A curated list of high-signal resources for Google Cloud Build, covering CI/CD, security, and modern delivery pipelines.
Awesome Cloud Build is a curated list of resources focused on Google Cloud Build, Google Cloud's managed continuous integration and delivery platform. It provides a centralized directory of documentation, tutorials, tools, and best practices for building, securing, and deploying applications using Cloud Build in 2026. The project helps users navigate the platform's modern features like private pools, Artifact Registry, and software supply chain security.
DevOps engineers, SREs, and developers using Google Cloud Platform who need to implement, optimize, or migrate CI/CD pipelines with Google Cloud Build. It's particularly valuable for teams adopting modern practices like SLSA provenance, private pools, and Cloud Deploy.
It saves significant time by aggregating high-quality, up-to-date resources from official docs, community tools, and migration guides into one place, specifically tailored for the 2026 Cloud Build ecosystem. Unlike generic lists, it focuses on signal-over-noise curation for practical implementation.
A curated list of resources about all things Google Cloud Build
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The README is explicitly updated for 2026, with sections on modern features like private pools, Artifact Registry, and SLSA provenance, ensuring relevance to current practices.
It aggregates official documentation, tutorials, tools, and community builders into a single reference, saving time for DevOps engineers navigating the Cloud Build ecosystem.
Provides specific guidance on transitioning from deprecated services like Container Registry and legacy service accounts, helping users avoid common pitfalls.
Highlights 2026-specific updates such as Cloud Build repositories (2nd gen) and Developer Connect, keeping users aligned with Google's recommended integrations.
As a curated list, it lacks interactive elements or real-time updates; users must rely on external links that may become outdated or broken over time.
The sheer number of links and resources can be daunting for newcomers, and the README assumes prior knowledge of CI/CD concepts and Google Cloud, making it less accessible.
It doesn't provide tools, code, or community features itself; users must seek external help for hands-on issues, which can slow down troubleshooting.