Last week I tried to setup Google Cloud for a NodeJS API and Cloud SQL database. Overall it works fine, but I can't access my Cloud SQL database. The authorization of the SQL database shows that all apps within the current project are granted to access the database. Unfortunality, this is not true. I need to granted the IP addresses of the instances from the App Engine. The IP adressess of the instances constantly changes after I deploy a newer version of the the API.
Does anybody have a solution to get access from the App Engine to the Cloud SQL database. It's very annoying to add constant the instance ip address to grant the database.
Sample here
Thank you in advance!
Jelle
I was going to suggest to assign a static IP to the app engine, but seems like it's not possible in App engine (it's possible in compute engine though). So lets tackle the root of the problem, you being unable to access cloud sql from App engine, are you sure you followed the instructions of the following link to the letter?
https://cloud.google.com/nodejs/getting-started/using-cloud-sql
This might solve your connection issue if you haven't.
Related
I created mongodb and mysql databases on Google Cloud Compute Engine they are running well on the server, but i want to access them from my local computer, i am getting errors, can anyone help me to find out where i'm doing wrong in configurations ?.
Firewall rules
Ports status
IP Bind
errors
mongo
mysql
I'm trying to establish a basic mysql connection from a google compute engine instance in one project to a google cloud sql instance (2nd generation) in a different project.
I've done this many times before without any problem. You simply add the ip address of the google compute instance to the list of authorized networks for the google cloud sql instance. This has always worked in the past but it is not working now.
The only thing that I can think of which is different about this situation is that I've recently been experimenting with using the cloudsql-proxy to establish a connection from a different gce instance to the same google cloud sql instance. Could this be the problem? Perhaps the google cloud sql instance is getting confused by having to support both connection mechanisms?
I just need the connection to work. Is there a work-around?
There isn't a problem using both modes of connectivity simultaneously.
The only thing I can think of is that you are accidentally using an ephemeral IP addresses for your VMs instead of static, which means the VM may have a different IP address than you expect (after a restart, for example).
If that's not the case, please send a mail to cloud-sql#google.com with a little bit more information (project and database name, project/name/ip of your VM) so that we can figure out what's going on in the backend.
I am trying to connect to google cloud sql instance from eclipse in my app engine connected android project.
So far i am able to connect to cloud sql instance using Class.forname("com.mysql.jdbc.Driver"). But it requires authorising my ip address in google cloud sql every time i want to use the instance hence making it unfeasible.
I know that while connecting from app engine i dont need to authorize my ip address. Bur for that i have to use GoogleDriver ie. Class.forname("com.mysql.jdbc.GoogleDriver").
But when i run my code it gives me ClassNotFoundException.
I am stuck at this situation for a long time. Please give me a proper solution to the problem
The GoogleDriver is only intended to be used when actually running on App Engine. When running from eclipse or the dev_appserver you will have to use the stock com.mysql.jdbc.Driver class, and you will have to authorize your IP address. A good example of this is shown in the documentation, which demonstrates how to choose in code which driver to use. Note the commented out line for connecting from your dev environment to Cloud SQL.
As an FYI don't forget to enable the connector for running on App Engine.
I have authorised 0.0.0.0/0 in access control in my cloud instance and now all the devices are able to connect to the cloud instance with stock mysql driver ie. com.mysql.jdbc.Driver without need to changing authorised network again and again in access control.
Still can't figure out to implement GoogleDriver but for now this solution will work.
If anyone find a more better and general way to connect to cloud instance please post your answer.
I am trying to connect my web application to google sql. The app is running and getting deployed on appspot without database access. However when I try to deploy enable google cloud sql it is giving me following error:
I am to access the cloud sql using mysql command line prompt. Can anybody help what am I doing wrong here. I think there is a problem with appid. I create an application name cfsdonuts on appengine and gave it the access to sql instance. I create the application on eclipse with same appid (because eclipse was not allowing to choose from existing id's not it was allowing me to create new app id at the time of project creation. When I deploy the application on app engine the name comes as http://1-dot-cfsdonuts.appspot.com/. Should I use this name?
I just wanted to ask if we can access an external MySQL server from Google App Engine...
The only way to communicate with other hosts is by using UrlFetch that only provides HTTP and HTTPS requests.
So, you can't do it out of the box.
Anyway, if you really need to access an external MySQL server database, you should consider to expose it through a Web API (RESTful, Soap web-services for example).
In this way your data would be available also via UrlFetch.
I am still in the learning phase of all this, but I am fairly certain you can do this now a few ways:
Link Apps Scripts to App Engine and use the JDBC
Link it to Google
Cloud SQL Store your SQL database on Google Cloud Store
Connect Apps Scripts via spreadsheet scripting
"Google Apps Script has the ability to make connections to databases via JDBC with the Jdbc Service. The current support extends to MySQL, Microsoft SQL Server and Oracle. Apps Script makes it easy to connect to databases hosted on Google Cloud SQL, but also works with other cloud hosting platforms and even local databases." https://developers.google.com/apps-script/jdbc
(edited for structure)
It is still not possible to native connect GAE to an external MySQL server the only exception is Googles Cloud SQL. We are using it in our production environment and like the experience. Stable and the performance is good.
GAEs own database scales well and we are using it in most situations, but in cases where we need to ask more complex questions or need aggregate functions, we use Googles Cloud SQl.
These answers are a bit outdated. Google App Engine instances can connect to external database servers.
The ability to connect externally requires that the account the App Engine is running under be a "paid account" a/k/a "billing enabled".
References:
-https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/php/using-third-party-databases
-https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/php/runtime#PHP_Functions_that_requires_billing_enabled