324 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
324 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
# Google API Client
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## Alpha
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This library is in Alpha. We will make an effort to support the library, but we reserve the right to make incompatible
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changes when necessary.
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## Migrating from 0.8.x
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See [MIGRATING](MIGRATING.md) for additional details on how to migrate to the latest version.
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## Installation
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Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
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```ruby
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gem 'google-api-client', '~> 0.10'
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```
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And then execute:
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$ bundle
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Or install it yourself as:
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$ gem install google-api-client
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## Usage
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### Basic usage
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To use an API, include the corresponding generated file and instantiate the service. For example to use the Drive API:
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```ruby
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require 'google/apis/drive_v2'
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Drive = Google::Apis::DriveV2 # Alias the module
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drive = Drive::DriveService.new
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drive.authorization = ... # See Googleauth or Signet libraries
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# Search for files in Drive (first page only)
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files = drive.list_files(q: "title contains 'finances'")
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files.items.each do |file|
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puts file.title
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end
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# Upload a file
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metadata = Drive::File.new(title: 'My document')
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metadata = drive.insert_file(metadata, upload_source: 'test.txt', content_type: 'text/plain')
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# Download a file
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drive.get_file(metadata.id, download_dest: '/tmp/myfile.txt')
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```
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### Naming conventions vs JSON representation
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Object properties in the ruby client use the standard ruby convention for naming -- snake_case. This differs from the underlying JSON representation which typically uses camelCase for properties. There are a few notable exceptions to this rule:
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* For properties that are defined as hashes with user-defined keys, no translation is performed on the key.
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* For embedded field masks in requests (for example, the Sheets API), specify the camelCase form when referencing fields.
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Outside those exceptions, if a property is specified using camelCase in a request, it will be ignored during serialization and omitted from the request.
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### Media
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Methods that allow media operations have additional parameters to specify the upload source or download destination.
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For uploads, the `upload_source` parameter can be specified with either a path to a file, an `IO` stream, or `StringIO`
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instance.
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For downloads, the `download_dest` parameter can also be either a path to a file, an `IO` stream, or `StringIO` instance.
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Both uploads & downloads are resumable. If an error occurs during transmission the request will be automatically
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retried from the last received byte.
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### Errors & Retries
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Retries are disabled by default, but enabling retries is strongly encouraged. The number of retries can be configured
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via `Google::Apis::RequestOptions`. Any number greater than 0 will enable retries.
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To enable retries for all services:
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```ruby
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Google::Apis::RequestOptions.default.retries = 5
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```
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With retries enabled globally, retries can be disabled for specific calls by including a retry value of 0 in the
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request options:
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```ruby
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drive.insert_file(metadata, upload_source: 'test.txt', content_type: 'text/plain', options: { retries: 0 })
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```
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When retries are enabled, if a server or rate limit error occurs during a request it is automatically retried with
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an exponentially increasing delay on subsequent retries. If a request can not be retried or if the maximum number
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of retries is exceeded, an exception is thrown.
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### Callbacks
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A block can be specified when making calls. If present, the block will be called with the result or error, rather than
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returning the result from the call or raising the error. Example:
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```ruby
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# Search for files in Drive (first page only)
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drive.list_files(q: "title contains 'finances'") do |res, err|
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if err
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# Handle error
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else
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# Handle response
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end
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end
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```
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This calling style is required when making batch requests as responses are not available until the entire batch
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is complete.
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### Paging
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To fetch multiple pages of data, use the `fetch_all` method to wrap the paged query. This returns an
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`Enumerable` that automatically fetches additional pages as needed.
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```ruby
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# List all calendar events
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now = Time.now.iso8601
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items = calendar.fetch_all do |token|
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calendar.list_events('primary',
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single_events: true,
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order_by: 'startTime',
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time_min: now,
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page_token: token)
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end
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items.each { |event| puts event.summary }
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```
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For APIs that use a field other than `items` to contain the results, an alternate field name can be supplied.
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```ruby
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# List all files in Drive
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items = drive.fetch_all(items: :files) { |token| drive.list_files(page_token: token) }
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items.each { |file| puts file.name }
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```
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### Batches
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Multiple requests can be batched together into a single HTTP request to reduce overhead. Batched calls are executed
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in parallel and the responses processed once all results are available
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```ruby
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# Fetch a bunch of files by ID
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ids = ['file_id_1', 'file_id_2', 'file_id_3', 'file_id_4']
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drive.batch do |drive|
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ids.each do |id|
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drive.get_file(id) do |res, err|
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# Handle response
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end
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end
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end
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```
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Media operations -- uploads & downloads -- can not be included in batch with other requests.
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However, some APIs support batch uploads. To upload multiple files in a batch, use the `batch_upload` method instead.
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Batch uploads should only be used when uploading multiple small files. For large files, upload files individually to
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take advantage of the libraries built-in resumable upload support.
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### Hashes
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While the API will always return instances of schema classes, plain hashes are accepted in method calls for
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convenience. Hash keys must be symbols matching the attribute names on the corresponding object the hash is meant
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to replace. For example:
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```ruby
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file = {id: '123', title: 'My document', labels: { starred: true }}
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file = drive.create_file(file, {}) # Returns a Drive::File instance
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```
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is equivalent to:
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```ruby
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file = Drive::File.new(id: '123', title: 'My document')
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file.labels = Drive::File::Labels.new(starred: true)
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file = drive.update_file(file) # Returns a Drive::File instance
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```
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IMPORTANT: Be careful when supplying hashes for request objects. If it is the last argument to a method, ruby will interpret the hash as keyword arguments. To prevent this, appending an empty hash as an extra parameter will avoid misinterpretation.
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```ruby
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file = {id: '123', title: 'My document', labels: { starred: true }}
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file = drive.create_file(file) # Raises ArgumentError: unknown keywords: id, title, labels
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file = drive.create_file(file, {}) # Returns a Drive::File instance
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```
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## Authorization
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[OAuth 2](https://developers.google.com/accounts/docs/OAuth2) is used to authorize applications. This library uses
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both [Signet](https://github.com/google/signet) and
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[Google Auth Library for Ruby](https://github.com/google/google-auth-library-ruby) for OAuth 2 support.
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The [Google Auth Library for Ruby](https://github.com/google/google-auth-library-ruby) provides an implementation of
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[application default credentials] for Ruby. It offers a simple way to get authorization credentials for use in
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calling Google APIs, best suited for cases when the call needs to have the same identity
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and authorization level for the application independent of the user. This is
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the recommended approach to authorize calls to Cloud APIs, particularly when
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you're building an application that uses Google Compute Engine.
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For per-user authorization, use [Signet](https://github.com/google/signet) to obtain user authorization.
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### Passing authorization to requests
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Authorization can be specified for the entire client, for an individual service instance, or on a per-request basis.
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Set authorization for all service:
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```ruby
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Google::Apis::RequestOptions.default.authorization = authorization
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# Services instantiated after this will inherit the authorization
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```
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On a per-service level:
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```ruby
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drive = Google::Apis::DriveV2::DriveService.new
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drive.authorization = authorization
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# All requests made with this service will use the same authorization
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```
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Per-request:
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```ruby
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drive.get_file('123', options: { authorization: authorization })
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```
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### Authorization using API keys
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Some APIs allow using an API key instead of OAuth2 tokens. For these APIs, set
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the `key` attribute of the service instance. For example:
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```ruby
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require 'google/apis/translate_v2'
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translate = Google::Apis::TranslateV2::TranslateService.new
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translate.key = 'YOUR_API_KEY_HERE'
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result = translate.list_translations('Hello world!', 'es', source: 'en')
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puts result.translations.first.translated_text
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```
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### Authorization using environment variables
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The [GoogleAuth Library for Ruby](https://github.com/google/google-auth-library-ruby) also supports authorization via
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environment variables if you do not want to check in developer credentials
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or private keys. Simply set the following variables for your application:
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```sh
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GOOGLE_ACCOUNT_TYPE="YOUR ACCOUNT TYPE" # ie. 'service'
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GOOGLE_CLIENT_EMAIL="YOUR GOOGLE DEVELOPER EMAIL"
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GOOGLE_PRIVATE_KEY="YOUR GOOGLE DEVELOPER API KEY"
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```
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## Logging
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The client includes a `Logger` instance that can be used to capture debugging information.
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To set the logging level for the client:
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```ruby
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Google::Apis.logger.level = Logger::DEBUG
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```
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When running in a Rails environment, the client will default to using `::Rails.logger`. If you
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prefer to use a separate logger instance for API calls, this can be changed via one of two ways.
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The first is to provide a new logger instance:
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```ruby
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Google::Apis.logger = Logger.new(STDERR)
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```
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The second is to set the environment variable `GOOGLE_API_USE_RAILS_LOGGER` to any value other than `'true'`
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## Samples
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See the [samples](samples) for examples on how to use the client library for various
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services.
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Contributions for additional samples are welcome. See [CONTRIBUTING](CONTRIBUTING.md).
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## Generating APIs
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For [Cloud Endpoints](https://cloud.google.com/endpoints/) or other APIs not included in the gem, ruby code can be
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generated from the discovery document.
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To generate from a local discovery file:
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$ generate-api gen <outdir> --file=<path>
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A URL can also be specified:
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$ generate-api gen <outdir> --url=<url>
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## TODO
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* ETag support (if-not-modified)
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* Caching
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* Model validations
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## License
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This library is licensed under Apache 2.0. Full license text is
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available in [LICENSE](LICENSE).
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## Contributing
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See [CONTRIBUTING](CONTRIBUTING.md).
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## Support
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Please [report bugs at the project on Github](https://github.com/google/google-api-ruby-client/issues). Don't
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hesitate to [ask questions](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/google-api-ruby-client) about the client or APIs
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on [StackOverflow](http://stackoverflow.com).
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