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Google Cloud projects form the basis for creating,enabling, and using all Google Cloud services including managing APIs,enabling billing, adding and removing collaborators, and managing permissionsfor Google Cloud resources.
A project ID is a unique string used to differentiate your project from allothers in Google Cloud. After you enter a project name, theGoogle Cloud console generates a unique project ID that can be a combinationof letters, numbers, and hyphens. We recommend you use the generated project ID,but you can edit it during project creation. After the project has been created,the project ID is permanent.
Don't include sensitive information such as personally identifiable information(PII) or security data in your project name, project ID, or other resource names.The project ID is used in the name of many other Google Cloud resources, and anyreference to the project or related resources exposes the project ID and resource name.
To create a project, you must have the resourcemanager.projects.createpermission. This permission is included in roles like the Project Creator role(roles/resourcemanager.projectCreator). The Project Creator role is grantedby default to the entire domain of a new organization resource and to free trial users.For information on how to grant individuals the role and limit organization-resourcewide access, see the Managing Default OrganizationRoles page.
At the bottom of the Google Cloud console, a Cloud Shell session starts and displays a command-line prompt. Cloud Shell is a shell environment with the Google Cloud CLI already installed and with values already set for your current project. It can take a few seconds for the session to initialize.
Where PROJECT_ID is the ID for the project you want to create.A project ID must start with a lowercase letter, and can contain onlyASCII letters, digits, and hyphens, and must be between 6 and 30 characters.
You can't use certain words in the project ID when you create a new projectwith the projects.create() method. Some examples include google, null, undefined, and ssl.When you use a restricted word, the request returns withan INVALID_ARGUMENT error.
The below request only creates a project, and does not associate itautomatically with a billing account. Use theprojects.updateBillingInfomethod to set or update the billing account associated with a project.
You can use a service account to automate project creation. Like user accounts,service accounts can be granted permission to create projects within anorganization resource. Service accounts are not allowed to create projects outside of anorganization resource and must specify the parent resource when creating a project.Service accounts can create a new project using the gcloud CLI or theprojects.create() method.
If you have fewer than 30 projects remaining in your quota, a notificationdisplays the number of projects remaining in your quota on theNew Project page. Once you have reached yourproject limit, to create more projects you must request a project limitincrease. Alternatively, you can schedule some projects to be deleted after 30days on theManage Resources Page.Projects that users havesoft deleted count against your quota. These projectsfully delete after 30 days.
To request additional capacity for projects in your quota, use theRequest Project Quota Increaseform. More information about quotas and why they are used can be foundat theFree Trial Project Quota Requestssupport page. For more information about billing reports, see theBilling Reports support page.
To search for projects matching the specified query, use gcloud alpha resource-managerprojects search, passing the query in the --query flag. The scope of searchis all the projects for which the user has projects.get permission.
You can use theprojects.search methodand a query string to return specific project resources that match the filter.The results contain only projects for which you have been granted theresourcemanager.projects.get permission.
If you specify the parent.type and parent.idfields in your request body, then theresourcemanager.projects.list permission is checked on theparent. If the user has this permission, all projects under the parent arereturned after the remaining filters have been applied.
This method immediately marks a project to be deleted. A notification email is sent to the user who initiated the delete operation and the Technicalcategory contacts that are listed inEssential Contacts on a best effort basis; if the notification fails to send, the project is still marked to be deleted. If there's no contact in the Technical category, the fallback contact isn't notified.
A project that is marked for deletion isn't usable. If the projecthas a billing account associated with it, that association is broken and isn'treinstated if the project delete operation is canceled. After 30 days, theproject is fully deleted. Until it is fully deleted, the project might still bevisible, although it isn't usable.
To help ensure that you don't delete any important projects, you can enable change risk recommendations. Change riskrecommendations generate warnings when you try to delete projects that Google Cloud hasidentified as important.
If you have set up billing for a project, it might not be completely deleteduntil the current billing cycle ends and your account is successfully charged.The number and types of services in use can also affect when the systempermanently deletes a project. To learn more about data retention and safedeletion, see How Google retains data we collect.
Project owners can restore a deleted project within the 30-day recovery periodthat starts when the project is shut down. Restoring a project returns it tothe state it was in before it was shut down, with certain exceptions:
A number of variables can be defined by the user to specify files to includeat different points during the execution of the project() command.The following outlines the steps performed during a project() call:
The top-level CMakeLists.txt file for a project must contain aliteral, direct call to the project() command; loading onethrough the include() command is not sufficient. If no suchcall exists, CMake will issue a warning and pretend there is aproject(Project) at the top to enable the default languages(C and CXX).
Call the project() command near the top of the top-levelCMakeLists.txt, but after calling cmake_minimum_required().It is important to establish version and policy settings before invokingother commands whose behavior they may affect and for this reason theproject() command will issue a warning if this order is not kept.See also policy CMP0000.
Prior support for the project has been provided by the Annenberg/CPB Project, Apple Computer, the Berger Family Technology Transfer Endowment, Digital Libraries Initiative Phase 2, the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education part of the U.S. Department of Education, the Getty Grant program, the Modern Language Association, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Packard Humanities Institute, Xerox Corporation, Boston University, and Harvard University.
Project Calico is an open-source project with an active development and user community. Calico Open Source was born out of this project and has grown to be the most widely adopted solution for container networking and security, powering 8M+ nodes daily across 166 countries.
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