Region ID
The REGION_ID
is an abbreviated code that Google assigns
based on the region you select when you create your app. The code does not
correspond to a country or province, even though some region IDs may appear
similar to commonly used country and province codes. For apps created after
February 2020, REGION_ID.r
is included in
App Engine URLs. For existing apps created before this date, the
region ID is optional in the URL.
Learn more about region IDs.
Learn how to run your application locally, deploy it, and test on App Engine.
Running locally
To test your application's functionality before deploying, run your application
in your local environment with the development tools that you usually use. For
example, the
go run
command.
Before deploying your application
Before you can deploy your application:
- The Owner of the Google Cloud project must enable App Engine.
- You must ensure that your user account includes the required privileges.
Deploying your application
Deploy your application to App Engine using the
gcloud app deploy
command.
During deployment, the Cloud Build service builds a container image of your application to run in the App Engine standard environment. The builds are created in the app's region. Learn more in Managing build images.
To programmatically deploy your apps, use the Admin API.
Deploying a service
You deploy your application to App Engine by deploying versions of your application's services and each of their configuration files.
To deploy a version of your application's service, run the following command
from the directory where the app.yaml
file of your service is located:
gcloud app deploy
Specifying no files with the command deploys only the app.yaml
file in your
current directory. By default, the deploy
command generates a unique ID for
the version that you deploy, deploys the version to the
Google Cloud project you configured the Google Cloud CLI to use,
and routes all traffic to the new version.
You can change the default behavior of the command by targeting specific files or including additional parameters:
- To deploy the other configuration files of your service, you must target and
deploy each file separately. For example:
gcloud app deploy cron.yaml gcloud app deploy dispatch.yaml gcloud app deploy index.yaml
- To specify a custom version ID, use the
--version
flag. - To prevent traffic from being automatically routed to the new version, use
the
--no-promote
flag. - To deploy to a specific Google Cloud project, use the
--project
flag.
For example, to deploy the service defined by the app.yaml
file to a specific
Google Cloud project, assign it a custom version ID, and prevent traffic
from being routed to the new version:
gcloud app deploy --project PROJECT_ID --version VERSION_ID --no-promote
For more information about this command, see the gcloud app deploy
reference.
Deploying multiple services
You use the same deployment command for deploying or updating the multiple services that make up your application.
To deploy multiple services, separately deploy each service's app.yaml
file. You can specify multiple files with a single gcloud app deploy
command:
gcloud app deploy service1/app.yaml service2/app.yaml
Requirements for deploying multiple services
- You must initially deploy a version of your application to the
default
service before you can create and deploy subsequent services. - The ID of each of your services must be specified in their corresponding
app.yaml
configuration files. To specify the service ID, include theservice
element definition in each configuration file. By default, excluding this element definition from your configuration file deploys the version to thedefault
service.
Viewing build logs
Cloud Build streams build and deploy logs that are viewable in the Cloud Build history section of the Google Cloud console. To view builds in the app's region, use the Region drop-down menu at the top of the page to choose the region you would like to filter by.
Ignoring files
You can use a .gcloudignore
file to specify files and directories that will
not be uploaded to App Engine when you deploy your services. This is
useful for ignoring build artifacts and other files that do not need to be
uploaded with your deployment.
Managing build images
Each time you deploy a new version, a container image is created using the Cloud Build service. That container image is built in the app's region, and then runs in the App Engine standard environment.
Built container images are stored in the app-engine-tmp/app
folder
in Container Registry. You can
download these images to keep or run elsewhere. Once deployment is complete,
App Engine no longer needs the
container images. Note that they are not automatically deleted, so to avoid
reaching your storage quota, you can safely delete any images you don't need.
For more information about managing images in Container Registry, see the
Container Registry documentation.
Viewing your application
After you deploy your application to App Engine, you can run the
following command to launch your browser and view it at
https://PROJECT_ID.REGION_ID.r.appspot.com
:
gcloud app browse
Testing on App Engine before shifting traffic
Before configuring a new version to receive traffic, you can test it on
App Engine. For example, to test a new version of your default
service:
Deploy your new version, but prevent traffic from being automatically routed to the new version:
gcloud app deploy --no-promote
Access your new version by navigating to the following URL:
https://VERSION_ID-dot-default-dot-PROJECT_ID.REGION_ID.r.appspot.com
Now you can test your new version in the App Engine runtime environment. You can debug your application by viewing its logs. For more information, see Writing Application Logs.
App Engine routes requests sent to
https://PROJECT_ID.REGION_ID.r.appspot.com
to the version previously configured to receive traffic.When you want to send traffic to the new version, use the Google Cloud console to migrate traffic:
Select the version you just deployed and click Migrate traffic.
You can use the same process to test new versions of other services by replacing
default
in the URL with your service's name:
https://VERSION-dot-SERVICE-dot-PROJECT_ID.REGION_ID.r.appspot.com
For more information about targeting specific services and versions, see How Requests are Routed.
Using build environment variables
You can also set build environment variables for runtimes that support Google Cloud's buildpacks.
Build environment variables are key/value pairs deployed alongside an app that
let you pass configuration information
to buildpacks. For example, you might want to customize compiler options. You
can add or remove these build environment variables by configuring the
build_env_variables
field in your app.yaml
file.
Using the local development server
You can use dev_appserver
to run your apps locally to simulate your application running in
production App Engine. This development server partially simulates the
environment in which your application runs, allowing you to test apps written for
any of the standard environment runtimes.
Since Go 1.11 has reached the end of support, you can no longer use the
latest version of dev_appserver.py
to locally run your
applications. To continue using dev_appserver.py
, follow the instructions in
Using the local development server.
Running the local development server
After you create the
app.yaml
configuration
file for your app, you can start the local development server with the
dev_appserver.py
command to run your app locally.
To obtain access credentials for your user account, run:
gcloud auth login
Allow your local application to temporarily use your user credentials for API access:
gcloud auth application-default login
To start the local development server:
In the directory that contains your
app.yaml
configuration file, run thedev_appserver.py
command and specify your project ID and path to yourapp.yaml
file:python2 DEVAPPSERVER_ROOT/google_appengine/dev_appserver.py/dev_appserver.py --application=PROJECT_ID app.yaml
To change the port, include the
--port
option:python2 DEVAPPSERVER_ROOT/google_appengine/dev_appserver.py/dev_appserver.py --application=PROJECT_ID app.yaml --port=9999
Replace DEVAPPSERVER_ROOT with the path to the folder where you extract the archived version of
devapp_server.py
. For more information about downloading and using the archived version ofdev_appserver.py
, see Using the local development server.To learn more about the
dev_appserver.py
command options, see Local development server options.As the local development server starts, it sets up a development environment that pre-installs the dependencies found in your
requirements.txt
file.The local development server is now running and listening for requests. Visit http://localhost:8080/ in your web browser to see the app in action.
If you specified a custom port with the
--port
option, remember to open your browser to that port.To stop the local server from the command line, press Control-C on your keyboard.
Detecting application runtime environment
To determine whether your code is running in production or in the local
development server, you can check the GAE_ENV
environment variable:
if os.getenv('GAE_ENV', '').startswith('standard'): # Production in the standard environment else: # Local execution.
Using the local development server with Google Cloud services
You can integrate dev_appserver
with other Google Cloud components.
Cloud client libraries
Many Cloud Client Libraries depend on the presence of the
GOOGLE_CLOUD_PROJECT
environment variable, which should be your
Google Cloud project ID. You can find its value by running the
gcloud config list project
command or looking at your project page in the
Google Cloud console.
To ensure that this environment variable is set correctly during local
development, initialize dev_appserver
using the
--application=PROJECT_ID
parameter as shown in the previous
example.
Cloud emulators
You can test your application with emulators for Cloud Datastore, Cloud Bigtable and Cloud Pub/Sub.
Auto-reloading requirements.txt
and app.yaml
changes
The local development server automatically installs dependencies found in your
requirements.txt
file. dev_appserver
also allows you to test functionality
that is configured via app.yaml
. For example, you can test your app's ability
to serve static
files. When
dev_appserver
is running, any changes to requirements.txt
and app.yaml
automatically restarts your app to reflect these changes. This may result in a
temporary delay as dependencies are downloaded and installed.
Instance management and routing in the development server
Discovering instance addresses
The local development server creates all manual scaling instances at startup. Instances for automatic and basic scaling services are managed dynamically. The server assigns a port to each service, and clients can depend on the server to load-balance and select an instance automatically. The port assignments for addressing each service appear in the server's log message stream.
Here are the ports for an app that defines three services:
INFO Starting module "default" running at: http://localhost:8084 INFO Starting module "service1" running at: http://localhost:8082 INFO Starting module "service2" running at: http://localhost:8083
When you use a service's address, for example http://localhost:8082/
, the
server creates or selects an instance of the service and sends the request to
that instance.
The server assigns unique ports to each instance of a service. You can use the admin server to discover these ports. There is a unique port for the admin server, which appears in the message log:
INFO Starting admin server at: http://localhost:8000
This address takes you to the admin server console. Click on Instances to see the dynamic state of your app's instances
A separate entry appears for each manual and basic instance. The instance numbers are links with unique port addresses for each instance. Click on the link to send a request directly to that instance.
Dispatch files
If your app includes a dispatch.yaml
file, the log messages stream includes a
dispatcher port:
INFO Starting dispatcher running at: http://localhost:8080
Requests to this port are routed according to the rules in the dispatch file.
The server does not support dispatch.yaml
file rules that include
hostnames, for example, url: "customer1.myapp.com/*"
). Rules with relative
path patterns (url: "*/fun"
, do work, so you can use URLs like
http://localhost/fun/mobile
to reach instances. The server reports an error in
the log stream if you try to start an application with a dispatch.yaml
file
that contains host-based rules.