Skip to main content

Google Cloud Platform Friendly Pilot

Project description

Github CI Maintainability Test Coverage python

Google Cloud Pilot

Installation

pip install gcp-pilot

Some APIs need extra packages, thus you must use extras to add them:

  • Cloud Tasks: pip install gcp-pilot[tasks]
  • Cloud Build: pip install gcp-pilot[build]
  • Cloud Storage: pip install gcp-pilot[storage]
  • Big Query: pip install gcp-pilot[bigquery]
  • Speech: pip install gcp-pilot[speech]
  • Sheets: pip install gcp-pilot[sheets]
  • Pub/Sub: pip install gcp-pilot[pubsub]
  • Datastore: pip install gcp-pilot[datastore]
  • Cloud DNS: pip install gcp-pilot[dns]
  • Secret Manager: pip install gcp-pilot[secret]

Usage

from gcp_pilot.resource import ResourceManager

grm = ResourceManager()

Default Values

Credentials

gcp-pilot uses ADC to detect credentials. This means that you must have one of the following setups:

  • Environment variable GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS pointing to the JSON file with the credentials
  • Run inside GCP (Compute Engine, Cloud Run, GKE, AppEngine), so the machine's credentials will be used

You can also globally set a service account using the environment variable DEFAULT_SERVICE_ACCOUNT, which will require impersonation.

Project

When creating a client, a default project is defined by using the project that the credentials belongs to.

Clients that support managing resources from other projects can be overwritten per call.

Example: you create a BigQuery client using credentials from project_a. All calls will query datasets from project_a, unless another project is passed as parameter when performing the call.

You can also globally set a project using the environment variable DEFAULT_PROJECT

Location

Very similar to default project, a default location is defined by using the project's location. The project's location will exist if you ever enabled AppEngine, so you had to set a location then. Otherwise, no default location will be set.

You can also globally set a location using the environment variable DEFAULT_LOCATION and reduce the amount of API calls when creating clients.

Why Use gcp-pilot

"Since Google already has a generic API client and so many specific clients, why should I use this library?"

Google's has 2 types of clients:

  • dedicated: custom made for the APIs. They are excellent: they implement high level interaction with the API with friendly methods. The gcp-pilot can adds its value by handling authentication, friendly errors and parameter fallback.
  • generic: a single client that is capable of dynamically calling any REST API. They are a pain to use: very specific calls that must be translated from the documentation. The gcp-pilot comes in handy to add high-level interaction with friendly method such as Calendar.create_event, on top of all other vantages cited above.

Parameter Fallback

Most of the API endpoints require project_id (sometimes even project_number) and location.

So gcp-pilot automatically detects these values for you, based on your credentials (although it'll require extra permissions and API calls).

If you use multiple projects, and your credentials is accessing other projects, you can still customize the parameters on each call to avoid the default fallback.

Friendly Errors

Most of APIs return a generic HttpException with am embedded payload with error output, and also there's a couple of different structures for these payloads.

So gcp-pilot tries its best to convert these exceptions into more friendly ones, such as NotFound, AlreadyExists and NotAllowed.

It'll be much easier to capture these exceptions and handle them by its type.

Identification Features

  • Authentication: each client uses ADC, which consists on trying to detect the service account with fallbacks: SDK > Environment Variable > Metadata
  • Impersonation: it's possible to create clients with impersonate_account parameter that impersonates another account.
  • Delegation: services (eg. Google Workspace) that requires specific subjects are automatically delegated, sometimes even performing additional credential signatures.
  • Region: most GCP services requires a location to work on (some even require specific locations). If not provided, the clients use the project's default location, as defined by App Engine.
  • Authorization: OIDC authorization is automatically generated for services (eg. CloudRun) that require authentication to be used.

Auto-Authorization

Some services require specific authorizations that should be setup prior to its usage, some examples:

  • [Pub/Sub] subscribe to a topic with authenticated push;
  • [Cloud Scheduler] schedule a job to trigger a Cloud Run service;
  • [Cloud Tasks] queue a task to trigger a Cloud Run service;

In these cases, gcp-pilot tries its best to assure that the required permissions are properly set up before the actual request is made.

Integration

Some services can be integrated, and gcp-pilot does just that in a seamless way by adding helper methods.

Example: you can subscribe to Google Cloud Build's events to be notified by every build step.

By using CloudBuild.subscribe, the gcp-pilot creates a subscription (and the topic, if needed) in the Google Pub/Sub service.

Supported APIs

  • IAM
    • manage service accounts
    • manage permissions
  • Identity Platform
    • sign in users
    • sign up users
    • reset password flow
    • verify email flow
  • Resource Manager
    • manage projects
    • manage permissions
  • Secret Manager
    • manage secrets
  • Identity Aware Proxy
    • generate OIDC token
  • Source Repositories
    • manage repositories
  • Cloud SQL
    • manage instances
    • manage databases
    • manage users
  • Cloud Storage
    • manage buckets
    • manage files
  • Cloud Build
    • manage triggers
  • Cloud Functions
    • manager functions
    • manage permissions
  • Cloud Scheduler
    • manage schedules
  • Cloud Tasks
    • manage tasks & queues
  • Cloud Run
    • read services
    • manage domain mappings [1]
  • BigQuery
    • manage datasets
    • perform queries
  • Calendar
    • manage events
  • Google Chats
    • build complex messages
    • call webhook
    • interact as bot
  • Cloud Directory
    • manage groups
  • Cloud DNS
    • manage DNS zones
    • manage zone's registers
  • Sheets
    • manage spreadsheets (powered by gspread)
  • Speech
    • recognize speech from audio
  • Datastore
    • Object Mapping ("ORM-ish" management of documents)
  • Monitoring
    • reporting errors
    • logging
    • manage custom services

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

gcp-pilot-0.33.0.tar.gz (46.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

gcp_pilot-0.33.0-py3-none-any.whl (55.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file gcp-pilot-0.33.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: gcp-pilot-0.33.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 46.0 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.1.10 CPython/3.8.12 Linux/5.8.0-1041-azure

File hashes

Hashes for gcp-pilot-0.33.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 f2a36f6522588d3f8f990e52d48c0e89dfb22190225c18d87666d02382d70426
MD5 389ccc266d6fb7c6b2e24f9d8329345d
BLAKE2b-256 b0ae1791b57e22cbcaeeb8f29f815e10273f4f3d1477f1e63a9ba4e24ac8279d

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file gcp_pilot-0.33.0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: gcp_pilot-0.33.0-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 55.3 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.1.10 CPython/3.8.12 Linux/5.8.0-1041-azure

File hashes

Hashes for gcp_pilot-0.33.0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 30258a8bc68d022fde97bd06b97ddd60c7127e2ae2b56b826118bd3d0d468858
MD5 d14b74da65094b77839a7702d7d0a9d4
BLAKE2b-256 c4b4ce5e9458b5cabc7b1045e87d37002997f79d13644db4d88586330c23d212

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page