Artifact Registry client libraries

This page shows how to get started with the Cloud Client Libraries for the Artifact Registry API. Client libraries make it easier to access Google Cloud APIs from a supported language. Although you can use Google Cloud APIs directly by making raw requests to the server, client libraries provide simplifications that significantly reduce the amount of code you need to write.

Read more about the Cloud Client Libraries and the older Google API Client Libraries in Client libraries explained.

Artifact Registry client libraries only support control plane actions, not data plane actions. Control plane actions include repository management actions such as creating repositories, editing repository descriptions, and deleting repositories, and artifact management actions such as listing artifacts, tagging artifacts, and deleting artifacts. Data plane actions include actions such as pushing and pulling artifacts from Artifact Registry repositories.

Install the client library

Go

go get cloud.google.com/go/artifactregistry

For more information, see Setting Up a Go Development Environment.

Java

If you are using Maven, add this to your pom.xml file:

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.google.cloud</groupId>
    <artifactId>google-cloud-artifact-registry</artifactId>
    <version>1.31.0</version>
</dependency>

If you are using Gradle, add this to your dependencies:

compile group: 'com.google.cloud', name: 'google-cloud-artifact-registry', version: '1.31.0'

For more information, see Setting Up a Java Development Environment.

Node.js

npm install --save @google-cloud/artifact-registry

For more information, see Setting Up a Node.js Development Environment.

PHP

composer require google/cloud-artifact-registry

For more information, see Using PHP on Google Cloud.

Ruby

gem install google-cloud-artifact_registry-v1

For more information, see Setting Up a Ruby Development Environment.

Set up authentication

To authenticate calls to Google Cloud APIs, client libraries support Application Default Credentials (ADC); the libraries look for credentials in a set of defined locations and use those credentials to authenticate requests to the API. With ADC, you can make credentials available to your application in a variety of environments, such as local development or production, without needing to modify your application code.

For production environments, the way you set up ADC depends on the service and context. For more information, see Set up Application Default Credentials.

For a local development environment, you can set up ADC with the credentials that are associated with your Google Account:

  1. Install the Google Cloud CLI, then initialize it by running the following command:

    gcloud init
  2. If you're using a local shell, then create local authentication credentials for your user account:

    gcloud auth application-default login

    You don't need to do this if you're using Cloud Shell.

    A sign-in screen appears. After you sign in, your credentials are stored in the local credential file used by ADC.

Additional resources

Go

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for Go:

Java

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for Java:

Node.js

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for Node.js:

PHP

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for PHP:

Ruby

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for Ruby: