Note: GitHub Packages is currently in beta for GitHub Enterprise Server 2.22. To join the beta for your GitHub Enterprise Server instance, use the sign-up form.
Note: This package type may not be available for your instance, because site administrators can enable or disable each supported package type. For more information, see "Configuring packages support for your enterprise."
Authenticating to GitHub Packages
You need an access token to publish, install, and delete packages.
You can use a personal access token (PAT) to authenticate to GitHub Packages or the GitHub Enterprise Server API. When you create a personal access token, you can assign the token different scopes depending on your needs. For more information about packages-related scopes for a PAT, see "About permissions for GitHub Packages."
To authenticate to a GitHub Packages registry within a GitHub Actions workflow, you can use:
GITHUB_TOKEN
to publish packages associated with the workflow repository.- a PAT to install packages associated with other private repositories (which
GITHUB_TOKEN
can't access).
For more information about GITHUB_TOKEN
used in GitHub Actions workflows, see "Authentication in a workflow." For more information about using GITHUB_TOKEN
with Gradle, see "Publishing Java packages with Gradle."
Authenticating with a personal access token
You must use a personal access token with the appropriate scopes to publish and install packages in GitHub Packages. For more information, see "About GitHub Packages."
You can authenticate to GitHub Packages with Gradle using either Gradle Groovy or Kotlin DSL by editing your build.gradle file (Gradle Groovy) or build.gradle.kts file (Kotlin DSL) file to include your personal access token. You can also configure Gradle Groovy and Kotlin DSL to recognize a single package or multiple packages in a repository.
Replace REGISTRY-URL with the URL for your instance's Maven registry. If your instance has subdomain isolation enabled, use maven.HOSTNAME
. If your instance has subdomain isolation disabled, use HOSTNAME/_registry/maven
. In either case, replace HOSTNAME with the host name of your GitHub Enterprise Server instance.
Replace USERNAME with your GitHub username, TOKEN with your personal access token, REPOSITORY with the name of the repository containing the package you want to publish, and OWNER with the name of the user or organization account on GitHub that owns the repository. Because uppercase letters aren't supported, you must use lowercase letters for the repository owner even if the GitHub user or organization name contains uppercase letters.
Note: GitHub Packages supports SNAPSHOT
versions of Apache Maven. To use the GitHub Packages repository for downloading SNAPSHOT
artifacts, enable SNAPSHOTS in the POM of the consuming project or your ~/.m2/settings.xml file. For an example, see "Configuring Apache Maven for use with GitHub Packages."
Example using Gradle Groovy for a single package in a repository
plugins {
id("maven-publish")
}
publishing {
repositories {
maven {
name = "GitHubPackages"
url = uri("https://REGISTRY-URL/OWNER/REPOSITORY")
credentials {
username = project.findProperty("gpr.user") ?: System.getenv("USERNAME")
password = project.findProperty("gpr.key") ?: System.getenv("TOKEN")
}
}
}
publications {
gpr(MavenPublication) {
from(components.java)
}
}
}
Example using Gradle Groovy for multiple packages in the same repository
plugins {
id("maven-publish") apply false
}
subprojects {
apply plugin: "maven-publish"
publishing {
repositories {
maven {
name = "GitHubPackages"
url = uri("https://REGISTRY-URL/OWNER/REPOSITORY")
credentials {
username = project.findProperty("gpr.user") ?: System.getenv("USERNAME")
password = project.findProperty("gpr.key") ?: System.getenv("TOKEN")
}
}
}
publications {
gpr(MavenPublication) {
from(components.java)
}
}
}
}
Example using Kotlin DSL for a single package in the same repository
plugins {
`maven-publish`
}
publishing {
repositories {
maven {
name = "GitHubPackages"
url = uri("https://REGISTRY-URL/OWNER/REPOSITORY")
credentials {
username = project.findProperty("gpr.user") as String? ?: System.getenv("USERNAME")
password = project.findProperty("gpr.key") as String? ?: System.getenv("TOKEN")
}
}
}
publications {
register<MavenPublication>("gpr") {
from(components["java"])
}
}
}
Example using Kotlin DSL for multiple packages in the same repository
plugins {
`maven-publish` apply false
}
subprojects {
apply(plugin = "maven-publish")
configure<PublishingExtension> {
repositories {
maven {
name = "GitHubPackages"
url = uri("https://REGISTRY-URL/OWNER/REPOSITORY")
credentials {
username = project.findProperty("gpr.user") as String? ?: System.getenv("USERNAME")
password = project.findProperty("gpr.key") as String? ?: System.getenv("TOKEN")
}
}
}
publications {
register<MavenPublication>("gpr") {
from(components["java"])
}
}
}
}
Publishing a package
By default, GitHub publishes the package to an existing repository with the same name as the package. For example, GitHub will publish a package named com.example.test
in the OWNER/test
GitHub Packages repository.
After you publish a package, you can view the package on GitHub. For more information, see "Viewing packages."
-
Authenticate to GitHub Packages. For more information, see "Authenticating to GitHub Packages."
-
After creating your package, you can publish the package.
$ gradle publish
Using a published package
To use a published package from GitHub Packages, add the package as a dependency and add the repository to your project. For more information, see "Declaring dependencies" in the Gradle documentation.
-
Authenticate to GitHub Packages. For more information, see "Authenticating to GitHub Packages."
-
Add the package dependencies to your build.gradle file (Gradle Groovy) or build.gradle.kts file (Kotlin DSL) file.
Example using Gradle Groovy:
dependencies { implementation 'com.example:package' }
Example using Kotlin DSL:
dependencies { implementation("com.example:package") }
-
Add the repository to your build.gradle file (Gradle Groovy) or build.gradle.kts file (Kotlin DSL) file.
Example using Gradle Groovy:
repositories { maven { url = uri("https://REGISTRY-URL/OWNER/REPOSITORY") credentials { username = project.findProperty("gpr.user") ?: System.getenv("USERNAME") password = project.findProperty("gpr.key") ?: System.getenv("TOKEN") } } }
Example using Kotlin DSL:
repositories { maven { url = uri("https://REGISTRY-URL/OWNER/REPOSITORY") credentials { username = project.findProperty("gpr.user") as String? ?: System.getenv("USERNAME") password = project.findProperty("gpr.key") as String? ?: System.getenv("TOKEN") } } }