google-apis-bigtableadmin_v2 0.55.0 → 0.56.0
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- checksums.yaml +4 -4
- data/CHANGELOG.md +4 -0
- data/lib/google/apis/bigtableadmin_v2/classes.rb +52 -52
- data/lib/google/apis/bigtableadmin_v2/gem_version.rb +2 -2
- metadata +3 -3
checksums.yaml
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metadata.gz:
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metadata.gz:
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data.tar.gz: 1f2d37435e4b0ab7787563d766c39a7010a86168c3dd5e6f1b4e19de22c1a0037a6c9a15fce814239a4e01b1eb3e1d7d63e321ab370a7b43882323e172ccb164
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data/CHANGELOG.md
CHANGED
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# Each link in the encoding chain also defines the following properties: *
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# Natural sort: Does the encoded value sort consistently with the original typed
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# value? Note that Bigtable will always sort data based on the raw encoded value,
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# *not* the decoded type. - Example:
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# *not* the decoded type. - Example: BYTES values sort in the same order as
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# their raw encodings. - Counterexample: Encoding INT64 to a fixed-width STRING
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# does *not* preserve sort order when dealing with negative numbers. INT64(1) >
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# INT64(-1), but STRING("-00001") > STRING("00001). - The overall encoding chain
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# has this property if *every* link does. * Self-delimiting: If we concatenate
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# two encoded values, can we always tell where the first one ends and the second
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# one begins? - Example: If we encode INT64s to fixed-width STRINGs, the first
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# value will always contain exactly N digits, possibly preceded by a sign. -
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# Counterexample: If we concatenate two UTF-8 encoded STRINGs, we have no way to
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# tell where the first one ends. - The overall encoding chain has this property
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# if *any* link does. * Compatibility: Which other systems have matching
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# encoding schemes? For example, does this encoding have a GoogleSQL equivalent?
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# HBase? Java?
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# Corresponds to the JSON property `valueType`
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# @return [Google::Apis::BigtableadminV2::Type]
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attr_accessor :value_type
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# Each link in the encoding chain also defines the following properties: *
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# Natural sort: Does the encoded value sort consistently with the original typed
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# value? Note that Bigtable will always sort data based on the raw encoded value,
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# *not* the decoded type. - Example:
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# their
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# INT64(
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# *not* the decoded type. - Example: BYTES values sort in the same order as
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# their raw encodings. - Counterexample: Encoding INT64 to a fixed-width STRING
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# does *not* preserve sort order when dealing with negative numbers. INT64(1) >
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# INT64(-1), but STRING("-00001") > STRING("00001). - The overall encoding chain
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# has this property if *every* link does. * Self-delimiting: If we concatenate
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# two encoded values, can we always tell where the first one ends and the second
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# one begins? - Example: If we encode INT64s to fixed-width STRINGs, the first
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# value will always contain exactly N digits, possibly preceded by a sign. -
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# Counterexample: If we concatenate two UTF-8 encoded STRINGs, we have no way to
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# tell where the first one ends. - The overall encoding chain has this property
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# if *any* link does. * Compatibility: Which other systems have matching
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# encoding schemes? For example, does this encoding have a GoogleSQL equivalent?
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# HBase? Java?
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# Corresponds to the JSON property `inputType`
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# @return [Google::Apis::BigtableadminV2::Type]
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attr_accessor :input_type
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# Each link in the encoding chain also defines the following properties: *
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# Natural sort: Does the encoded value sort consistently with the original typed
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# value? Note that Bigtable will always sort data based on the raw encoded value,
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-
# *not* the decoded type. - Example:
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# their
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# INT64(
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#
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# *not* the decoded type. - Example: BYTES values sort in the same order as
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# their raw encodings. - Counterexample: Encoding INT64 to a fixed-width STRING
|
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# does *not* preserve sort order when dealing with negative numbers. INT64(1) >
|
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+
# INT64(-1), but STRING("-00001") > STRING("00001). - The overall encoding chain
|
1642
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+
# has this property if *every* link does. * Self-delimiting: If we concatenate
|
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+
# two encoded values, can we always tell where the first one ends and the second
|
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+
# one begins? - Example: If we encode INT64s to fixed-width STRINGs, the first
|
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# value will always contain exactly N digits, possibly preceded by a sign. -
|
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+
# Counterexample: If we concatenate two UTF-8 encoded STRINGs, we have no way to
|
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# tell where the first one ends. - The overall encoding chain has this property
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# if *any* link does. * Compatibility: Which other systems have matching
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# encoding schemes? For example, does this encoding have a GoogleSQL equivalent?
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# HBase? Java?
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# Corresponds to the JSON property `stateType`
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# @return [Google::Apis::BigtableadminV2::Type]
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attr_accessor :state_type
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@@ -3170,19 +3170,19 @@ module Google
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# Each link in the encoding chain also defines the following properties: *
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# Natural sort: Does the encoded value sort consistently with the original typed
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# value? Note that Bigtable will always sort data based on the raw encoded value,
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# *not* the decoded type. - Example:
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# their
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# INT64(
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# *not* the decoded type. - Example: BYTES values sort in the same order as
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# their raw encodings. - Counterexample: Encoding INT64 to a fixed-width STRING
|
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+
# does *not* preserve sort order when dealing with negative numbers. INT64(1) >
|
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# INT64(-1), but STRING("-00001") > STRING("00001). - The overall encoding chain
|
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# has this property if *every* link does. * Self-delimiting: If we concatenate
|
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# two encoded values, can we always tell where the first one ends and the second
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# one begins? - Example: If we encode INT64s to fixed-width STRINGs, the first
|
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# value will always contain exactly N digits, possibly preceded by a sign. -
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# Counterexample: If we concatenate two UTF-8 encoded STRINGs, we have no way to
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# tell where the first one ends. - The overall encoding chain has this property
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# if *any* link does. * Compatibility: Which other systems have matching
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# encoding schemes? For example, does this encoding have a GoogleSQL equivalent?
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# HBase? Java?
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class Type
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include Google::Apis::Core::Hashable
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@@ -16,13 +16,13 @@ module Google
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module Apis
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module BigtableadminV2
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# Version of the google-apis-bigtableadmin_v2 gem
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GEM_VERSION = "0.
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GEM_VERSION = "0.56.0"
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# Version of the code generator used to generate this client
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GENERATOR_VERSION = "0.15.0"
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# Revision of the discovery document this client was generated from
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REVISION = "
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REVISION = "20240522"
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end
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end
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end
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metadata
CHANGED
@@ -1,14 +1,14 @@
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--- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
|
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name: google-apis-bigtableadmin_v2
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version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
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version: 0.
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version: 0.56.0
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platform: ruby
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authors:
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- Google LLC
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autorequire:
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bindir: bin
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cert_chain: []
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date: 2024-
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date: 2024-06-09 00:00:00.000000000 Z
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dependencies:
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- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
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name: google-apis-core
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metadata:
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bug_tracker_uri: https://github.com/googleapis/google-api-ruby-client/issues
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changelog_uri: https://github.com/googleapis/google-api-ruby-client/tree/main/generated/google-apis-bigtableadmin_v2/CHANGELOG.md
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documentation_uri: https://googleapis.dev/ruby/google-apis-bigtableadmin_v2/v0.
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documentation_uri: https://googleapis.dev/ruby/google-apis-bigtableadmin_v2/v0.56.0
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source_code_uri: https://github.com/googleapis/google-api-ruby-client/tree/main/generated/google-apis-bigtableadmin_v2
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post_install_message:
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rdoc_options: []
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