Blog

How to find Google Cloud Platform services dependencies

03 Oct, 2020
Xebia Background Header Wave

Before I can use a particular service, I have to enable the API in my Google project. Sometimes when I do this, more services are enabled than the one I specified. In this blog I will show you how to find service dependencies like this.


Deprecation Notice This blog documented the usefulness of an undocumented property in the output of the gcloud services list command. This property has disappeared, hence the instructions here are no longer valid.


To see this in effect, I am going to enable the Cloud Functions service. First I will show you that enabling Cloud Functions, will actually enable six services in total. Then I will show you how you can list the dependencies. Finally, I will present you with a small utility and graph with all dependencies for you to play around with.

enabling Cloud Functions

So I am going to show you that enabling Cloud Functions is actually enabling multiple services. First, I am going to check the enabled services in my project:

gcloud services list

The output looks roughly like this:

NAME                              TITLE
bigquery.googleapis.com           BigQuery API
...
servicemanagement.googleapis.com  Service Management API
serviceusage.googleapis.com       Service Usage API

In this case, the Cloud Functions service is not listed.

enabling the service

To enable Cloud Functions in my project, I type:

$ gcloud services enable cloudfunctions
Operation "operations/acf.3170fc7d-dc07-476f-851b-ff0cc2b9d79f" finished successfully.

Now, when I check the list of enabled services again, the number of active services has increased with the following six services!

NAME                              TITLE
cloudfunctions.googleapis.com     Cloud Functions API
logging.googleapis.com            Cloud Logging API
pubsub.googleapis.com             Cloud Pub/Sub API
source.googleapis.com             Legacy Cloud Source Repositories API
storage-api.googleapis.com        Google Cloud Storage JSON API
storage-component.googleapis.com  Cloud Storage
...

Could I have predicted this before i enabled it? Yes, I could have..

listing all available services

To list all the available services, I use the following command:

gcloud services list --available --format json

The result is a list of objects with meta information about the service:

{ 
  "config": {
    "name": "cloudfunctions.googleapis.com",
    "title": "Cloud Functions API",
    "documentation": {},
    "features": [],
    "monitoredResources": [
    "monitoring": {},
    "quota": {},
    "authentication": {},
    "usage": {}
  },
  "dependencyConfig": {
    "dependsOn": [],
    "directlyDependsOn": []
    "directlyRequiredBy": [],
    "requiredBy": []
  },
  "serviceAccounts": [],
  "state": "DISABLED"
}

I see four main attributes for each service: config, dependencyConfig, serviceAccounts and state. The fields dependencyConfig lists the service dependencies, while serviceAccounts lists the service accounts which are created in the project for this service. Note that these fields are not part of the documented service usage API.

listing specific dependencies

So, this service usage API provides all the dependencies of a specific service. To list all dependent services of Cloud Functions, I use the following command:

gcloud services list \
   --available --format json | \
jq --arg service cloudfunctions.googleapis.com \
    'map(select(.config.name == $service)| 
        { 
          name:      .config.name, 
          dependsOn: .dependencyConfig.dependsOn
        }
    )'

and the result is:

{
  "name": "cloudfunctions.googleapis.com",
  "dependsOn": [
    "cloudfunctions.googleapis.com",
    "logging.googleapis.com",
    "pubsub.googleapis.com",
    "source.googleapis.com",
    "storage-api.googleapis.com",
    "storage-component.googleapis.com"
  ]
}

These are precisely the six services that were previously enabled \o/. If you want to explore dependencies yourself, you can use this bash script. If you do not want to type, you can browse through the entire graph
google cloud platform services dependencies. I know it is a bit tiny, but luckily it is a scalable vector graphic. So open it in a separate window and you can pan and zoom.

conclusion

Thanks to some undocumented properties of by the Google service usage API, I can find all dependencies between Google Cloud Platform services.

Mark van Holsteijn
Mark van Holsteijn is a senior software systems architect at Xebia Cloud-native solutions. He is passionate about removing waste in the software delivery process and keeping things clear and simple.
Questions?

Get in touch with us to learn more about the subject and related solutions

Explore related posts