.NET idiomatic client libraries for Google Cloud Platform services.
This repository contains code for the following client libraries. Each package name links to the documentation for that package.
If you need support for other Google APIs, check out the Google .NET API Client library
- getting-started-dotnet - A quickstart and tutorial that demonstrates how to build a complete web application using Cloud Datastore, Cloud Storage, and Cloud Pub/Sub and deploy it to Google Compute Engine.
Most Google Cloud Libraries for .NET require a project ID. If you don't remember yours (or haven't created a project yet), navigate to the Google Developers Console to view your project ID (or create a new project and then get the ID). Once done, record the value and make sure to pass it as a parameter to the methods that require it.
Every API call needs to be authenticated. In order to successfully make a call, first ensure that the necessary Google Cloud APIs are enabled for your project and that you've downloaded the right set of keys (if it applies to you) as explained in the authentication document.
Next, choose a method for authenticating API requests from within your project:
- When using
google-cloud-dotnet
libraries from within Compute/App Engine, no additional authentication steps are necessary. - When using
google-cloud-dotnet
libraries elsewhere, you can do one of the following:-
Define the environment variable GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS to be the location of the key. For example:
set GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS=/path/to/my/key.json
-
If running locally for development/testing, you can authenticate using the Google Cloud SDK. Download the SDK if you haven't already, then login by running the following in the command line:
gcloud auth application-default login
-
See the Supported Platforms documentation for details on where the Google Cloud Libraries for .NET are supported.
The Google Cloud Client Libraries for .NET follow Semantic Versioning.
The version number in the package name (and .NET namespace) represents the version of the underlying API; the version number for the package itself indicates the status of the client library.
See the Versioning documentation for more details.
Apache 2.0 - See LICENSE for more information.