Book Image

Google Cloud Platform for Architects

By : Vitthal Srinivasan, Loonycorn , Judy Raj
Book Image

Google Cloud Platform for Architects

By: Vitthal Srinivasan, Loonycorn , Judy Raj

Overview of this book

Using a public cloud platform was considered risky a decade ago, and unconventional even just a few years ago. Today, however, use of the public cloud is completely mainstream - the norm, rather than the exception. Several leading technology firms, including Google, have built sophisticated cloud platforms, and are locked in a fierce competition for market share. The main goal of this book is to enable you to get the best out of the GCP, and to use it with confidence and competence. You will learn why cloud architectures take the forms that they do, and this will help you become a skilled high-level cloud architect. You will also learn how individual cloud services are configured and used, so that you are never intimidated at having to build it yourself. You will also learn the right way and the right situation in which to use the important GCP services. By the end of this book, you will be able to make the most out of Google Cloud Platform design.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
13
Logging and Monitoring

Why GCP's networking model is unique

The way the GCP does networking is very different from what most networking professionals are used to, and other cloud providers such as AWS. This makes GCP networking confusing, especially since some of the important terms, such as VPC and subnet, have somewhat different meanings than in other contexts:

There is a lot going on here, so let's go through and parse the implications of all of that:

Each project in a GCP organization contains at least one default VPC. It can contain more than one network, depending on the resources requested. All VPCs of GCP are global resources, which means they are not bound to any particular zone or region. VPC resources have both internal and external IPs. The resources within the network communicate with each other using internal IPs, whereas external requests are served through external IP addresses...