You will see the Connect Repository panel. Complete the following
steps to connect your Bitbucket Server repository:
Region: Select a region your connection is in.
Under Select source code management provider, select Bitbucket Server.
Host connection: Select the name of your host connection from the drop-down menu.
Click Continue.
Under Select Repository, select the Bitbucket Server repositories
you wish to connect to Cloud Build.
Once you have selected your Bitbucket Server account and repositories,
read the consent disclaimer and select the checkbox next to it to indicate
that you accept the presented terms.
Click Connect to connect your repositories.
When a repository is connected, Cloud Build
configures a webhook on the repository
in your Bitbucket Server instance. The repository
then sends webhooks to invoke the
corresponding Bitbucket Server triggers when
you make changes to your repository. A
repository can also be connected multiple
times with multiple host connections.
To learn how to manage webhooks, see Manage webhooks.
To locate the webhook, you need the webhook ID. The webhook ID
for each connected repository can be found in the BitbucketServerConfig.
Enter the following command to retrieve the webhook ID:
PROJECT_NUMBER is the project number of your
Cloud project.
REGION is the region associated with your Bitbucket Server configuration.
BITBUCKET_SERVER_CONFIG_NAME is the name of your
Bitbucket Server configuration.
PROJECT_KEY is the key of your Bitbucket Server project.
If you want to connect a personal repository, your project key should
contain the tilde (~) symbol before your username. For example,
~${USERNAME}. The complete URL for a host repository may look like
https://${HOST_URI}/projects/~${USER_NAME}/repos/${REPO_SLUG}.
REPO_SLUG is the slug of your
Bitbucket Server repository.
Enter the following curl command in your terminal:
REGION is the region associated with your Bitbucket Server configuration.
OPERATION_ID is the ID of your Bitbucket Server configuration creation operation.
You can find the Operation ID in the name field of your response. The format of the name field in your response
looks like the following: projects/project-id/locations/region/operations/operation-id.
You may need to keep running the GetOperation API command until the response contains done: true, which indicates the operation is completed. If the Bitbucket Server repository is connected successfully, you can see the connected repository in the response.bitbucketServerConnectedRepositories field. Otherwise, see the error field for a detailed error report.
[[["Easy to understand","easyToUnderstand","thumb-up"],["Solved my problem","solvedMyProblem","thumb-up"],["Other","otherUp","thumb-up"]],[["Hard to understand","hardToUnderstand","thumb-down"],["Incorrect information or sample code","incorrectInformationOrSampleCode","thumb-down"],["Missing the information/samples I need","missingTheInformationSamplesINeed","thumb-down"],["Other","otherDown","thumb-down"]],["Last updated 2025-08-07 UTC."],[[["\u003cp\u003eThis page details the process of connecting a Bitbucket Server repository to Cloud Build, allowing for automated builds upon code changes.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eBefore connecting, users must enable the Cloud Build, Secret Manager, and Compute Engine APIs, and also connect a Bitbucket Server host.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eConnecting a repository can be done through the Google Cloud console, where users must select their region, source code management provider, host connection, and specific repositories.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eAlternatively, users can connect a Bitbucket Server repository using the API, which involves using a JSON template and \u003ccode\u003ecurl\u003c/code\u003e commands to configure and verify the connection.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eOnce connected, Cloud Build configures a webhook on the repository, allowing it to send webhooks that invoke triggers when changes occur, and users can further manage webhooks to learn about troubleshooting them.\u003c/p\u003e\n"]]],[],null,["# Connect to a Bitbucket Server repository\n\nThis page explains how to connect to a [Bitbucket Server](https://confluence.atlassian.com/bitbucketserver/bitbucket-data-center-and-server-documentation-776639749.html) repository\nto Cloud Build.\n\nBefore you begin\n----------------\n\n-\n\n\n Enable the Cloud Build, Secret Manager, and Compute Engine APIs.\n\n\n [Enable the APIs](https://console.cloud.google.com/flows/enableapi?apiid=cloudbuild.googleapis.com,secretmanager.googleapis.com,compute.googleapis.com&redirect=https://cloud.google.com/build/docs/automating-builds/bitbucket/connect-repo-bitbucket-server)\n\n\u003c!-- --\u003e\n\n- Follow the instructions to [connect a Bitbucket Server host](/build/docs/automating-builds/bitbucket/connect-host-bitbucket-server) before connecting repositories.\n\nConnecting to a Bitbucket Server repository\n-------------------------------------------\n\n### Console\n\nTo connect a Bitbucket Server repository to Cloud Build\nusing the Google Cloud console:\n\n1. Open the **Repositories** page in the Google Cloud console.\n\n [Open the Repositories page](https://console.cloud.google.com/cloud-build/repositories)\n2. At the top of the page, select the **1st gen** tab.\n\n3. Click **Connect Repository**.\n\n4. Select **Bitbucket Server**.\n\n You will see the **Connect Repository** panel. Complete the following\n steps to connect your Bitbucket Server repository:\n 1. **Region**: Select a region your connection is in.\n\n 2. Under **Select source code management provider** , select **Bitbucket Server**.\n\n 3. **Host connection**: Select the name of your host connection from the drop-down menu.\n\n 4. Click **Continue**.\n\n 5. Under **Select Repository**, select the Bitbucket Server repositories\n you wish to connect to Cloud Build.\n\n 6. Once you have selected your Bitbucket Server account and repositories,\n read the consent disclaimer and select the checkbox next to it to indicate\n that you accept the presented terms.\n\n 7. Click **Connect** to connect your repositories.\n\n When a repository is connected, Cloud Build\n configures a webhook on the repository\n in your Bitbucket Server instance. The repository\n then sends webhooks to invoke the\n corresponding Bitbucket Server triggers when\n you make changes to your repository. A\n repository can also be connected multiple\n times with multiple host connections.\n To learn how to manage webhooks, see [Manage webhooks](https://confluence.atlassian.com/bitbucketserver/manage-webhooks-938025878.html#Managewebhooks-troubleshootingwebhooks).\n\n To locate the webhook, you need the webhook ID. The webhook ID\n for each connected repository can be found in the `BitbucketServerConfig`.\n\n Enter the following command to retrieve the webhook ID: \n\n gcloud alpha builds enterprise-config bitbucketserver describe \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eCONFIG_NAME\u003c/var\u003e --region=\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eREGION\u003c/var\u003e\n\n Where:\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eCONFIG_NAME\u003c/var\u003e is the name of the Bitbucket Server config\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eREGION\u003c/var\u003e is the region of the Bitbucket Server host connection\n5. Click **Done** . Optionally, click **Create a trigger** to create a trigger.\n\n### API\n\nTo connect your Bitbucket Server repository to Cloud Build\nusing the API, complete the following steps:\n\n1. Use the following JSON template below to connect your repository:\n\n {\n \"parent\": \"projects/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003ePROJECT_NUMBER\u003c/var\u003e/locations/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eREGION\u003c/var\u003e/bitbucketServerConfigs/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eBITBUCKET_SERVER_CONFIG_NAME\u003c/var\u003e\",\n \"requests\": {\n \"parent\": \"projects/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003ePROJECT_NUMBER\u003c/var\u003e/locations/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eREGION\u003c/var\u003e/bitbucketServerConfigs/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eBITBUCKET_SERVER_CONFIG_NAME\u003c/var\u003e\",\n \"bitbucketServerConnectedRepository\": {\n \"parent\": \"projects/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003ePROJECT_NUMBER\u003c/var\u003e/locations/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eREGION\u003c/var\u003e/bitbucketServerConfigs/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eBITBUCKET_SERVER_CONFIG_NAME\u003c/var\u003e\",\n \"repo\": {\n \"projectKey\": \"\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003ePROJECT_KEY\u003c/var\u003e\",\n \"repoSlug\": \"\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eREPO_SLUG\u003c/var\u003e\"\n }\n }\n }\n }\n\n Where:\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003ePROJECT_NUMBER\u003c/var\u003e is the project number of your Cloud project.\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eREGION\u003c/var\u003e is the [region](/build/docs/locations) associated with your Bitbucket Server configuration.\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eBITBUCKET_SERVER_CONFIG_NAME\u003c/var\u003e is the name of your Bitbucket Server configuration.\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003ePROJECT_KEY\u003c/var\u003e is the key of your Bitbucket Server project. If you want to connect a personal repository, your project key should contain the tilde (`~`) symbol before your username. For example, `~${USERNAME}`. The complete URL for a host repository may look like `https://${HOST_URI}/projects/~${USER_NAME}/repos/${REPO_SLUG}`.\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eREPO_SLUG\u003c/var\u003e is the [slug](https://support.atlassian.com/bitbucket-cloud/docs/what-is-a-slug/) of your Bitbucket Server repository.\n2. Enter the following `curl` command in your terminal:\n\n curl -X POST -H \"Authorization: Bearer \"$(gcloud auth print-access-token) -H \"Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8\" -H \"x-goog-user-project: \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003ePROJECT_NUMBER\u003c/var\u003e\" https://cloudbuild.googleapis.com/v1/projects/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003e\u003cspan class=\"devsite-syntax-n\"\u003ePROJECT_ID\u003c/span\u003e\u003c/var\u003e/locations/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003e\u003cspan class=\"devsite-syntax-n\"\u003eREGION\u003c/span\u003e\u003c/var\u003e/bitbucketServerConfigs/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003e\u003cspan class=\"devsite-syntax-n\"\u003eBITBUCKET_SERVER_CONFIG_NAME\u003c/span\u003e\u003c/var\u003e/connectedRepositories:batchCreate -d @requests.json\n\n Where:\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003ePROJECT_NUMBER\u003c/var\u003e is your Cloud project number.\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003ePROJECT_ID\u003c/var\u003e is your Cloud project ID.\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eREGION\u003c/var\u003e is the [region](/build/docs/locations) associated with your Bitbucket Server configuration.\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eBITBUCKET_SERVER_CONFIG_NAME\u003c/var\u003e is the name of your Bitbucket Server configuration.\n\n If successful, the response body contains a newly created instance of [Operation](https://cloud.google.com/build/docs/api/reference/rest/v1/operations#Operation).\n3. Enter the following `curl` command in your terminal:\n\n curl -X GET -H \"Authorization: Bearer \"$(gcloud auth print-access-token) -H \"Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8\" -H \"x-goog-user-project: \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003ePROJECT_NUMBER\u003c/var\u003e\" https://cloudbuild.googleapis.com/v1/projects/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003e\u003cspan class=\"devsite-syntax-nt\"\u003ePROJECT_ID\u003c/span\u003e\u003c/var\u003e/locations/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003e\u003cspan class=\"devsite-syntax-nt\"\u003eREGION\u003c/span\u003e\u003c/var\u003e/operations/\u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003e\u003cspan class=\"devsite-syntax-nt\"\u003eOPERATION_ID\u003c/span\u003e\u003c/var\u003e\n\n Where:\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003ePROJECT_NUMBER\u003c/var\u003e is your Cloud project number.\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003ePROJECT_ID\u003c/var\u003e is your Cloud project ID.\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eREGION\u003c/var\u003e is the [region](/build/docs/locations) associated with your Bitbucket Server configuration.\n - \u003cvar translate=\"no\"\u003eOPERATION_ID\u003c/var\u003e is the ID of your Bitbucket Server configuration creation operation. You can find the Operation ID in the `name` field of your response. The format of the `name` field in your response looks like the following: `projects/project-id/locations/region/operations/operation-id`.\n\n You may need to keep running the `GetOperation` API command until the response contains `done: true`, which indicates the operation is completed. If the Bitbucket Server repository is connected successfully, you can see the connected repository in the `response.bitbucketServerConnectedRepositories` field. Otherwise, see the `error` field for a detailed error report.\n\nWhat's next\n-----------\n\n- Learn how to [build repositories from Bitbucket Server](/build/docs/automating-builds/bitbucket/build-repos-from-bitbucket-server).\n- Learn how to [build repositories from Bitbucket Server in a private network](/build/docs/automating-builds/bitbucket/build-repos-from-bitbucket-server-private-network).\n- Learn how to [perform blue/green deployments on Compute Engine](/build/docs/deploying-builds/deploy-compute-engine)."]]