Documentação do ambiente padrão do Java 8 no Google App Engine
Com o ambiente padrão do App Engine, fica mais fácil criar e implantar um aplicativo que será executado de maneira confiável sob grande carga e com grandes quantidades de dados. O aplicativo é executado no próprio ambiente, que é seguro, confiável e independente de hardware, sistema operacional ou local físico do servidor. Saiba mais
Comece seu próximo projeto com US$ 300 em créditos sem custos financeiros
Crie e teste uma prova de conceito com os créditos de teste e o uso mensal sem custos financeiros de mais de 20 produtos.
Recursos de documentação
Guias
-
Como programar tarefas com o Cron para Java 8
-
Primeiros passos: como configurar o ambiente de desenvolvimento
-
Como enviar e-mails com a API Mail
-
Como implantar um aplicativo Java
-
Como usar o Apache Maven e o plug-in do App Engine (baseado no SDK Cloud)
-
Como criar, recuperar, atualizar e excluir entidades
-
Metas e parâmetros do plug-in do Maven para App Engine (baseado no Cloud SDK)
-
Referência
-
Descritor de implantação: web.xml
-
Referência de appengine-web.xml
-
Como migrar de AppCfg para a linha de comando gcloud
-
Arquivos de configuração
-
Como configurar índices do Datastore com index.yaml
-
Referência do cron.xml para ferramentas baseadas no SDK do App Engine
-
Referência de queue.xml
-
Arquivo de configuração dispatch.yaml
-
Recursos relacionados
Vídeos relacionados
Java on Google Cloud: The enterprise, the serverless, and the native
Do you want to know your options for running Java on Google Cloud? We’ll explore various options for running workloads written using the latest Java and Jakarta EE versions on serverless offerings like Google App Engine and Google Cloud Run.
Extending support for App Engine bundled services: Part 2 (Module 22)
Serverless Migration Station is a Serverless Expeditions mini-series focused on helping developers modernize their applications running on a Google Cloud serverless compute platform. In Module 22, Google engineers Martin and Wesley continue the
Extending support for App Engine bundled services: Part 1 (Module 17)
Serverless Migration Station is a Serverless Expeditions mini-series, a set of videos focused on helping developers modernize their applications running on a Google Cloud serverless compute platform. In this Module 17 video, Google engineers Martin
End to End Java on Google Cloud with Ray Tsang: GCPPodcast 204
Original post → https://goo.gle/2rlEYno Mark Mirchandani hosts solo today but is later joined by fellow Googler and Developer Advocate Ray Tsang to talk Java! Ray tells us what’s new with Java 11, including more memory and fewer restrictions for
Kubernetes' Product Security Committee, GKE usage metering, & more!
Here to bring you the latest news in the cloud is Carter Morgan. Learn more about these announcements → https://goo.gle/2MNg4EX • Vulnerability management in open-source Kubernetes →https://goo.gle/2JIcnhV • Java 11 for App Engine is now Generally
Deploy a Spring Boot Application to App Engine Java 11
Learn how to deploy a Spring Boot application using a JAR file to Google App Engine standard for Java 11. The runtime can now deploy a JAR file, using gcloud command line, or Maven and Gradle plugins. Learn more in the developer documentation:
A Serverless Java® Developer's Journey (Cloud Next '19)
Serverless Java in 2019 is going to be ubiquitous in your favorite cloud. Well, it’s actually been 10 years since you could take advantage of Java on Google App Engine. But now you can run your apps on the brand-new Java 11 runtime. Not only
Migrating a Monolithic Application to Microservices (Cloud Next '19)
Last year, Google Cloud’s Release Engineering team migrated a monolithic application into dynamic microservices. We leveraged Google Kubernetes Engine and Spring Cloud Kubernetes to make the migration seamless. In this talk, we will show you how we
Deploying Java Web App to App Engine Standard
Ray Tsang (@saturnism) shows how you deploy a Java Web App to Google App Engine standard environment. Java on Google Cloud documentation: https://cloud.google.com/java/ Sample applications: