/

Google Cloud Storage

&

GitHub

Integrate Google Cloud Storage and GitHub

Connect Google Cloud Storage and GitHub nodes in your workflow. Integrate with any tool or database and ship powerful backend logic and APIs instantly - No code required!

Node stack

Supported Google Cloud Storage and GitHub Nodes

Add any other tools or your preferred database nodes. If an integration is not available generate your own using AI

Create File

Create a file with the given content, creating the folder if it doesn't exist

Delete File

Checks if a file exists in your GCP storage bucket and deletes it

Delete GCP Folder

Deletes a folder in GCP Storage if it exists

File Rename

Checks if a file exists at a given path in GCP storage and renames it

Generate Public Download URL

Generate a publicly accessible download URL from a Google Cloud Storage file path.

List GCP Storage Files

List files in the specified GCP storage bucket directory

Move File

Checks if a file exists in the Google Cloud Storage and if it does, moves it to a different location.

Move Folder

Check if a folder exists in the GCP storage and move it along with its contents to a different path.

Rename GCP Folder

Renames a given folder in Google Cloud Storage if it exists.

Upload Base64 File

Uploads a Base64 file to Google Cloud Storage and returns the public URL

Upload File from External URL

Uploads a file from an external URL to GCP Storage and returns its public URL

Upload Text to File

Uploads a text content to a specified GCP storage bucket and returns the file's public URL

Zip GCP Folder

Zips an existing folder in GCP storage and returns a download url.

GitHub Trigger

Creates a repository webhook on GitHub. In other words, this workflow will be executed when there is an event on the provided repository.

Add Labels to Issues

Appends the provided labels to a Github PR/Issue using Octokit

Commit File - OAuth

Commit a file to a GitHub repository using a personal access token, repository name, branch, file name, and file content.

Count Open Issues

Gets the number of open issues excluding pull requests in a public repository using Octokit library

Create Branch

Create a new branch on Github using Octokit with personal access token, repository, base branch, and new branch name

Create Branch - OAuth

Create a new branch on Github using Octokit with personal access token, repository, base branch, and new branch name

Create Pull Request

Create a pull request on GitHub using Octokit

Create Pull Request - OAuth

Create a new pull request on Github

Fetch Commits Since Last Release

Fetches commits and pull requests merged since the last release using Octokit

Fetch GitHub User

Fetches a GitHub user by username

Get File Content

Fetches the content of a file from a GitHub repository.

Get Issue

Fetch data of a specific issue or PR using octokit library

Get Issue - OAuth

Fetches a specific issue from a GitHub repository

Get Issue Labels

Fetches the existing labels in a Github repository using Octokit

Get Issue Labels - OAuth

Fetches labels of a GitHub repository

Get User - OAuth

Fetches a GitHub user by username

Rename Branch - OAuth

Renames a Github branch

Quick start

How to integrate Google Cloud Storage and GitHub

Step 1 — Add the nodes to your workflow

Create a new workflow in BuildShip, click “Add node”, and select the Google Cloud Storage and GitHub actions you want to use.

Step 2 — Configure each node

Go to each node to authenticate (or add your API key) and fill in the required parameters.

Step 3 — Connect the nodes

Each node in BuildShip can connect to others by using their output variables. When you reference a variable from one node in another, BuildShip automatically links them in the workflow.

Step 4 — Test your workflow

Define your starting data in the Inputs node and choose what to do with the result in the Flow Output node. Finally, run a test to see your workflow in action.

blog posts & tutorials

Recommended Reads

Below are recommneded blogs that will help in your journey