The Workflows connector defines the built-in
functions that can be used to access other Google Cloud products within a
workflow.
This page provides an overview of the individual connector.
There is no need to import or load connector libraries in a workflow—connectors
work out of the box when used in a call step.
Cloud Tasks API
Manages the execution of large numbers of distributed requests.
To learn more, see the Cloud Tasks API documentation.
Cloud Tasks connector sample
Module: googleapis.cloudtasks.v2.projects.locations
Functions |
get |
Gets information about a location. |
list |
Lists information about the supported locations for this service. |
Module: googleapis.cloudtasks.v2.projects.locations.queues
Functions |
create |
Creates a queue. Queues created with this method allow tasks to live for
a maximum of 31 days. After a task is 31 days old, the task will be
deleted regardless of whether it was dispatched or not. WARNING: Using
this method may have unintended side effects if you are using an App
Engine queue.yaml or queue.xml file to manage your queues. Read
Overview of Queue Management and
queue.yaml before using
this method. |
delete |
Deletes a queue. This command will delete the queue even if it has tasks
in it. Note: If you delete a queue, a queue with the same name can't be
created for 7 days. WARNING: Using this method may have unintended side
effects if you are using an App Engine queue.yaml or queue.xml file
to manage your queues. Read Overview of Queue Management and
queue.yaml before using
this method. |
get |
Gets a queue. |
getIamPolicy |
Gets the access control policy for a Queue. Returns an empty policy if
the resource exists and does not have a policy set. Authorization
requires the following Google IAM
permission on the specified resource parent: *
cloudtasks.queues.getIamPolicy |
list |
Lists queues. Queues are returned in lexicographical order. |
patch |
Updates a queue. This method creates the queue if it does not exist and
updates the queue if it does exist. Queues created with this method
allow tasks to live for a maximum of 31 days. After a task is 31 days
old, the task will be deleted regardless of whether it was dispatched or
not. WARNING: Using this method may have unintended side effects if you
are using an App Engine queue.yaml or queue.xml file to manage your
queues. Read Overview of Queue Management and
queue.yaml before using
this method. |
pause |
Pauses the queue. If a queue is paused then the system will stop
dispatching tasks until the queue is resumed via ResumeQueue. Tasks can
still be added when the queue is paused. A queue is paused if its state
is PAUSED. |
purge |
Purges a queue by deleting all of its tasks. All tasks created before
this method is called are permanently deleted. Purge operations can take
up to one minute to take effect. Tasks might be dispatched before the
purge takes effect. A purge is irreversible. |
resume |
Resume a queue. This method resumes a queue after it has been PAUSED or
DISABLED. The state of a queue is stored in the queue's state; after
calling this method it will be set to RUNNING. WARNING: Resuming many
high-QPS queues at the same time can lead to target overloading. If you
are resuming high-QPS queues, follow the 500/50/5 pattern described in
Managing Cloud Tasks Scaling
Risks. |
setIamPolicy |
Sets the access control policy for a Queue. Replaces any existing
policy. Note: The Cloud Console does not check queue-level IAM
permissions yet. Project-level permissions are required to use the Cloud
Console. Authorization requires the following Google
IAM permission on the specified resource
parent: * cloudtasks.queues.setIamPolicy |
testIamPermissions |
Returns permissions that a caller has on a Queue. If the resource does
not exist, this will return an empty set of permissions, not a NOT_FOUND
error. Note: This operation is designed to be used for building
permission-aware UIs and command-line tools, not for authorization
checking. This operation may "fail open" without warning. |
Module: googleapis.cloudtasks.v2.projects.locations.queues.tasks
Functions |
create |
Creates a task and adds it to a queue. Tasks cannot be updated after
creation; there is no UpdateTask command. * The maximum task size is
100KB. |
delete |
Deletes a task. A task can be deleted if it is scheduled or dispatched.
A task cannot be deleted if it has executed successfully or permanently
failed. |
get |
Gets a task. |
list |
Lists the tasks in a queue. By default, only the BASIC view is retrieved
due to performance considerations; response_view controls the subset of
information which is returned. The tasks may be returned in any order.
The ordering may change at any time. |
run |
Forces a task to run now. When this method is called, Cloud Tasks will
dispatch the task, even if the task is already running, the queue has
reached its RateLimits or is PAUSED. This command is meant to be used
for manual debugging. For example, RunTask can be used to retry a failed
task after a fix has been made or to manually force a task to be
dispatched now. The dispatched task is returned. That is, the task that
is returned contains the status after the task is dispatched but before
the task is received by its target. If Cloud Tasks receives a successful
response from the task's target, then the task will be deleted;
otherwise the task's schedule_time will be reset to the time that
RunTask was called plus the retry delay specified in the queue's
RetryConfig. RunTask returns NOT_FOUND when it is called on a task that
has already succeeded or permanently failed. |
Module: googleapis.cloudtasks.v2beta3.projects.locations
Functions |
get |
Gets information about a location. |
list |
Lists information about the supported locations for this service. |
Module: googleapis.cloudtasks.v2beta3.projects.locations.queues
Functions |
create |
Creates a queue. Queues created with this method allow tasks to live for
a maximum of 31 days. After a task is 31 days old, the task will be
deleted regardless of whether it was dispatched or not. WARNING: Using
this method may have unintended side effects if you are using an App
Engine queue.yaml or queue.xml file to manage your queues. Read
Overview of Queue Management and
queue.yaml before using
this method. |
delete |
Deletes a queue. This command will delete the queue even if it has tasks
in it. Note: If you delete a queue, a queue with the same name can't be
created for 7 days. WARNING: Using this method may have unintended side
effects if you are using an App Engine queue.yaml or queue.xml file
to manage your queues. Read Overview of Queue Management and
queue.yaml before using
this method. |
get |
Gets a queue. |
getIamPolicy |
Gets the access control policy for a Queue. Returns an empty policy if
the resource exists and does not have a policy set. Authorization
requires the following Google IAM
permission on the specified resource parent: *
cloudtasks.queues.getIamPolicy |
list |
Lists queues. Queues are returned in lexicographical order. |
patch |
Updates a queue. This method creates the queue if it does not exist and
updates the queue if it does exist. Queues created with this method
allow tasks to live for a maximum of 31 days. After a task is 31 days
old, the task will be deleted regardless of whether it was dispatched or
not. WARNING: Using this method may have unintended side effects if you
are using an App Engine queue.yaml or queue.xml file to manage your
queues. Read Overview of Queue Management and
queue.yaml before using
this method. |
pause |
Pauses the queue. If a queue is paused then the system will stop
dispatching tasks until the queue is resumed via ResumeQueue. Tasks can
still be added when the queue is paused. A queue is paused if its state
is PAUSED. |
purge |
Purges a queue by deleting all of its tasks. All tasks created before
this method is called are permanently deleted. Purge operations can take
up to one minute to take effect. Tasks might be dispatched before the
purge takes effect. A purge is irreversible. |
resume |
Resume a queue. This method resumes a queue after it has been PAUSED or
DISABLED. The state of a queue is stored in the queue's state; after
calling this method it will be set to RUNNING. WARNING: Resuming many
high-QPS queues at the same time can lead to target overloading. If you
are resuming high-QPS queues, follow the 500/50/5 pattern described in
Managing Cloud Tasks Scaling
Risks. |
setIamPolicy |
Sets the access control policy for a Queue. Replaces any existing
policy. Note: The Cloud Console does not check queue-level IAM
permissions yet. Project-level permissions are required to use the Cloud
Console. Authorization requires the following Google
IAM permission on the specified resource
parent: * cloudtasks.queues.setIamPolicy |
testIamPermissions |
Returns permissions that a caller has on a Queue. If the resource does
not exist, this will return an empty set of permissions, not a NOT_FOUND
error. Note: This operation is designed to be used for building
permission-aware UIs and command-line tools, not for authorization
checking. This operation may "fail open" without warning. |
Module: googleapis.cloudtasks.v2beta3.projects.locations.queues.tasks
Functions |
create |
Creates a task and adds it to a queue. Tasks cannot be updated after
creation; there is no UpdateTask command. * The maximum task size is
100KB. |
delete |
Deletes a task. A task can be deleted if it is scheduled or dispatched.
A task cannot be deleted if it has executed successfully or permanently
failed. |
get |
Gets a task. |
list |
Lists the tasks in a queue. By default, only the BASIC view is retrieved
due to performance considerations; response_view controls the subset of
information which is returned. The tasks may be returned in any order.
The ordering may change at any time. |
run |
Forces a task to run now. When this method is called, Cloud Tasks will
dispatch the task, even if the task is already running, the queue has
reached its RateLimits or is PAUSED. This command is meant to be used
for manual debugging. For example, RunTask can be used to retry a failed
task after a fix has been made or to manually force a task to be
dispatched now. The dispatched task is returned. That is, the task that
is returned contains the status after the task is dispatched but before
the task is received by its target. If Cloud Tasks receives a successful
response from the task's target, then the task will be deleted;
otherwise the task's schedule_time will be reset to the time that
RunTask was called plus the retry delay specified in the queue's
RetryConfig. RunTask returns NOT_FOUND when it is called on a task that
has already succeeded or permanently failed. |