Associate Cloud Engineer
Certification exam guide
An Associate Cloud Engineer deploys and secures applications and infrastructure, monitors operations of multiple projects, and maintains enterprise solutions to ensure that they meet target performance metrics. This individual has experience working with public clouds and on-premises solutions. They are able to use the Google Cloud console and the command-line interface to perform common platform-based tasks to maintain and scale one or more deployed solutions that leverage Google-managed or self-managed services on Google Cloud.
Section 1: Setting up a cloud solution environment
1.1 Setting up cloud projects and accounts. Activities
include: ● Creating a resource hierarchy ● Applying organizational policies
to the resource hierarchy ● Granting members IAM roles within
a project ● Managing users and groups in
Cloud Identity (manually and automated) ● Enabling APIs within projects ● Provisioning and setting up
products in Google Cloud’s operations suite 1.2 Managing billing configuration. Activities include:
● Creating one or more billing
accounts ● Linking projects to a billing
account ● Establishing billing budgets and
alerts ● Setting up billing exports 1.3 Installing and configuring the command line
interface (CLI), specifically the Cloud SDK (e.g.,
setting the default project).
Section 2: Planning and configuring a cloud solution
2.1 Planning and estimating Google Cloud product use
using the Pricing Calculator 2.2 Planning and configuring compute resources.
Considerations include: ● Selecting appropriate compute
choices for a given workload (e.g., Compute Engine,
Google Kubernetes Engine, Cloud Run, Cloud Functions)
● Using preemptible VMs and custom
machine types as appropriate 2.3 Planning and configuring data storage options.
Considerations include: ● Product choice (e.g., Cloud SQL,
BigQuery, Firestore, Cloud Spanner, Cloud Bigtable) ● Choosing storage options (e.g.,
Zonal persistent disk, Regional balanced persistent
disk, Standard, Nearline, Coldline, Archive) 2.4 Planning and configuring network resources. Tasks
include: ● Differentiating load balancing
options ● Identifying resource locations in
a network for availability ● Configuring Cloud DNS
Section 3: Deploying and implementing a cloud solution
3.1 Deploying and implementing Compute Engine
resources. Tasks include: ● Launching a compute instance
using the Google Cloud console and Cloud SDK (gcloud)
(e.g., assign disks, availability policy, SSH keys) ● Creating an autoscaled managed
instance group using an instance template ● Generating/uploading a custom SSH
key for instances ● Installing and configuring the
Cloud Monitoring and Logging Agent ● Assessing compute quotas and
requesting increases 3.2 Deploying and implementing Google Kubernetes Engine
resources. Tasks include: ● Installing and configuring the
command line interface (CLI) for Kubernetes (kubectl)
● Deploying a Google Kubernetes
Engine cluster with different configurations including
AutoPilot, regional clusters, private clusters, etc. ● Deploying a containerized
application to Google Kubernetes Engine ● Configuring Google Kubernetes
Engine monitoring and logging 3.3 Deploying and implementing Cloud Run and Cloud
Functions resources. Tasks include, where applicable:
● Deploying an application and
updating scaling configuration, versions, and traffic
splitting ● Deploying an application that
receives Google Cloud events (e.g., Pub/Sub events,
Cloud Storage object change notification events) 3.4 Deploying and implementing data solutions. Tasks
include: ● Initializing data systems with
products (e.g., Cloud SQL, Firestore, BigQuery, Cloud
Spanner, Pub/Sub, Cloud Bigtable, Dataproc, Dataflow,
Cloud Storage) ● Loading data (e.g., command line
upload, API transfer, import/export, load data from
Cloud Storage, streaming data to Pub/Sub) 3.5 Deploying and implementing networking resources.
Tasks include: ● Creating a VPC with subnets
(e.g., custom-mode VPC, shared VPC) ● Launching a Compute Engine
instance with custom network configuration (e.g.,
internal-only IP address, Google private access, static
external and private IP address, network tags) ● Creating ingress and egress
firewall rules for a VPC (e.g., IP subnets, network
tags, service accounts) ● Creating a VPN between a Google
VPC and an external network using Cloud VPN ● Creating a load balancer to
distribute application network traffic to an application
(e.g., Global HTTP(S) load balancer, Global SSL Proxy
load balancer, Global TCP Proxy load balancer, regional
network load balancer, regional internal load balancer)
3.6 Deploying a solution using Cloud Marketplace. Tasks
include: ● Browsing the Cloud Marketplace
catalog and viewing solution details ● Deploying a Cloud Marketplace
solution 3.7 Implementing resources via infrastructure as code.
Tasks include: ● Building infrastructure via Cloud
Foundation Toolkit templates and implementing best
practices ● Installing and configuring Config
Connector in Google Kubernetes Engine to create, update,
delete, and secure resources
Section 4: Ensuring successful operation of a cloud solution
4.1 Managing Compute Engine resources. Tasks include:
● Managing a single VM instance
(e.g., start, stop, edit configuration, or delete an
instance) ● Remotely connecting to the
instance ● Attaching a GPU to a new instance
and installing necessary dependencies ● Viewing current running VM
inventory (instance IDs, details) ● Working with snapshots (e.g.,
create a snapshot from a VM, view snapshots, delete a
snapshot) ● Working with images (e.g., create
an image from a VM or a snapshot, view images, delete an
image) ● Working with instance groups
(e.g., set autoscaling parameters, assign instance
template, create an instance template, remove instance
group) ● Working with management
interfaces (e.g., Google Cloud console, Cloud Shell,
Cloud SDK) 4.2 Managing Google Kubernetes Engine resources. Tasks
include: ● Viewing current running cluster
inventory (nodes, pods, services) ● Browsing Docker images and
viewing their details in the Artifact Registry ● Working with node pools (e.g.,
add, edit, or remove a node pool) ● Working with pods (e.g., add,
edit, or remove pods) ● Working with services (e.g., add,
edit, or remove a service) ● Working with stateful
applications (e.g. persistent volumes, stateful sets)
● Managing Horizontal and Vertical
autoscaling configurations ● Working with management
interfaces (e.g., Google Cloud console, Cloud Shell,
Cloud SDK, kubectl) 4.3 Managing Cloud Run resources. Tasks include: ● Adjusting application
traffic-splitting parameters ● Setting scaling parameters for
autoscaling instances ● Determining whether to run Cloud
Run (fully managed) or Cloud Run for Anthos 4.4 Managing storage and database solutions. Tasks
include: ● Managing and securing objects in
and between Cloud Storage buckets ● Setting object life cycle
management policies for Cloud Storage buckets ● Executing queries to retrieve
data from data instances (e.g., Cloud SQL, BigQuery,
Cloud Spanner, Datastore, Cloud Bigtable) ● Estimating costs of data storage
resources ● Backing up and restoring database
instances (e.g., Cloud SQL, Datastore) ● Reviewing job status in Dataproc,
Dataflow, or BigQuery 4.5 Managing networking resources. Tasks include: ● Adding a subnet to an existing
VPC ● Expanding a subnet to have more
IP addresses ● Reserving static external or
internal IP addresses ● Working with CloudDNS, CloudNAT,
Load Balancers and firewall rules 4.6 Monitoring and logging. Tasks include: ● Creating Cloud Monitoring alerts
based on resource metrics ● Creating and ingesting Cloud
Monitoring custom metrics (e.g., from applications or
logs) ● Configuring log sinks to export
logs to external systems (e.g., on-premises or BigQuery)
● Configuring log routers ● Viewing and filtering logs in
Cloud Logging ● Viewing specific log message
details in Cloud Logging ● Using cloud diagnostics to
research an application issue (e.g., viewing Cloud Trace
data, using Cloud Debug to view an application
point-in-time) ● Viewing Google Cloud status
Section 5: Configuring access and security
5.1 Managing Identity and Access Management (IAM).
Tasks include: ● Viewing IAM policies ● Creating IAM policies ● Managing the various role types
and defining custom IAM roles (e.g., primitive,
predefined and custom) 5.2 Managing service accounts. Tasks include: ● Creating service accounts ● Using service accounts in IAM
policies with minimum permissions ● Assigning service accounts to
resources ● Managing IAM of a service account
● Managing service account
impersonation ● Creating and managing short-lived
service account credentials 5.3 Viewing audit logs