Reference documentation and code samples for the BigQuery Storage V1 API class Google::Cloud::Bigquery::Storage::V1::CreateReadSessionRequest.
Request message for CreateReadSession
.
Inherits
- Object
Extended By
- Google::Protobuf::MessageExts::ClassMethods
Includes
- Google::Protobuf::MessageExts
Methods
#max_stream_count
def max_stream_count() -> ::Integer
-
(::Integer) — Max initial number of streams. If unset or zero, the server will
provide a value of streams so as to produce reasonable throughput. Must be
non-negative. The number of streams may be lower than the requested number,
depending on the amount parallelism that is reasonable for the table.
There is a default system max limit of 1,000.
This must be greater than or equal to preferred_min_stream_count. Typically, clients should either leave this unset to let the system to determine an upper bound OR set this a size for the maximum "units of work" it can gracefully handle.
#max_stream_count=
def max_stream_count=(value) -> ::Integer
-
value (::Integer) — Max initial number of streams. If unset or zero, the server will
provide a value of streams so as to produce reasonable throughput. Must be
non-negative. The number of streams may be lower than the requested number,
depending on the amount parallelism that is reasonable for the table.
There is a default system max limit of 1,000.
This must be greater than or equal to preferred_min_stream_count. Typically, clients should either leave this unset to let the system to determine an upper bound OR set this a size for the maximum "units of work" it can gracefully handle.
-
(::Integer) — Max initial number of streams. If unset or zero, the server will
provide a value of streams so as to produce reasonable throughput. Must be
non-negative. The number of streams may be lower than the requested number,
depending on the amount parallelism that is reasonable for the table.
There is a default system max limit of 1,000.
This must be greater than or equal to preferred_min_stream_count. Typically, clients should either leave this unset to let the system to determine an upper bound OR set this a size for the maximum "units of work" it can gracefully handle.
#parent
def parent() -> ::String
-
(::String) — Required. The request project that owns the session, in the form of
projects/{project_id}
.
#parent=
def parent=(value) -> ::String
-
value (::String) — Required. The request project that owns the session, in the form of
projects/{project_id}
.
-
(::String) — Required. The request project that owns the session, in the form of
projects/{project_id}
.
#preferred_min_stream_count
def preferred_min_stream_count() -> ::Integer
-
(::Integer) — The minimum preferred stream count. This parameter can be used to inform
the service that there is a desired lower bound on the number of streams.
This is typically a target parallelism of the client (e.g. a Spark
cluster with N-workers would set this to a low multiple of N to ensure
good cluster utilization).
The system will make a best effort to provide at least this number of streams, but in some cases might provide less.
#preferred_min_stream_count=
def preferred_min_stream_count=(value) -> ::Integer
-
value (::Integer) — The minimum preferred stream count. This parameter can be used to inform
the service that there is a desired lower bound on the number of streams.
This is typically a target parallelism of the client (e.g. a Spark
cluster with N-workers would set this to a low multiple of N to ensure
good cluster utilization).
The system will make a best effort to provide at least this number of streams, but in some cases might provide less.
-
(::Integer) — The minimum preferred stream count. This parameter can be used to inform
the service that there is a desired lower bound on the number of streams.
This is typically a target parallelism of the client (e.g. a Spark
cluster with N-workers would set this to a low multiple of N to ensure
good cluster utilization).
The system will make a best effort to provide at least this number of streams, but in some cases might provide less.
#read_session
def read_session() -> ::Google::Cloud::Bigquery::Storage::V1::ReadSession
- (::Google::Cloud::Bigquery::Storage::V1::ReadSession) — Required. Session to be created.
#read_session=
def read_session=(value) -> ::Google::Cloud::Bigquery::Storage::V1::ReadSession
- value (::Google::Cloud::Bigquery::Storage::V1::ReadSession) — Required. Session to be created.
- (::Google::Cloud::Bigquery::Storage::V1::ReadSession) — Required. Session to be created.