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Projects

CreateProjects
client.projects.bulkCreate(ProjectBulkCreateParams { projects } body, RequestOptionsoptions?): ProjectBulkCreateResponse { createdProjects, failedProjects }
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/CreateProjects
DeleteProjects
client.projects.bulkDelete(ProjectBulkDeleteParams { projectIds } body, RequestOptionsoptions?): ProjectBulkDeleteResponse { deletedProjectIds, failedProjects }
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/DeleteProjects
UpdateProjects
client.projects.bulkUpdate(ProjectBulkUpdateParams { projects } body, RequestOptionsoptions?): ProjectBulkUpdateResponse { failedProjects, updatedProjects }
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/UpdateProjects
CreateProject
client.projects.create(ProjectCreateParams { initializer, automationsFilePath, devcontainerFilePath, 3 more } body, RequestOptionsoptions?): ProjectCreateResponse { project }
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/CreateProject
CreateProjectFromEnvironment
client.projects.createFromEnvironment(ProjectCreateFromEnvironmentParams { environmentId, name } body, RequestOptionsoptions?): ProjectCreateFromEnvironmentResponse { project }
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/CreateProjectFromEnvironment
DeleteProject
client.projects.delete(ProjectDeleteParams { projectId } body, RequestOptionsoptions?): ProjectDeleteResponse
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/DeleteProject
ListProjects
client.projects.list(ProjectListParams { token, pageSize, filter, 2 more } params, RequestOptionsoptions?): ProjectsPage<Project { environmentClass, id, automationsFilePath, 9 more } >
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/ListProjects
GetProject
client.projects.retrieve(ProjectRetrieveParams { projectId } body, RequestOptionsoptions?): ProjectRetrieveResponse { project }
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/GetProject
UpdateProject
client.projects.update(ProjectUpdateParams { automationsFilePath, devcontainerFilePath, initializer, 5 more } body, RequestOptionsoptions?): ProjectUpdateResponse { project }
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/UpdateProject
ModelsExpand Collapse
EnvironmentInitializer { specs }

EnvironmentInitializer specifies how an environment is to be initialized

specs?: Array<Spec>
contextUrl?: ContextURL { url }
url?: string

url is the URL from which the environment is created

formaturi
git?: Git { checkoutLocation, cloneTarget, remoteUri, 2 more }
checkoutLocation?: string

a path relative to the environment root in which the code will be checked out to

cloneTarget?: string

the value for the clone target mode - use depends on the target mode

remoteUri?: string

remote_uri is the Git remote origin

targetMode?: "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT" | 3 more

the target mode determines what gets checked out

One of the following:
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_LOCAL_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_TAG"
upstreamRemoteUri?: string

upstream_Remote_uri is the fork upstream of a repository

Project { environmentClass, id, automationsFilePath, 9 more }
DeprecatedenvironmentClass: ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order }

Use environment_classes instead.

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
id?: string

id is the unique identifier for the project

formatuuid
automationsFilePath?: string

automations_file_path is the path to the automations file relative to the repo root

desiredPhase?: ProjectPhase

desired_phase is the desired phase of the project When set to DELETED, the project is pending deletion

One of the following:
"PROJECT_PHASE_UNSPECIFIED"
"PROJECT_PHASE_ACTIVE"
"PROJECT_PHASE_DELETED"
devcontainerFilePath?: string

devcontainer_file_path is the path to the devcontainer file relative to the repo root

environmentClasses?: Array<ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order } >

environment_classes is the list of environment classes for the project

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
initializer?: EnvironmentInitializer { specs }

initializer is the content initializer

specs?: Array<Spec>
contextUrl?: ContextURL { url }
url?: string

url is the URL from which the environment is created

formaturi
git?: Git { checkoutLocation, cloneTarget, remoteUri, 2 more }
checkoutLocation?: string

a path relative to the environment root in which the code will be checked out to

cloneTarget?: string

the value for the clone target mode - use depends on the target mode

remoteUri?: string

remote_uri is the Git remote origin

targetMode?: "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT" | 3 more

the target mode determines what gets checked out

One of the following:
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_LOCAL_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_TAG"
upstreamRemoteUri?: string

upstream_Remote_uri is the fork upstream of a repository

metadata?: ProjectMetadata { createdAt, creator, name, 2 more }
createdAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
creator?: Subject { id, principal }

creator is the identity of the project creator

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
name?: string

name is the human readable name of the project

maxLength80
minLength1
organizationId?: string

organization_id is the ID of the organization that contains the environment

formatuuid
updatedAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
prebuildConfiguration?: ProjectPrebuildConfiguration { enabled, enableJetbrainsWarmup, environmentClassIds, 3 more }

prebuild_configuration defines how prebuilds are created for this project.

enabled?: boolean

enabled controls whether prebuilds are created for this project. When disabled, no automatic prebuilds will be triggered.

enableJetbrainsWarmup?: boolean

enable_jetbrains_warmup controls whether JetBrains IDE warmup runs during prebuilds.

environmentClassIds?: Array<string>

environment_class_ids specifies which environment classes should have prebuilds created. If empty, no prebuilds are created.

executor?: Subject { id, principal }

executor specifies who runs prebuilds for this project. The executor’s SCM credentials are used to clone the repository. If not set, defaults to the project creator.

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
timeout?: string

timeout is the maximum duration allowed for a prebuild to complete. If not specified, defaults to 1 hour. Must be between 5 minutes and 2 hours.

formatregex
trigger?: Trigger { dailySchedule }

trigger defines when prebuilds should be created.

dailySchedule: DailySchedule { hourUtc }

daily_schedule triggers a prebuild once per day at the specified hour (UTC). The actual start time may vary slightly to distribute system load.

hourUtc?: number

hour_utc is the hour of day (0-23) in UTC when the prebuild should start. The actual start time may be adjusted by a few minutes to balance system load.

formatint32
maximum23
recommendedEditors?: RecommendedEditors { editors }

recommended_editors specifies the editors recommended for this project.

technicalDescription?: string

technical_description is a detailed technical description of the project This field is not returned by default in GetProject or ListProjects responses

usedBy?: UsedBy { subjects, totalSubjects }
subjects?: Array<Subject { id, principal } >

Subjects are the 10 most recent subjects who have used the project to create an environment

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
totalSubjects?: number

Total number of unique subjects who have used the project

formatint32
ProjectMetadata { createdAt, creator, name, 2 more }
createdAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
creator?: Subject { id, principal }

creator is the identity of the project creator

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
name?: string

name is the human readable name of the project

maxLength80
minLength1
organizationId?: string

organization_id is the ID of the organization that contains the environment

formatuuid
updatedAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
ProjectPhase = "PROJECT_PHASE_UNSPECIFIED" | "PROJECT_PHASE_ACTIVE" | "PROJECT_PHASE_DELETED"
One of the following:
"PROJECT_PHASE_UNSPECIFIED"
"PROJECT_PHASE_ACTIVE"
"PROJECT_PHASE_DELETED"
ProjectPrebuildConfiguration { enabled, enableJetbrainsWarmup, environmentClassIds, 3 more }

ProjectPrebuildConfiguration defines how prebuilds are created for a project. Prebuilds create environment snapshots that enable faster environment startup times.

enabled?: boolean

enabled controls whether prebuilds are created for this project. When disabled, no automatic prebuilds will be triggered.

enableJetbrainsWarmup?: boolean

enable_jetbrains_warmup controls whether JetBrains IDE warmup runs during prebuilds.

environmentClassIds?: Array<string>

environment_class_ids specifies which environment classes should have prebuilds created. If empty, no prebuilds are created.

executor?: Subject { id, principal }

executor specifies who runs prebuilds for this project. The executor’s SCM credentials are used to clone the repository. If not set, defaults to the project creator.

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
timeout?: string

timeout is the maximum duration allowed for a prebuild to complete. If not specified, defaults to 1 hour. Must be between 5 minutes and 2 hours.

formatregex
trigger?: Trigger { dailySchedule }

trigger defines when prebuilds should be created.

dailySchedule: DailySchedule { hourUtc }

daily_schedule triggers a prebuild once per day at the specified hour (UTC). The actual start time may vary slightly to distribute system load.

hourUtc?: number

hour_utc is the hour of day (0-23) in UTC when the prebuild should start. The actual start time may be adjusted by a few minutes to balance system load.

formatint32
maximum23
ProjectBulkCreateResponse { createdProjects, failedProjects }
createdProjects?: Array<Project { environmentClass, id, automationsFilePath, 9 more } >

created_projects contains the successfully created projects

DeprecatedenvironmentClass: ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order }

Use environment_classes instead.

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
id?: string

id is the unique identifier for the project

formatuuid
automationsFilePath?: string

automations_file_path is the path to the automations file relative to the repo root

desiredPhase?: ProjectPhase

desired_phase is the desired phase of the project When set to DELETED, the project is pending deletion

One of the following:
"PROJECT_PHASE_UNSPECIFIED"
"PROJECT_PHASE_ACTIVE"
"PROJECT_PHASE_DELETED"
devcontainerFilePath?: string

devcontainer_file_path is the path to the devcontainer file relative to the repo root

environmentClasses?: Array<ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order } >

environment_classes is the list of environment classes for the project

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
initializer?: EnvironmentInitializer { specs }

initializer is the content initializer

specs?: Array<Spec>
contextUrl?: ContextURL { url }
url?: string

url is the URL from which the environment is created

formaturi
git?: Git { checkoutLocation, cloneTarget, remoteUri, 2 more }
checkoutLocation?: string

a path relative to the environment root in which the code will be checked out to

cloneTarget?: string

the value for the clone target mode - use depends on the target mode

remoteUri?: string

remote_uri is the Git remote origin

targetMode?: "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT" | 3 more

the target mode determines what gets checked out

One of the following:
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_LOCAL_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_TAG"
upstreamRemoteUri?: string

upstream_Remote_uri is the fork upstream of a repository

metadata?: ProjectMetadata { createdAt, creator, name, 2 more }
createdAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
creator?: Subject { id, principal }

creator is the identity of the project creator

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
name?: string

name is the human readable name of the project

maxLength80
minLength1
organizationId?: string

organization_id is the ID of the organization that contains the environment

formatuuid
updatedAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
prebuildConfiguration?: ProjectPrebuildConfiguration { enabled, enableJetbrainsWarmup, environmentClassIds, 3 more }

prebuild_configuration defines how prebuilds are created for this project.

enabled?: boolean

enabled controls whether prebuilds are created for this project. When disabled, no automatic prebuilds will be triggered.

enableJetbrainsWarmup?: boolean

enable_jetbrains_warmup controls whether JetBrains IDE warmup runs during prebuilds.

environmentClassIds?: Array<string>

environment_class_ids specifies which environment classes should have prebuilds created. If empty, no prebuilds are created.

executor?: Subject { id, principal }

executor specifies who runs prebuilds for this project. The executor’s SCM credentials are used to clone the repository. If not set, defaults to the project creator.

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
timeout?: string

timeout is the maximum duration allowed for a prebuild to complete. If not specified, defaults to 1 hour. Must be between 5 minutes and 2 hours.

formatregex
trigger?: Trigger { dailySchedule }

trigger defines when prebuilds should be created.

dailySchedule: DailySchedule { hourUtc }

daily_schedule triggers a prebuild once per day at the specified hour (UTC). The actual start time may vary slightly to distribute system load.

hourUtc?: number

hour_utc is the hour of day (0-23) in UTC when the prebuild should start. The actual start time may be adjusted by a few minutes to balance system load.

formatint32
maximum23
recommendedEditors?: RecommendedEditors { editors }

recommended_editors specifies the editors recommended for this project.

technicalDescription?: string

technical_description is a detailed technical description of the project This field is not returned by default in GetProject or ListProjects responses

usedBy?: UsedBy { subjects, totalSubjects }
subjects?: Array<Subject { id, principal } >

Subjects are the 10 most recent subjects who have used the project to create an environment

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
totalSubjects?: number

Total number of unique subjects who have used the project

formatint32
failedProjects?: Array<FailedProject>

failed_projects contains details about projects that failed to create

error?: string

error describes why the project creation failed

index?: number

index is the position in the request array (0-based)

formatint32
name?: string

name is the project name that failed

ProjectBulkDeleteResponse { deletedProjectIds, failedProjects }
deletedProjectIds?: Array<string>

deleted_project_ids contains the IDs of successfully deleted projects

failedProjects?: Array<FailedProject>

failed_projects contains details about projects that failed to delete

error?: string

error describes why the project deletion failed

index?: number

index is the position in the request array (0-based)

formatint32
projectId?: string

project_id is the project ID that failed

ProjectBulkUpdateResponse { failedProjects, updatedProjects }
failedProjects?: Array<FailedProject>

failed_projects contains details about projects that failed to update

error?: string

error describes why the project update failed

index?: number

index is the position in the request array (0-based)

formatint32
projectId?: string

project_id is the project ID that failed

updatedProjects?: Array<Project { environmentClass, id, automationsFilePath, 9 more } >

updated_projects contains the successfully updated projects

DeprecatedenvironmentClass: ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order }

Use environment_classes instead.

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
id?: string

id is the unique identifier for the project

formatuuid
automationsFilePath?: string

automations_file_path is the path to the automations file relative to the repo root

desiredPhase?: ProjectPhase

desired_phase is the desired phase of the project When set to DELETED, the project is pending deletion

One of the following:
"PROJECT_PHASE_UNSPECIFIED"
"PROJECT_PHASE_ACTIVE"
"PROJECT_PHASE_DELETED"
devcontainerFilePath?: string

devcontainer_file_path is the path to the devcontainer file relative to the repo root

environmentClasses?: Array<ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order } >

environment_classes is the list of environment classes for the project

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
initializer?: EnvironmentInitializer { specs }

initializer is the content initializer

specs?: Array<Spec>
contextUrl?: ContextURL { url }
url?: string

url is the URL from which the environment is created

formaturi
git?: Git { checkoutLocation, cloneTarget, remoteUri, 2 more }
checkoutLocation?: string

a path relative to the environment root in which the code will be checked out to

cloneTarget?: string

the value for the clone target mode - use depends on the target mode

remoteUri?: string

remote_uri is the Git remote origin

targetMode?: "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT" | 3 more

the target mode determines what gets checked out

One of the following:
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_LOCAL_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_TAG"
upstreamRemoteUri?: string

upstream_Remote_uri is the fork upstream of a repository

metadata?: ProjectMetadata { createdAt, creator, name, 2 more }
createdAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
creator?: Subject { id, principal }

creator is the identity of the project creator

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
name?: string

name is the human readable name of the project

maxLength80
minLength1
organizationId?: string

organization_id is the ID of the organization that contains the environment

formatuuid
updatedAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
prebuildConfiguration?: ProjectPrebuildConfiguration { enabled, enableJetbrainsWarmup, environmentClassIds, 3 more }

prebuild_configuration defines how prebuilds are created for this project.

enabled?: boolean

enabled controls whether prebuilds are created for this project. When disabled, no automatic prebuilds will be triggered.

enableJetbrainsWarmup?: boolean

enable_jetbrains_warmup controls whether JetBrains IDE warmup runs during prebuilds.

environmentClassIds?: Array<string>

environment_class_ids specifies which environment classes should have prebuilds created. If empty, no prebuilds are created.

executor?: Subject { id, principal }

executor specifies who runs prebuilds for this project. The executor’s SCM credentials are used to clone the repository. If not set, defaults to the project creator.

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
timeout?: string

timeout is the maximum duration allowed for a prebuild to complete. If not specified, defaults to 1 hour. Must be between 5 minutes and 2 hours.

formatregex
trigger?: Trigger { dailySchedule }

trigger defines when prebuilds should be created.

dailySchedule: DailySchedule { hourUtc }

daily_schedule triggers a prebuild once per day at the specified hour (UTC). The actual start time may vary slightly to distribute system load.

hourUtc?: number

hour_utc is the hour of day (0-23) in UTC when the prebuild should start. The actual start time may be adjusted by a few minutes to balance system load.

formatint32
maximum23
recommendedEditors?: RecommendedEditors { editors }

recommended_editors specifies the editors recommended for this project.

technicalDescription?: string

technical_description is a detailed technical description of the project This field is not returned by default in GetProject or ListProjects responses

usedBy?: UsedBy { subjects, totalSubjects }
subjects?: Array<Subject { id, principal } >

Subjects are the 10 most recent subjects who have used the project to create an environment

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
totalSubjects?: number

Total number of unique subjects who have used the project

formatint32
ProjectCreateResponse { project }
project?: Project { environmentClass, id, automationsFilePath, 9 more }
DeprecatedenvironmentClass: ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order }

Use environment_classes instead.

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
id?: string

id is the unique identifier for the project

formatuuid
automationsFilePath?: string

automations_file_path is the path to the automations file relative to the repo root

desiredPhase?: ProjectPhase

desired_phase is the desired phase of the project When set to DELETED, the project is pending deletion

One of the following:
"PROJECT_PHASE_UNSPECIFIED"
"PROJECT_PHASE_ACTIVE"
"PROJECT_PHASE_DELETED"
devcontainerFilePath?: string

devcontainer_file_path is the path to the devcontainer file relative to the repo root

environmentClasses?: Array<ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order } >

environment_classes is the list of environment classes for the project

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
initializer?: EnvironmentInitializer { specs }

initializer is the content initializer

specs?: Array<Spec>
contextUrl?: ContextURL { url }
url?: string

url is the URL from which the environment is created

formaturi
git?: Git { checkoutLocation, cloneTarget, remoteUri, 2 more }
checkoutLocation?: string

a path relative to the environment root in which the code will be checked out to

cloneTarget?: string

the value for the clone target mode - use depends on the target mode

remoteUri?: string

remote_uri is the Git remote origin

targetMode?: "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT" | 3 more

the target mode determines what gets checked out

One of the following:
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_LOCAL_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_TAG"
upstreamRemoteUri?: string

upstream_Remote_uri is the fork upstream of a repository

metadata?: ProjectMetadata { createdAt, creator, name, 2 more }
createdAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
creator?: Subject { id, principal }

creator is the identity of the project creator

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
name?: string

name is the human readable name of the project

maxLength80
minLength1
organizationId?: string

organization_id is the ID of the organization that contains the environment

formatuuid
updatedAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
prebuildConfiguration?: ProjectPrebuildConfiguration { enabled, enableJetbrainsWarmup, environmentClassIds, 3 more }

prebuild_configuration defines how prebuilds are created for this project.

enabled?: boolean

enabled controls whether prebuilds are created for this project. When disabled, no automatic prebuilds will be triggered.

enableJetbrainsWarmup?: boolean

enable_jetbrains_warmup controls whether JetBrains IDE warmup runs during prebuilds.

environmentClassIds?: Array<string>

environment_class_ids specifies which environment classes should have prebuilds created. If empty, no prebuilds are created.

executor?: Subject { id, principal }

executor specifies who runs prebuilds for this project. The executor’s SCM credentials are used to clone the repository. If not set, defaults to the project creator.

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
timeout?: string

timeout is the maximum duration allowed for a prebuild to complete. If not specified, defaults to 1 hour. Must be between 5 minutes and 2 hours.

formatregex
trigger?: Trigger { dailySchedule }

trigger defines when prebuilds should be created.

dailySchedule: DailySchedule { hourUtc }

daily_schedule triggers a prebuild once per day at the specified hour (UTC). The actual start time may vary slightly to distribute system load.

hourUtc?: number

hour_utc is the hour of day (0-23) in UTC when the prebuild should start. The actual start time may be adjusted by a few minutes to balance system load.

formatint32
maximum23
recommendedEditors?: RecommendedEditors { editors }

recommended_editors specifies the editors recommended for this project.

technicalDescription?: string

technical_description is a detailed technical description of the project This field is not returned by default in GetProject or ListProjects responses

usedBy?: UsedBy { subjects, totalSubjects }
subjects?: Array<Subject { id, principal } >

Subjects are the 10 most recent subjects who have used the project to create an environment

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
totalSubjects?: number

Total number of unique subjects who have used the project

formatint32
ProjectCreateFromEnvironmentResponse { project }
project?: Project { environmentClass, id, automationsFilePath, 9 more }
DeprecatedenvironmentClass: ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order }

Use environment_classes instead.

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
id?: string

id is the unique identifier for the project

formatuuid
automationsFilePath?: string

automations_file_path is the path to the automations file relative to the repo root

desiredPhase?: ProjectPhase

desired_phase is the desired phase of the project When set to DELETED, the project is pending deletion

One of the following:
"PROJECT_PHASE_UNSPECIFIED"
"PROJECT_PHASE_ACTIVE"
"PROJECT_PHASE_DELETED"
devcontainerFilePath?: string

devcontainer_file_path is the path to the devcontainer file relative to the repo root

environmentClasses?: Array<ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order } >

environment_classes is the list of environment classes for the project

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
initializer?: EnvironmentInitializer { specs }

initializer is the content initializer

specs?: Array<Spec>
contextUrl?: ContextURL { url }
url?: string

url is the URL from which the environment is created

formaturi
git?: Git { checkoutLocation, cloneTarget, remoteUri, 2 more }
checkoutLocation?: string

a path relative to the environment root in which the code will be checked out to

cloneTarget?: string

the value for the clone target mode - use depends on the target mode

remoteUri?: string

remote_uri is the Git remote origin

targetMode?: "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT" | 3 more

the target mode determines what gets checked out

One of the following:
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_LOCAL_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_TAG"
upstreamRemoteUri?: string

upstream_Remote_uri is the fork upstream of a repository

metadata?: ProjectMetadata { createdAt, creator, name, 2 more }
createdAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
creator?: Subject { id, principal }

creator is the identity of the project creator

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
name?: string

name is the human readable name of the project

maxLength80
minLength1
organizationId?: string

organization_id is the ID of the organization that contains the environment

formatuuid
updatedAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
prebuildConfiguration?: ProjectPrebuildConfiguration { enabled, enableJetbrainsWarmup, environmentClassIds, 3 more }

prebuild_configuration defines how prebuilds are created for this project.

enabled?: boolean

enabled controls whether prebuilds are created for this project. When disabled, no automatic prebuilds will be triggered.

enableJetbrainsWarmup?: boolean

enable_jetbrains_warmup controls whether JetBrains IDE warmup runs during prebuilds.

environmentClassIds?: Array<string>

environment_class_ids specifies which environment classes should have prebuilds created. If empty, no prebuilds are created.

executor?: Subject { id, principal }

executor specifies who runs prebuilds for this project. The executor’s SCM credentials are used to clone the repository. If not set, defaults to the project creator.

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
timeout?: string

timeout is the maximum duration allowed for a prebuild to complete. If not specified, defaults to 1 hour. Must be between 5 minutes and 2 hours.

formatregex
trigger?: Trigger { dailySchedule }

trigger defines when prebuilds should be created.

dailySchedule: DailySchedule { hourUtc }

daily_schedule triggers a prebuild once per day at the specified hour (UTC). The actual start time may vary slightly to distribute system load.

hourUtc?: number

hour_utc is the hour of day (0-23) in UTC when the prebuild should start. The actual start time may be adjusted by a few minutes to balance system load.

formatint32
maximum23
recommendedEditors?: RecommendedEditors { editors }

recommended_editors specifies the editors recommended for this project.

technicalDescription?: string

technical_description is a detailed technical description of the project This field is not returned by default in GetProject or ListProjects responses

usedBy?: UsedBy { subjects, totalSubjects }
subjects?: Array<Subject { id, principal } >

Subjects are the 10 most recent subjects who have used the project to create an environment

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
totalSubjects?: number

Total number of unique subjects who have used the project

formatint32
ProjectDeleteResponse = unknown
ProjectRetrieveResponse { project }
project?: Project { environmentClass, id, automationsFilePath, 9 more }
DeprecatedenvironmentClass: ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order }

Use environment_classes instead.

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
id?: string

id is the unique identifier for the project

formatuuid
automationsFilePath?: string

automations_file_path is the path to the automations file relative to the repo root

desiredPhase?: ProjectPhase

desired_phase is the desired phase of the project When set to DELETED, the project is pending deletion

One of the following:
"PROJECT_PHASE_UNSPECIFIED"
"PROJECT_PHASE_ACTIVE"
"PROJECT_PHASE_DELETED"
devcontainerFilePath?: string

devcontainer_file_path is the path to the devcontainer file relative to the repo root

environmentClasses?: Array<ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order } >

environment_classes is the list of environment classes for the project

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
initializer?: EnvironmentInitializer { specs }

initializer is the content initializer

specs?: Array<Spec>
contextUrl?: ContextURL { url }
url?: string

url is the URL from which the environment is created

formaturi
git?: Git { checkoutLocation, cloneTarget, remoteUri, 2 more }
checkoutLocation?: string

a path relative to the environment root in which the code will be checked out to

cloneTarget?: string

the value for the clone target mode - use depends on the target mode

remoteUri?: string

remote_uri is the Git remote origin

targetMode?: "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT" | 3 more

the target mode determines what gets checked out

One of the following:
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_LOCAL_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_TAG"
upstreamRemoteUri?: string

upstream_Remote_uri is the fork upstream of a repository

metadata?: ProjectMetadata { createdAt, creator, name, 2 more }
createdAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
creator?: Subject { id, principal }

creator is the identity of the project creator

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
name?: string

name is the human readable name of the project

maxLength80
minLength1
organizationId?: string

organization_id is the ID of the organization that contains the environment

formatuuid
updatedAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
prebuildConfiguration?: ProjectPrebuildConfiguration { enabled, enableJetbrainsWarmup, environmentClassIds, 3 more }

prebuild_configuration defines how prebuilds are created for this project.

enabled?: boolean

enabled controls whether prebuilds are created for this project. When disabled, no automatic prebuilds will be triggered.

enableJetbrainsWarmup?: boolean

enable_jetbrains_warmup controls whether JetBrains IDE warmup runs during prebuilds.

environmentClassIds?: Array<string>

environment_class_ids specifies which environment classes should have prebuilds created. If empty, no prebuilds are created.

executor?: Subject { id, principal }

executor specifies who runs prebuilds for this project. The executor’s SCM credentials are used to clone the repository. If not set, defaults to the project creator.

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
timeout?: string

timeout is the maximum duration allowed for a prebuild to complete. If not specified, defaults to 1 hour. Must be between 5 minutes and 2 hours.

formatregex
trigger?: Trigger { dailySchedule }

trigger defines when prebuilds should be created.

dailySchedule: DailySchedule { hourUtc }

daily_schedule triggers a prebuild once per day at the specified hour (UTC). The actual start time may vary slightly to distribute system load.

hourUtc?: number

hour_utc is the hour of day (0-23) in UTC when the prebuild should start. The actual start time may be adjusted by a few minutes to balance system load.

formatint32
maximum23
recommendedEditors?: RecommendedEditors { editors }

recommended_editors specifies the editors recommended for this project.

technicalDescription?: string

technical_description is a detailed technical description of the project This field is not returned by default in GetProject or ListProjects responses

usedBy?: UsedBy { subjects, totalSubjects }
subjects?: Array<Subject { id, principal } >

Subjects are the 10 most recent subjects who have used the project to create an environment

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
totalSubjects?: number

Total number of unique subjects who have used the project

formatint32
ProjectUpdateResponse { project }
project?: Project { environmentClass, id, automationsFilePath, 9 more }
DeprecatedenvironmentClass: ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order }

Use environment_classes instead.

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
id?: string

id is the unique identifier for the project

formatuuid
automationsFilePath?: string

automations_file_path is the path to the automations file relative to the repo root

desiredPhase?: ProjectPhase

desired_phase is the desired phase of the project When set to DELETED, the project is pending deletion

One of the following:
"PROJECT_PHASE_UNSPECIFIED"
"PROJECT_PHASE_ACTIVE"
"PROJECT_PHASE_DELETED"
devcontainerFilePath?: string

devcontainer_file_path is the path to the devcontainer file relative to the repo root

environmentClasses?: Array<ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order } >

environment_classes is the list of environment classes for the project

environmentClassId?: string

Use a fixed environment class on a given Runner. This cannot be a local runner’s environment class.

formatuuid
localRunner?: boolean

Use a local runner for the user

order?: number

order is the priority of this entry

formatint32
initializer?: EnvironmentInitializer { specs }

initializer is the content initializer

specs?: Array<Spec>
contextUrl?: ContextURL { url }
url?: string

url is the URL from which the environment is created

formaturi
git?: Git { checkoutLocation, cloneTarget, remoteUri, 2 more }
checkoutLocation?: string

a path relative to the environment root in which the code will be checked out to

cloneTarget?: string

the value for the clone target mode - use depends on the target mode

remoteUri?: string

remote_uri is the Git remote origin

targetMode?: "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD" | "CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT" | 3 more

the target mode determines what gets checked out

One of the following:
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_UNSPECIFIED"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_HEAD"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_COMMIT"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_LOCAL_BRANCH"
"CLONE_TARGET_MODE_REMOTE_TAG"
upstreamRemoteUri?: string

upstream_Remote_uri is the fork upstream of a repository

metadata?: ProjectMetadata { createdAt, creator, name, 2 more }
createdAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
creator?: Subject { id, principal }

creator is the identity of the project creator

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
name?: string

name is the human readable name of the project

maxLength80
minLength1
organizationId?: string

organization_id is the ID of the organization that contains the environment

formatuuid
updatedAt?: string

A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.

All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are “smeared” so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a 24-hour linear smear.

The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from RFC 3339 date strings.

Examples

Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX time().

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL));
 timestamp.set_nanos(0);

Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX gettimeofday().

 struct timeval tv;
 gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);

 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec);
 timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000);

Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime().

 FILETIME ft;
 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft);
 UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime;

 // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z
 // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
 Timestamp timestamp;
 timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL));
 timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100));

Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java System.currentTimeMillis().

 long millis = System.currentTimeMillis();

 Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000)
     .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build();

Example 5: Compute Timestamp from Java Instant.now().

 Instant now = Instant.now();

 Timestamp timestamp =
     Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(now.getEpochSecond())
         .setNanos(now.getNano()).build();

Example 6: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python.

 timestamp = Timestamp()
 timestamp.GetCurrentTime()

JSON Mapping

In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the RFC 3339 format. That is, the format is “{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z” where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The “Z” suffix indicates the timezone (“UTC”); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by “Z”) when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset).

For example, “2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z” encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017.

In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard toISOString() method. In Python, a standard datetime.datetime object can be converted to this format using strftime with the time format spec ‘%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ’. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time’s ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime() to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format.

formatdate-time
prebuildConfiguration?: ProjectPrebuildConfiguration { enabled, enableJetbrainsWarmup, environmentClassIds, 3 more }

prebuild_configuration defines how prebuilds are created for this project.

enabled?: boolean

enabled controls whether prebuilds are created for this project. When disabled, no automatic prebuilds will be triggered.

enableJetbrainsWarmup?: boolean

enable_jetbrains_warmup controls whether JetBrains IDE warmup runs during prebuilds.

environmentClassIds?: Array<string>

environment_class_ids specifies which environment classes should have prebuilds created. If empty, no prebuilds are created.

executor?: Subject { id, principal }

executor specifies who runs prebuilds for this project. The executor’s SCM credentials are used to clone the repository. If not set, defaults to the project creator.

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
timeout?: string

timeout is the maximum duration allowed for a prebuild to complete. If not specified, defaults to 1 hour. Must be between 5 minutes and 2 hours.

formatregex
trigger?: Trigger { dailySchedule }

trigger defines when prebuilds should be created.

dailySchedule: DailySchedule { hourUtc }

daily_schedule triggers a prebuild once per day at the specified hour (UTC). The actual start time may vary slightly to distribute system load.

hourUtc?: number

hour_utc is the hour of day (0-23) in UTC when the prebuild should start. The actual start time may be adjusted by a few minutes to balance system load.

formatint32
maximum23
recommendedEditors?: RecommendedEditors { editors }

recommended_editors specifies the editors recommended for this project.

technicalDescription?: string

technical_description is a detailed technical description of the project This field is not returned by default in GetProject or ListProjects responses

usedBy?: UsedBy { subjects, totalSubjects }
subjects?: Array<Subject { id, principal } >

Subjects are the 10 most recent subjects who have used the project to create an environment

id?: string

id is the UUID of the subject

formatuuid
principal?: Principal

Principal is the principal of the subject

One of the following:
"PRINCIPAL_UNSPECIFIED"
"PRINCIPAL_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_USER"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER"
"PRINCIPAL_ENVIRONMENT"
"PRINCIPAL_SERVICE_ACCOUNT"
"PRINCIPAL_RUNNER_MANAGER"
totalSubjects?: number

Total number of unique subjects who have used the project

formatint32

ProjectsEnvironment Clases

ListProjectEnvironmentClasses
client.projects.environmentClases.list(EnvironmentClaseListParams { token, pageSize, pagination, projectId } params, RequestOptionsoptions?): ProjectEnvironmentClassesPage<ProjectEnvironmentClass { environmentClassId, localRunner, order } >
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/ListProjectEnvironmentClasses
UpdateProjectEnvironmentClasses
client.projects.environmentClases.update(EnvironmentClaseUpdateParams { projectEnvironmentClasses, projectId } body, RequestOptionsoptions?): EnvironmentClaseUpdateResponse
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/UpdateProjectEnvironmentClasses
ModelsExpand Collapse
EnvironmentClaseUpdateResponse = unknown

ProjectsPolicies

CreateProjectPolicy
client.projects.policies.create(PolicyCreateParams { groupId, projectId, role } body, RequestOptionsoptions?): PolicyCreateResponse { policy }
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/CreateProjectPolicy
DeleteProjectPolicy
client.projects.policies.delete(PolicyDeleteParams { groupId, projectId } body, RequestOptionsoptions?): PolicyDeleteResponse
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/DeleteProjectPolicy
ListProjectPolicies
client.projects.policies.list(PolicyListParams { token, pageSize, pagination, projectId } params, RequestOptionsoptions?): PoliciesPage<ProjectPolicy { groupId, role } >
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/ListProjectPolicies
UpdateProjectPolicy
client.projects.policies.update(PolicyUpdateParams { groupId, projectId, role } body, RequestOptionsoptions?): PolicyUpdateResponse { policy }
POST/gitpod.v1.ProjectService/UpdateProjectPolicy
ModelsExpand Collapse
ProjectPolicy { groupId, role }
groupId?: string
formatuuid

role is the role assigned to the group

One of the following:
"PROJECT_ROLE_UNSPECIFIED"
"PROJECT_ROLE_ADMIN"
"PROJECT_ROLE_USER"
"PROJECT_ROLE_EDITOR"
ProjectRole = "PROJECT_ROLE_UNSPECIFIED" | "PROJECT_ROLE_ADMIN" | "PROJECT_ROLE_USER" | "PROJECT_ROLE_EDITOR"
One of the following:
"PROJECT_ROLE_UNSPECIFIED"
"PROJECT_ROLE_ADMIN"
"PROJECT_ROLE_USER"
"PROJECT_ROLE_EDITOR"
PolicyCreateResponse { policy }
policy?: ProjectPolicy { groupId, role }
groupId?: string
formatuuid

role is the role assigned to the group

One of the following:
"PROJECT_ROLE_UNSPECIFIED"
"PROJECT_ROLE_ADMIN"
"PROJECT_ROLE_USER"
"PROJECT_ROLE_EDITOR"
PolicyDeleteResponse = unknown
PolicyUpdateResponse { policy }
policy?: ProjectPolicy { groupId, role }
groupId?: string
formatuuid

role is the role assigned to the group

One of the following:
"PROJECT_ROLE_UNSPECIFIED"
"PROJECT_ROLE_ADMIN"
"PROJECT_ROLE_USER"
"PROJECT_ROLE_EDITOR"