Manage custom sample repositories in Cloud Code for IntelliJ

A sample repository is a Git repository that contains custom samples you create that your team can use to develop applications.

This means that, within an organization or team, you can set up sample repositories with Cloud Code, custom to your organization, to offer a standard set of starter applications, services, and infrastructure configuration that others can use. This helps align new projects with your organization's preferred technical stack and standards, and encourages best practices at the beginning of the development cycle.

A sample repository can be an existing repository of sample applications you've already created or a new set of samples you'd like others to use. To import a repository with Cloud Code, you add a sample descriptor file to the repository.

When ready, sample repositories are easy to share with your team; they'll need Cloud Code set up and the Git URL of the sample repository to use. For private Git repositories, only members that have access to the repository can use the underlying custom samples.

To see an example of how a sample repository might be set up, reference this repository.

Before you begin

Make sure that Git version 2.25.0 or later is installed on your local machine.

Creating a sample repository

To use an existing repository, skip to creating a sample descriptor file. To create a new repository to use as a sample repository, follow these steps:

  1. Create a new Git repository.

    Your Git repository can be hosted remotely or live on your local machine. This example uses a new GitHub repository, 'custom-sample-repo'.

    GitHub repository creation interface with repository name field filled with 'custom-sample-repo'

  2. Add sample directories to the repository.

    Your sample directories can contain anything and be located anywhere you want in the repository. In this example, two sample directories, 'hello-world' and 'kubernetes-custom-sample', have been added to 'custom-sample-repo'.

    A readme file with instructions on how best to use your custom samples is highly recommended.

    'custom-sample-repo' with two underlying sample directories, 'hello-world' and 'kubernetes-custom-sample'

  3. Create a sample descriptor file.

    A sample descriptor file provides Cloud Code with information on your sample to properly create your application. This file must be named .cctemplate, must be located in your root directory, and must have the schema defined in the sample descriptor file schema section.

  4. Test your custom sample by following the steps to create an app from a custom sample.

Sample descriptor schema

Key Description Type
metadata Metadata used by Cloud Code to read. Conforms to the metadata schema. Metadata
templates Array of samples contained in a repository. Objects in this array must conform to the Sample Schema. Array<Sample>
name (optional) Name of the sample repository. String

Example

{
   "metadata":{
      "version":"1"
   },
   "name": "My Sample Repository",
   "templates":[
      {
         "path":"/path/to/sample1_location",
         "name":"My Sample 1",
         "description":"The first sample of its name."
      },
      {
         "path":"/path/to/sample2_location",
         "name":"My Sample 2",
         "description":"The sequel."
      }
   ]
}

Sample schema

Key Description Type
path The location of the sample in a repository.
The path is relative to the root of the repository.
String
name Name of a sample.
The name is displayed in an IDE when selecting a sample to base an application on.
String
description (optional) Description of a sample.
The description is displayed in an IDE when selecting a sample to base an application on.
String

Example

{
   "path":"path/to/sample1",
   "name":"My Sample 1",
   "description":"The first sample of its name."
}

Metadata schema

Key Description Type
version The version of the sample schema to use. The only valid version is 1. String

Example

{
   "version":"1"
}

Deleting a custom sample repository

To delete a custom sample, which removes it from the custom application selector flow and from users' machines:

  1. In the settings.json file, look up the localPath for the custom sample entry.

    "cloudcode.customApplications": [
      {
        "repoUrl": https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/cloud-code-custom-samples-example.git,
        "branchName": "",
        "localPath": "/Users/username/Library/cloud-code/custom-templates/https-github-com-google-cloud-platform-cloud-code-custom-samples-example-git"
      }
    ],
    
  2. Delete the template folder at the path.

  3. Delete the custom sample section from the settings.json file.

Deleting a custom sample repository

To delete a custom sample repository from Cloud Code:

  1. Navigate to Preferences > Tools > Cloud Code > Custom Samples.

  2. In the Custom Sample Repositories table, select the repository URL that you want to remove and click - Remove.

    Dialog to remove repo in IntelliJ

  3. In the confirmation dialog that appears, click Remove to delete the selected repository from Cloud Code.

Get support

To submit feedback or report an issue in your IntelliJ IDE, go to Tools > Cloud Code > Help / About > Submit feedback or report an issue to report an issue on GitHub, or ask a question on Stack Overflow.