NAME
    gcloud compute target-https-proxies update - update a target HTTPS proxy

SYNOPSIS
    gcloud compute target-https-proxies update NAME
        [--quic-override=QUIC_OVERRIDE]
        [--ssl-certificates=SSL_CERTIFICATE,[...]] [--url-map=URL_MAP]
        [--clear-ssl-policy | --ssl-policy=SSL_POLICY]
        [--global | --region=REGION]
        [--global-ssl-certificates
          | --ssl-certificates-region=SSL_CERTIFICATES_REGION]
        [--global-url-map | --url-map-region=URL_MAP_REGION]
        [GCLOUD_WIDE_FLAG ...]

DESCRIPTION
    gcloud compute target-https-proxies update is used to change the SSL
    certificate and/or URL map of existing target HTTPS proxies. A target HTTPS
    proxy is referenced by one or more forwarding rules which specify the
    network traffic that the proxy is responsible for routing. The target HTTPS
    proxy in turn points to a URL map that defines the rules for routing the
    requests. The URL map's job is to map URLs to backend services which handle
    the actual requests. The target HTTPS proxy also points to at most 15 SSL
    certificates used for server-side authentication. The target HTTPS proxy
    can be associated with at most one SSL policy.

EXAMPLES
    Update the URL map of a global target HTTPS proxy by running:

        $ gcloud compute target-https-proxies update PROXY_NAME \
            --url-map=URL_MAP

    Update the SSL certificate of a global target HTTPS proxy by running:

        $ gcloud compute target-https-proxies update PROXY_NAME \
            --ssl-certificates=SSL_CERTIFIFCATE

    Update the URL map of a global target HTTPS proxy by running:

        $ gcloud compute target-https-proxies update PROXY_NAME \
            --url-map=URL_MAP --region=REGION_NAME

    Update the SSL certificate of a global target HTTPS proxy by running:

        $ gcloud compute target-https-proxies update PROXY_NAME \
            --ssl-certificates=SSL_CERTIFIFCATE --region=REGION_NAME

POSITIONAL ARGUMENTS
     NAME
        Name of the target HTTPS proxy to update.

FLAGS
     --quic-override=QUIC_OVERRIDE
        Controls whether load balancer may negotiate QUIC with clients. QUIC is
        a new transport which reduces latency compared to that of TCP. See
        https://www.chromium.org/quic for more details. QUIC_OVERRIDE must be
        one of:

         DISABLE
            Disallows load balancer to negotiate QUIC with clients.
         ENABLE
            Allows load balancer to negotiate QUIC with clients.
         NONE
            Allows Google to control when QUIC is rolled out.

     --ssl-certificates=SSL_CERTIFICATE,[...]
        References to at most 15 SSL certificate resources that are used for
        server-side authentication. The first SSL certificate in this list is
        considered the primary SSL certificate associated with the load
        balancer. The SSL certificates must exist and cannot be deleted while
        referenced by a target HTTPS proxy.

     --url-map=URL_MAP
        A reference to a URL map resource. A URL map defines the mapping of
        URLs to backend services. Before you can refer to a URL map, you must
        create the URL map. To delete a URL map that a target proxy is
        referring to, you must first delete the target HTTPS proxy.

     At most one of these can be specified:

       --clear-ssl-policy
          Removes any attached SSL policy from the HTTPS proxy.

       --ssl-policy=SSL_POLICY
          A reference to an SSL policy resource that defines the server-side
          support for SSL features and affects the connections between clients
          and the HTTPS proxy load balancer. The SSL policy must exist and
          cannot be deleted while referenced by a target HTTPS proxy.

     At most one of these can be specified:

       --global
          If set, the target HTTPS proxy is global.

       --region=REGION
          Region of the target HTTPS proxy to update. If not specified, you
          might be prompted to select a region (interactive mode only).

          To avoid prompting when this flag is omitted, you can set the
          compute/region property:

              $ gcloud config set compute/region REGION

          A list of regions can be fetched by running:

              $ gcloud compute regions list

          To unset the property, run:

              $ gcloud config unset compute/region

          Alternatively, the region can be stored in the environment variable
          CLOUDSDK_COMPUTE_REGION.

     At most one of these can be specified:

       --global-ssl-certificates
          If set, the ssl certificates are global.

       --ssl-certificates-region=SSL_CERTIFICATES_REGION
          Region of the ssl certificates to operate on. If not specified, you
          might be prompted to select a region (interactive mode only).

          To avoid prompting when this flag is omitted, you can set the
          compute/region property:

              $ gcloud config set compute/region REGION

          A list of regions can be fetched by running:

              $ gcloud compute regions list

          To unset the property, run:

              $ gcloud config unset compute/region

          Alternatively, the region can be stored in the environment variable
          CLOUDSDK_COMPUTE_REGION.

     At most one of these can be specified:

       --global-url-map
          If set, the URL map is global.

       --url-map-region=URL_MAP_REGION
          Region of the URL map to operate on. Overrides the default
          compute/region property value for this command invocation.

GCLOUD WIDE FLAGS
    These flags are available to all commands: --access-token-file, --account,
    --billing-project, --configuration, --flags-file, --flatten, --format,
    --help, --impersonate-service-account, --log-http, --project, --quiet,
    --trace-token, --user-output-enabled, --verbosity.

    Run $ gcloud help for details.

NOTES
    These variants are also available:

        $ gcloud alpha compute target-https-proxies update

        $ gcloud beta compute target-https-proxies update

