Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
bq analyticshub listing - add support for restrictedExportConfig (#96…
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
…61) (#628)

* bq analyticshub listing - add support for restrictedExportConfig

* lint

* Update mmv1/products/bigqueryanalyticshub/Listing.yaml

---------


[upstream:9baa61fae74633eaa57e63c532a0bef70c12aaa6]

Signed-off-by: Modular Magician <[email protected]>
  • Loading branch information
modular-magician authored Dec 20, 2023
1 parent 7de7afd commit b9205e8
Show file tree
Hide file tree
Showing 4 changed files with 131 additions and 0 deletions.
15 changes: 15 additions & 0 deletions bigquery_analyticshub_listing_restricted/backing_file.tf
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
# This file has some scaffolding to make sure that names are unique and that
# a region and zone are selected when you try to create your Terraform resources.

locals {
name_suffix = "${random_pet.suffix.id}"
}

resource "random_pet" "suffix" {
length = 2
}

provider "google" {
region = "us-central1"
zone = "us-central1-c"
}
30 changes: 30 additions & 0 deletions bigquery_analyticshub_listing_restricted/main.tf
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
resource "google_bigquery_analytics_hub_data_exchange" "listing" {
location = "US"
data_exchange_id = "my_data_exchange-${local.name_suffix}"
display_name = "my_data_exchange-${local.name_suffix}"
description = "example data exchange-${local.name_suffix}"
}

resource "google_bigquery_analytics_hub_listing" "listing" {
location = "US"
data_exchange_id = google_bigquery_analytics_hub_data_exchange.listing.data_exchange_id
listing_id = "my_listing-${local.name_suffix}"
display_name = "my_listing-${local.name_suffix}"
description = "example data exchange-${local.name_suffix}"

bigquery_dataset {
dataset = google_bigquery_dataset.listing.id
}

restricted_export_config {
enabled = true
restrict_query_result = true
}
}

resource "google_bigquery_dataset" "listing" {
dataset_id = "my_listing-${local.name_suffix}"
friendly_name = "my_listing-${local.name_suffix}"
description = "example data exchange-${local.name_suffix}"
location = "US"
}
7 changes: 7 additions & 0 deletions bigquery_analyticshub_listing_restricted/motd
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
===

These examples use real resources that will be billed to the
Google Cloud Platform project you use - so make sure that you
run "terraform destroy" before quitting!

===
79 changes: 79 additions & 0 deletions bigquery_analyticshub_listing_restricted/tutorial.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,79 @@
# Bigquery Analyticshub Listing Restricted - Terraform

## Setup

<walkthrough-author name="[email protected]" analyticsId="UA-125550242-1" tutorialName="bigquery_analyticshub_listing_restricted" repositoryUrl="https://github.com/terraform-google-modules/docs-examples"></walkthrough-author>

Welcome to Terraform in Google Cloud Shell! We need you to let us know what project you'd like to use with Terraform.

<walkthrough-project-billing-setup></walkthrough-project-billing-setup>

Terraform provisions real GCP resources, so anything you create in this session will be billed against this project.

## Terraforming!

Let's use {{project-id}} with Terraform! Click the Cloud Shell icon below to copy the command
to your shell, and then run it from the shell by pressing Enter/Return. Terraform will pick up
the project name from the environment variable.

```bash
export GOOGLE_CLOUD_PROJECT={{project-id}}
```

After that, let's get Terraform started. Run the following to pull in the providers.

```bash
terraform init
```

With the providers downloaded and a project set, you're ready to use Terraform. Go ahead!

```bash
terraform apply
```

Terraform will show you what it plans to do, and prompt you to accept. Type "yes" to accept the plan.

```bash
yes
```


## Post-Apply

### Editing your config

Now you've provisioned your resources in GCP! If you run a "plan", you should see no changes needed.

```bash
terraform plan
```

So let's make a change! Try editing a number, or appending a value to the name in the editor. Then,
run a 'plan' again.

```bash
terraform plan
```

Afterwards you can run an apply, which implicitly does a plan and shows you the intended changes
at the 'yes' prompt.

```bash
terraform apply
```

```bash
yes
```

## Cleanup

Run the following to remove the resources Terraform provisioned:

```bash
terraform destroy
```
```bash
yes
```

0 comments on commit b9205e8

Please sign in to comment.