About environments and environment groups

This page applies to Apigee and Apigee hybrid.

View Apigee Edge documentation.

This section describes environments and environment groups.

Overview

An Apigee environment is a software environment, within an organization, for creating and deploying API proxies. You must deploy an API proxy to an environment before it can be accessed. You can deploy an API proxy to a single environment or to multiple environments.

Each environment is subject to limits on the number of API proxies, shared flows, and other resources that can be deployed to it. These limits vary based on the Apigee organization type (Subscription, Pay-as-you-go, or hybrid) that uses the environment. For more detailed information, see the Limits documentation.

An environment group (sometimes called an envgroup in the Apigee API) is the basic mechanism for defining the way requests are routed to individual environments. You define hostnames on your environment groups (not on individual environments), and Apigee routes requests to the environments within a group using those hostname definitions.

An environment must be a member of at least one environment group before you can access proxies deployed within it. In other words, you must assign an environment to a group before you can use it.

The logical grouping of environments by environment group provides the following benefits:

  • Centralized hostname management: Environment groups provide a centralized place to manage hostnames.
  • Aggregate insights: With groups, you can analyze errors by looking at reports for an entire environment group at once rather than individual environments.
  • Conflict avoidance: By grouping environments, you can ensure that the base paths for your deployed proxies exist under the same hostname.

Supported deployment types

Apigee supports the following deployment types in an environment:

Type Description
Proxy Develop and test your API proxies in your Apigee development environments, and then deploy them to Apigee integration test and production environments. See Deploying an API proxy.
Archive Develop and test your programmable API proxies using Apigee in VS Code.

Summary of prevented actions with archive deployment

When you enable archive deployment in an Apigee environment, you will be prevented from performing the following actions within the environment to prevent conflicts:

  • In the Apigee UI, you cannot view, confirm deployment status, or manage your archive deployments, as described Deploying an API proxy, or use the Debug UI as described in Using Debug. As a workaround, you can use gcloud or the API to List all archive deployments in an environment and use the Debug API.
  • You cannot create, update, or delete resource files or target servers using the Apigee UI, API, or gcloud.
  • At this time, Google Authentication using Service Accounts is not supported.

If you attempt to perform any of the prevented actions listed above, the action will fail with the following error message:

FAILED_PRECONDITION

Proxy deployment units

Proxy deployment units count proxies and shared flows deployed to environments per region.

These are the deployment unit types:

  • Standard proxy deployment units count the number of currently deployed proxies that qualify as Standard proxies.
  • Extensible proxy deployment units count the number of currently deployed proxies that qualify as Extensible proxies.
  • Shared flow deployment units count the number of deployed shared flow.

Your usage might be subject to deployments quota, which is a limit on how many deployment units you can use at a time. See your entitlements (Pay-as-you-go or Subscription 2024) for details. For information on system limits, see Max proxy deployment units per instance.

For more information on viewing proxy deployment unit usage and deployments quota details for your organization, see View proxy deployment usage.

Environment types

For Pay-as-you-go users, when you create an environment you will select the environment type: Base, Intermediate, or Comprehensive. Features, functionality, and costs associated with the environment depend on the environment type. See Pay-as-you-go environment types and Pay-as-you-go entitlements for more information.

For Subscription plans, your environment type is always Comprehensive and you do not need to know about environment types.

Forward proxying

Apigee supports forwarding traffic to a specified URI. This feature applies at the environment level and can be used to direct traffic to the internet after initial processing in a proxy.

Incoming requests to proxies in the configured environment process for any included policies (see Forward proxying feature support) and then forward using HTTP to the new URI.

Changes made to the forward proxy setting of an environment are effective immediately for new requests only. Requests already processing complete with the setting that was in place when the request was received.

For instructions to configure forward proxying, see Configure forward proxying in an environment.

Forward proxying feature support

Not all generally available proxy features have the same availability or applicability with forward proxying.

Apigee does not currently support Basic Authentication with forward proxying, except in Apigee Hybrid.

This table shows support for additional functionality:

Feature or policy Supported/applicable for forward proxying?
Target Endpoints Yes
HTTP Health Check Yes
Service Callouts Yes
HTTP calls via JavaScript Yes
Integration targets Yes
Proxy chaining, via local loopbacks No
Publishing messages No
Cloud logging No
Communication with Synchronizer No
Message logging via Syslog No

Forward proxying limitations

GoogleToken via an external audience is currently not supported with forward proxying.

Key points

The following table lists important points to remember about environments, organizations, and environment groups:

Element Rules
Organizations
  • Can contain multiple environment groups
  • Must have at least one environment group
Environments
  • Must be in at least one environment group
  • Can be in more than one group
  • Share hostnames with all other environments in the same group
  • Can be used to forward traffic to a specified URI
Environment Types
  • Determine the functionality available in and with that environment
  • Determine the pricing for the environment

(See Environment types.)

Environment Groups
  • Can have multiple hostnames
  • Contain one or more environments
  • Hostnames assigned to a group must be unique to that group (they cannot be used by other groups)

Examples

The following sections show common ways in which environments are structured within environment groups.

One environment group and one environment

The simplest structure is a single environment group with a single environment in it. This is common for organizations that are currently evaluating the product or have not yet set up testing or analytics infrastructure, nor have any proxies deployed in production.

Multiple environments in a single environment group

An environment group can contain multiple environments. In the example below, there is a single environment group, prod-group, which contains three environments, cart-prod, catalog-prod, and payment-prod.

Hostnames defined at the environment group level.

The environment group has a single hostname, example.com. You can use the hostname to route requests to a proxy deployed in any of the environments. Note that hostnames are defined on the environment group level: they do not route to a specific environment.

See Working with environment groups to learn how to create this environment group.

Restricting routing to a single environment

In the previous example, requests can be routed to proxies in all three environments by a single hostname. If you want to restrict access to proxies in a single environment, say catalog-prod, create another environment group that contains only the environment catalog-prod. Then a hostname defined for that environment group can only access catalog-prod.

In the example below, the hostname catalog.example.com, for the environment group catalog-prod-group, can only route requests to proxies in the environment catalog-prod.

Environment group with a single environment.

 

Ready to create a group?

Open the Console

 

 

To learn more about environments:

Keep Reading

 

 

To learn more about environment groups:

Keep Reading

 

Routing and base paths

In a simple configuration, a request to a deployed API proxy is made up of a hostname, base path, and the name of an API resource; for example:

https://www.example.com/shopping/cart/addItem
        |_____________| |___________| |_____|
               |             |           |
            hostname      basepath     resource

You define hostnames on the environment group so that multiple environments can share them. Basepaths and API resources are defined on the API proxy.

For more information about base paths and API resources, start with Understanding routes. In addition, check out the Flow configuration reference and Flow variables reference to gain a greater understanding of how these pieces fit together.

Hostnames

When you create an environment group, you attach one or more hostnames to that group. For example, you might have the following environment groups, each with its own hostnames:

Environment Group Name
(Environments)
prod-group

(catalog-prod
cart-prod
pymnt-prod)
dev-group

(dev-env)
test-group

(test-env)
Hostnames catalog.example.com
payment.example.com
dev.example.com test.example.com

You define base paths on the proxy when you create it.

When you deploy a proxy to an environment within the group, the hostname plus the base path and the resource name together define the endpoint of an API request to that proxy.

You can define more than one hostname on an environment group. They can all be used to call any proxy deployed to any environment in the group. For example, catalog.example.com/proxy1 and payment.example.com/proxy1 will both call the proxy1 resource if the hostnames catalog.example.com and payment.example.com are defined on the same environment group.

Routing example

For example:

  • The prod-group environment group contains the following environments:

    • catalog-prod
    • cart-prod
    • pymnt-prod
  • The prod-group has the following hostnames defined on it:

    • catalog.example.com
    • payment.example.com
  • The following proxies are deployed to these environments:

    • The catalog proxy on catalog-prod with a base path of /catalog
    • The cart proxy on cart-prod with a base path of /catalog/cart
    • The payment proxy on pymnt-prod with a base path of /payment

This creates the following endpoints:

  • catalog.example.com/catalog routes to the catalog proxy in the catalog-prod environment.
  • catalog.example.com/catalog/cart routes to the cart proxy in the cart-prod environment.
  • payment.example.com/payment routes to the payment proxy in the pymnt-prod environment.

The following example shows that the requests are routed to different proxies that are deployed to environments within the group, matching any of the hostnames and the base path:

API requests are routed to different environments within the group based on the hostname
  and base path

Shared environments and routing

An environment can belong to multiple environment groups. If you deploy a proxy to such an environment, the proxy will have a multiple addresses, one for each environment group the environment belongs to. This is useful if a customer has wildcard certificates (like *.example.com) for multiple partners.

For example:

  • shared-env belongs to two environment groups:
    • partner-1 with host alias api.partner-1.com
    • partner-2 with host alias api.partner-2.com
  • Proxy foo is deployed to shared-env with a base path /foo. Because shared-env is shared by both environment groups, foo has two addresses:
    • api.partner-1.com/foo
    • api.partner-2.com/foo

Note that both of the hostnames route to the same environment. This gives each environment group a unique domain name. For Apigee hybrid, this scenario can use mTLS with a different certificate for each partner.

About environment scope

The organization provides scope for some Apigee capabilities. For example, key-value-map (KVM) data can be made available at the organization level, meaning that API proxies deployed to any environment within that organization can access the same KVM data.

Similarly, some capabilities can be scoped to environments or environment groups within the organization. For example, Apigee analytics data is partitioned by a combination of organization, environment, and (eventually) environment group.

Considerations

Every deployment to an environment has the potential to affect the routing of traffic for every environment group to which that environment is attached. When new basepaths are added, they may start capturing entirely new traffic, or they may start capturing a subset of existing traffic already being handled by an existing deployment.

Similarly, when basepaths are removed, they may correspond to endpoints that no longer receive any traffic, or they may cause existing traffic to be rerouted to a different proxy. When traffic is rerouted, it may be to a proxy in the same environment, or when multiple environments share a single environment group, it may be to a proxy in a different environment.

The total number of API proxy basepaths added to an environment, or environment group, should also be considered. For optimal performance, Apigee recommends using no more than 3,000 API proxy basepaths per Apigee environment or environment group. Exceeding this recommendation can result in increased latency for all new and existing API proxy deployments.

Additional resources

The following information describes how to manage your environments and environment groups: