- 0.59.0 (latest)
- 0.58.0
- 0.56.0
- 0.54.0
- 0.53.0
- 0.50.0
- 0.49.0
- 0.48.0
- 0.46.0
- 0.45.0
- 0.44.0
- 0.43.0
- 0.42.0
- 0.41.0
- 0.40.0
- 0.39.0
- 0.38.0
- 0.37.0
- 0.35.0
- 0.34.0
- 0.33.0
- 0.32.0
- 0.31.0
- 0.30.0
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- 0.28.0
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- 0.26.0
- 0.25.0
- 0.23.0
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google-cloud-confidentialcomputing overview (0.16.0)
Key Reference Links
Protect data in-use with Confidential VMs, Confidential GKE, Confidential Dataproc, and Confidential Space.
Confidential Computing API Product Reference | GitHub Repository (includes samples) | Maven artifact |
Getting Started
In order to use this library, you first need to go through the following steps:
- Install a JDK (Java Development Kit)
- Select or create a Cloud Platform project
- Enable billing for your project
- Enable the API
- Set up authentication
Use the Confidential Computing API for Java
To ensure that your project uses compatible versions of the libraries
and their component artifacts, import com.google.cloud:libraries-bom
and use
the BOM to specify dependency versions. Be sure to remove any versions that you
set previously. For more information about
BOMs, see Google Cloud Platform Libraries BOM
.
Which version should I use?
For this library, we recommend using API version v1 for new applications.
Each Cloud Java client library may contain multiple packages. Each package containing a version number in its name corresponds to a published version of the service.
We recommend using the latest stable version for new production applications, which can be identified by the largest numeric version that does not contain a suffix.
For example, if a client library has two packages: v1
and v2alpha
, then the latest stable version is v1
.
If you use an unstable release, breaking changes may be introduced when upgrading.
You can read more about Cloud API versioning strategy here
.