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<?php
/*
* Copyright 2014 Google Inc.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not
* use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
* the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
* WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
* License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
* the License.
*/
namespace Google\Service\Digitalassetlinks\Resource;
use Google\Service\Digitalassetlinks\ListResponse;
/**
* The "statements" collection of methods.
* Typical usage is:
* <code>
* $digitalassetlinksService = new Google\Service\Digitalassetlinks(...);
* $statements = $digitalassetlinksService->statements;
* </code>
*/
class Statements extends \Google\Service\Resource
{
/**
* Retrieves a list of all statements from a given source that match the
* specified target and statement string. The API guarantees that all statements
* with secure source assets, such as HTTPS websites or Android apps, have been
* made in a secure way by the owner of those assets, as described in the
* [Digital Asset Links technical design
* specification](https://github.com/google/digitalassetlinks/blob/master/well-
* known/details.md). Specifically, you should consider that for insecure
* websites (that is, where the URL starts with `http://` instead of
* `https://`), this guarantee cannot be made. The `List` command is most useful
* in cases where the API client wants to know all the ways in which two assets
* are related, or enumerate all the relationships from a particular source
* asset. Example: a feature that helps users navigate to related items. When a
* mobile app is running on a device, the feature would make it easy to navigate
* to the corresponding web site or Google+ profile. (statements.listStatements)
*
* @param array $optParams Optional parameters.
*
* @opt_param string relation Use only associations that match the specified
* relation. See the [`Statement`](#Statement) message for a detailed definition
* of relation strings. For a query to match a statement, one of the following
* must be true: * both the query's and the statement's relation strings match
* exactly, or * the query's relation string is empty or missing. Example: A
* query with relation `delegate_permission/common.handle_all_urls` matches an
* asset link with relation `delegate_permission/common.handle_all_urls`.
* @opt_param string source.androidApp.certificate.sha256Fingerprint The
* uppercase SHA-265 fingerprint of the certificate. From the PEM certificate,
* it can be acquired like this: $ keytool -printcert -file $CERTFILE | grep
* SHA256: SHA256: 14:6D:E9:83:C5:73:06:50:D8:EE:B9:95:2F:34:FC:64:16:A0:83: \
* 42:E6:1D:BE:A8:8A:04:96:B2:3F:CF:44:E5 or like this: $ openssl x509 -in
* $CERTFILE -noout -fingerprint -sha256 SHA256
* Fingerprint=14:6D:E9:83:C5:73:06:50:D8:EE:B9:95:2F:34:FC:64: \
* 16:A0:83:42:E6:1D:BE:A8:8A:04:96:B2:3F:CF:44:E5 In this example, the contents
* of this field would be `14:6D:E9:83:C5:73:
* 06:50:D8:EE:B9:95:2F:34:FC:64:16:A0:83:42:E6:1D:BE:A8:8A:04:96:B2:3F:CF:
* 44:E5`. If these tools are not available to you, you can convert the PEM
* certificate into the DER format, compute the SHA-256 hash of that string and
* represent the result as a hexstring (that is, uppercase hexadecimal
* representations of each octet, separated by colons).
* @opt_param string source.androidApp.packageName Android App assets are
* naturally identified by their Java package name. For example, the Google Maps
* app uses the package name `com.google.android.apps.maps`. REQUIRED
* @opt_param string source.web.site Web assets are identified by a URL that
* contains only the scheme, hostname and port parts. The format is
* http[s]://[:] Hostnames must be fully qualified: they must end in a single
* period ("`.`"). Only the schemes "http" and "https" are currently allowed.
* Port numbers are given as a decimal number, and they must be omitted if the
* standard port numbers are used: 80 for http and 443 for https. We call this
* limited URL the "site". All URLs that share the same scheme, hostname and
* port are considered to be a part of the site and thus belong to the web
* asset. Example: the asset with the site `https://www.google.com` contains all
* these URLs: * `https://www.google.com/` * `https://www.google.com:443/` *
* `https://www.google.com/foo` * `https://www.google.com/foo?bar` *
* `https://www.google.com/foo#bar` * `https://user@password:www.google.com/`
* But it does not contain these URLs: * `http://www.google.com/` (wrong scheme)
* * `https://google.com/` (hostname does not match) *
* `https://www.google.com:444/` (port does not match) REQUIRED
* @return ListResponse
*/
public function listStatements($optParams = [])
{
$params = [];
$params = array_merge($params, $optParams);
return $this->call('list', [$params], ListResponse::class);
}
}
// Adding a class alias for backwards compatibility with the previous class name.
class_alias(Statements::class, 'Google_Service_Digitalassetlinks_Resource_Statements');