Manage Java packages

This page describes adding, viewing, and deleting Java packages.

If you want to use sbt as a build tool for Scala and Java instead of using Maven or Gradle, there is a community-created sbt plugin available. This documentation does not describe configuration or usage of Scala clients.

Before you begin

  1. If the target repository does not exist, create a new repository.
  2. Verify that you have the required permissions for the repository.
  3. Verify that you have configured authentication. If you are using an access token, make sure that you refresh the token before connecting to the repository.
  4. (Optional) Configure defaults for gcloud commands.

Required roles

To get the permissions that you need to manage packages, ask your administrator to grant you the following IAM roles on the repository:

For more information about granting roles, see Manage access to projects, folders, and organizations.

You might also be able to get the required permissions through custom roles or other predefined roles.

Adding packages

Repository modes: Standard

To add packages to the repository:

Maven

Use mvn deploy and mvn release to add packages to the repository.

To successfully deploy a Maven project that references a parent, the project must include the Artifact Registry Wagon provider in a core extensions file as described in the authentication instructions.

Use mvn deploy:deploy-file to upload artifacts that were built outside of Maven.

For example, this example command deploys example/external.jar and its project file example/pom.xml to the repository us-central1-maven.pkg.dev/my-project/my-repo

mvn deploy:deploy-file \
-Durl=artifactregistry://us-central1-maven.pkg.dev/my-project/my-repo \
-DpomFile=example/pom.xml -Dfile=example/external.jar

To configure integration with Cloud Build, see Integrating with Cloud Build.

Gradle

To successfully publish to the repository, your build.gradle file must include a publications section that defines files to upload.

Use the gradle publish command to upload a package to the repository.

Viewing packages and versions

Repository modes: standard, remote

To view packages and package versions using the Google Cloud console or gcloud:

Console

  1. Open the Repositories page in the Google Cloud console.

    Open the Repositories page

  2. In the repository list, click the appropriate repository.

    The Packages page lists the packages in the repository.

  3. Click a package to view versions of the package.

gcloud

To list packages in a repository, run the following command:

gcloud artifacts packages list [--repository=REPOSITORY] [--location=LOCATION]

Where

  • REPOSITORY is the name of the repository. If you configured a default repository, you can omit this flag to use the default.
  • LOCATION is a regional or multi-regional location. Use this flag to view repositories in a specific location. If you configured a default location, you can omit this flag to use the default.

To view versions of a package, run the following command:

gcloud artifacts versions list --package=PACKAGE \
    [--repository=REPOSITORY] [--location=LOCATION]

Where

  • PACKAGE is the ID of the package or fully qualified identifier for the package.
  • REPOSITORY is the name of the repository. If you configured a default repository, you can omit this flag to use the default.
  • LOCATION is a regional or multi-regional location. Use this flag to view repositories in a specific location. If you configured a default location, you can omit this flag to use the default.

For remote repositories, the returned list should include all direct and transitive dependencies.

Listing files

Repository modes: standard, remote

You can list files in a repository, files in all versions of a specified package, or files in a specific version of a package.

For all the following commands, you can set a maximum number of files to return by adding the --limit flag to the command.

To list all files in the default project, repository, and location when the default values are configured:

gcloud artifacts files list

To list files in a specified project, repository, and location, run the command:

gcloud artifacts files list \
    --project=PROJECT \
    --repository=REPOSITORY \
    --location=LOCATION

To list files for all versions of a specific package:

gcloud artifacts files list \
    --project=PROJECT \
    --repository=REPOSITORY \
    --location=LOCATION \
    --package=PACKAGE

To list files for a specific package version:

gcloud artifacts files list \
    --project=PROJECT \
    --repository=REPOSITORY \
    --location=LOCATION \
    --package=PACKAGE \
    --version=VERSION

Replace the following values:

  • LOCATION: the regional or multi-regional location of the repository.
  • PROJECT: your Google Cloud project ID. If your project ID contains a colon (:), see Domain-scoped projects.
  • REPOSITORY: the name of the repository where the image is stored.
  • PACKAGE: the name of the package.
  • VERSION: the version of the package.

Examples

Consider the following package information:

  • Project: my-project
  • Repository: my-repo
  • Repository location: us-west1
  • Package: my-app

The following command lists all files in the repository my-repo in the location us-west1 within the default project:

gcloud artifacts files list \
    --location=us-west1 \
    --repository=my-repo
The following command lists files in version 1.0 of the package.

gcloud artifacts files list \
    --project=my-project \
    --location=us-west1 \
    --repository=my-repo \
    --package=my-app \
    --version=1.0

Downloading packages

Repository modes: standard, remote, virtual

To download an artifact as a part of your build, you declare the artifact as a dependency.

Maven

  1. Declare the packages you want to download in the project pom.xml file. The following example declares version 1.0 of the package artifact as a dependency.

    <dependencies>
        <dependency>
            <groupId>group</groupId>
            <artifactId>artifact</artifactId>
            <version>1.0</version>
        </dependency>
    </dependencies>
    

    To learn more about Maven dependencies, see the Maven introduction to dependencies and dependency reference.

  2. Build the Java project.

    mvn compile
    

Gradle

  1. Declare the packages you want to download in the project build.gradle file. The following example declares version 1.0 of the package artifact as an external compile dependency.

    To learn more about Gradle dependencies, see the Gradle documentation.

    dependencies {
        compile group: 'group', name: 'artifact', version: '1.0'
    }
    
  2. Build the Java project.

    gradle build
    

For standard repositories, you download a package directly from the repository.

For a remote repository, you download a cached copy of the package and its dependencies. If a cached copy does not exist, the remote repository downloads the package from the upstream source and caches it before serving it to you. You can verify that the remote repository retrieved the packages from the upstream source by viewing the list of packages in the repository.

For a virtual repository, Artifact Registry searches upstream repositories for the requested package.

  • Upstream remote repositories will download and cache the requested package if a cached copy does not exist. Virtual repositories only serve requested packages, they do not store them.
  • If you request a version that is available in more than one upstream repository, Artifact Registry chooses an upstream repository to use based on the priority settings configured for the virtual repository.

For example, consider a virtual repository with the following priority settings for upstream repositories:

  • main-repo: Priority set to 100
  • secondary-repo1: Priority set to 80.
  • secondary-repo2: Priority set to 80.
  • test-repo: Priority set to 20.

main-repo has the highest priority value, so the virtual repository always searches it first.

Both secondary-repo1 and secondary-repo2 have priority set to 80. If a requested package is not available in main-repo, Artifact Registry searches these repositories next. Since they both have the same priority value, Artifact Registry can choose to serve a package from either repository if the version is available in both of them.

test-repo has is lowest priority value and will serve a stored artifact if none of the other upstream repositories has it.

Deleting packages and versions

Repository modes: standard, remote

You can delete a package and all its versions, or delete a specific version.

  • Once you delete a package, you cannot undo the action.
  • For remote repositories, only the cached copy of the package is deleted. The upstream source is unaffected. If you delete a cached package, Artifact Registry will download and cache it again the next time the repository receives a request for the same package version.

Before you delete a package or package version, verify that any you have communicated or addressed any important dependencies on it.

To delete a package:

Console

  1. Open the Repositories page in the Google Cloud console.

    Open the Repositories page

  2. In the repository list, click the appropriate repository.

    The Packages page lists the packages in the repository.

  3. Select the package that you want to delete.

  4. Click DELETE.

  5. In the confirmation dialog box, click DELETE.

gcloud

Run the following command:

gcloud artifacts packages delete PACKAGE \
    [--repository=REPOSITORY] [--location=LOCATION] [--async]

Replace the following:

  • PACKAGE is the name of the package in the repository.
  • REPOSITORY is the name of the repository. If you configured a default repository, then you can omit this flag to use the default.
  • LOCATION is the regional or multi-regional location of the repository. Use this flag to view repositories in a specific location. If you configured a default location, then you can omit this flag to use the default.

The --async flag causes the command to return immediately, without waiting for the operation in progress to complete.

To delete versions of a package:

Console

  1. Open the Repositories page in the Google Cloud console.

    Open the Repositories page

  2. In the repository list, click the appropriate repository.

    The Packages page lists the packages in the repository.

  3. Click a package to view versions of that package.

  4. Select versions that you want to delete.

  5. Click DELETE.

  6. In the confirmation dialog box, click DELETE.

gcloud

Run the following command:

gcloud artifacts versions delete VERSION \
    --package=PACKAGE \
    [--repository=REPOSITORY] [--location=LOCATION] \
    [--async]

Replace the following:

  • VERSION is the name of the version to delete.
  • PACKAGE is the name of the package in the repository.
  • REPOSITORY is the name of the repository. If you configured a default repository, then you can omit this flag to use the default.
  • LOCATION is the regional or multi-regional location of the repository. Use this flag to view repositories in a specific location. If you configured a default location, then you can omit this flag to use the default.

The --async flag causes the command to return immediately, without waiting for the operation in progress to complete.

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