False, # Indicates that the property can be used for generating facets. Cannot be # true for properties whose type is object. IsReturnable must be true to set # this option. # Only supported for Boolean, Enum, and Text properties. "doublePropertyOptions": { # Options for double properties. "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for double properties. This is # If set, describes how the double should be used as a search operator. # optional. Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields # relevant to the type of item being searched. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to use the # double property in sorting or as a facet. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, }, "isRepeatable": True or False, # Indicates that multiple values are allowed for the property. For example, a # document only has one description but can have multiple comments. Cannot be # true for properties whose type is a boolean. # If set to false, properties that contain more than one value will cause the # indexing request for that item to be rejected. "isWildcardSearchable": True or False, # Indicates that users can perform wildcard search for this # property. Only supported for Text properties. IsReturnable must be true to # set this option. In a given datasource maximum of 5 properties can be # marked as is_wildcard_searchable. # # Note: This is an alpha feature and is enabled for whitelisted users only. "integerPropertyOptions": { # Options for integer properties. "orderedRanking": "A String", # Used to specify the ordered ranking for the integer. Can only be used if # isRepeatable # is false. "minimumValue": "A String", # The minimum value of the property. The minimum and maximum values for the # property are used to rank results according to the # ordered ranking. # Indexing requests with values less than the minimum are accepted and # ranked with the same weight as items indexed with the minimum value. "operatorOptions": { # Used to provide a search operator for integer properties. This is # If set, describes how the integer should be used as a search operator. # optional. Search operators let users restrict the query to specific fields # relevant to the type of item being searched. "lessThanOperatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # integer property using the less-than operator. For example, if # lessThanOperatorName is *prioritybelow* and the property's name is # *priorityVal*, then queries like *prioritybelow:<value>* will # show results only where the value of the property named *priorityVal* is # less than *<value>*. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. "greaterThanOperatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # integer property using the greater-than operator. For example, if # greaterThanOperatorName is *priorityabove* and the property's name is # *priorityVal*, then queries like *priorityabove:<value>* will # show results only where the value of the property named *priorityVal* is # greater than *<value>*. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. "operatorName": "A String", # Indicates the operator name required in the query in order to isolate the # integer property. For example, if operatorName is *priority* and the # property's name is *priorityVal*, then queries like # *priority:<value>* will show results only where the value of the # property named *priorityVal* matches *<value>*. By contrast, a # search that uses the same *<value>* without an operator will return # all items where *<value>* matches the value of any String # properties or text within the content field for the item. # The operator name can only contain lowercase letters (a-z). # The maximum length is 32 characters. }, "maximumValue": "A String", # The maximum value of the property. The minimum and maximum values for the # property are used to rank results according to the # ordered ranking. # Indexing requests with values greater than the maximum are accepted and # ranked with the same weight as items indexed with the maximum value. }, }, ], "name": "A String", # Name for the object, which then defines its type. Item indexing requests # should set the # objectType field # equal to this value. For example, if *name* is *Document*, then indexing # requests for items of type Document should set # objectType equal to # *Document*. Each object definition must be uniquely named within a schema. # The name must start with a letter and can only contain letters (A-Z, a-z) # or numbers (0-9). # The maximum length is 256 characters. "options": { # The options for an object. # The optional object-specific options. "freshnessOptions": { # Indicates which freshness property to use when adjusting search ranking for # The freshness options for an object. # an item. Fresher, more recent dates indicate higher quality. Use the # freshness option property that best works with your data. For fileshare # documents, last modified time is most relevant. For calendar event data, # the time when the event occurs is a more relevant freshness indicator. In # this way, calendar events that occur closer to the time of the search query # are considered higher quality and ranked accordingly. "freshnessDuration": "A String", # The duration after which an object should be considered # stale. The default value is 180 days (in seconds). "freshnessProperty": "A String", # This property indicates the freshness level of the object in the index. # If set, this property must be a top-level property within the # property definitions # and it must be a # timestamp type # or # date type. # Otherwise, the Indexing API uses # updateTime # as the freshness indicator. # The maximum length is 256 characters. # # When a property is used to calculate fresheness, the value defaults # to 2 years from the current time. }, "displayOptions": { # The display options for an object. # Options that determine how the object is displayed in the Cloud Search # results page. "metalines": [ # Defines the properties that will be displayed in the metalines of the # search results. The property values will be displayed in the order given # here. If a property holds multiple values, all of the values will be # diplayed before the next properties. For this reason, it is a good practice # to specify singular properties before repeated properties in this list. All # of the properties must set # is_returnable # to true. The maximum number of metalines is 3. { # A metaline is a list of properties that are displayed along with the search # result to provide context. "properties": [ # The list of displayed properties for the metaline. The maxiumum number of # properties is 5. { # A reference to a top-level property within the object that should be # displayed in search results. The values of the chosen properties will be # displayed in the search results along with the # dislpay label # for that property if one is specified. If a display label is not specified, # only the values will be shown. "propertyName": "A String", # The name of the top-level property as defined in a property definition # for the object. If the name is not a defined property in the schema, an # error will be given when attempting to update the schema. }, ], }, ], "objectDisplayLabel": "A String", # The user friendly label to display in the search result to inidicate the # type of the item. This is OPTIONAL; if not given, an object label will not # be displayed on the context line of the search results. The maximum length # is 32 characters. }, }, }, ], "operationIds": [ # IDs of the Long Running Operations (LROs) currently running for this # schema. After modifying the schema, wait for operations to complete # before indexing additional content. "A String", ], }, } x__xgafv: string, V1 error format. Allowed values 1 - v1 error format 2 - v2 error format Returns: An object of the form: { # This resource represents a long-running operation that is the result of a # network API call. "metadata": { # Service-specific metadata associated with the operation. It typically # contains progress information and common metadata such as create time. # Some services might not provide such metadata. Any method that returns a # long-running operation should document the metadata type, if any. "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. }, "error": { # The `Status` type defines a logical error model that is suitable for # The error result of the operation in case of failure or cancellation. # different programming environments, including REST APIs and RPC APIs. It is # used by [gRPC](https://github.com/grpc). Each `Status` message contains # three pieces of data: error code, error message, and error details. # # You can find out more about this error model and how to work with it in the # [API Design Guide](https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/errors). "message": "A String", # A developer-facing error message, which should be in English. Any # user-facing error message should be localized and sent in the # google.rpc.Status.details field, or localized by the client. "code": 42, # The status code, which should be an enum value of google.rpc.Code. "details": [ # A list of messages that carry the error details. There is a common set of # message types for APIs to use. { "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. }, ], }, "done": True or False, # If the value is `false`, it means the operation is still in progress. # If `true`, the operation is completed, and either `error` or `response` is # available. "response": { # The normal response of the operation in case of success. If the original # method returns no data on success, such as `Delete`, the response is # `google.protobuf.Empty`. If the original method is standard # `Get`/`Create`/`Update`, the response should be the resource. For other # methods, the response should have the type `XxxResponse`, where `Xxx` # is the original method name. For example, if the original method name # is `TakeSnapshot()`, the inferred response type is # `TakeSnapshotResponse`. "a_key": "", # Properties of the object. Contains field @type with type URL. }, "name": "A String", # The server-assigned name, which is only unique within the same service that # originally returns it. If you use the default HTTP mapping, the # `name` should be a resource name ending with `operations/{unique_id}`. }