Book Image

Professional Cloud Architect Google Cloud Certification Guide - Second Edition

By : Konrad Cłapa, Brian Gerrard
5 (1)
Book Image

Professional Cloud Architect Google Cloud Certification Guide - Second Edition

5 (1)
By: Konrad Cłapa, Brian Gerrard

Overview of this book

Google Cloud Platform (GCP) is one of the industry leaders thanks to its array of services that can be leveraged by organizations to bring the best out of their infrastructure. This book is a comprehensive guide for learning methods to effectively utilize GCP services and help you become acquainted with the topics required to pass Google's Professional Cloud Architect certification exam. Following the Professional Cloud Architect's official exam syllabus, you'll first be introduced to the GCP. The book then covers the core services that GCP offers, such as computing and storage, and takes you through effective methods of scaling and automating your cloud infrastructure. As you progress through the chapters, you'll get to grips with containers and services and discover best practices related to the design and process. This revised second edition features new topics such as Cloud Run, Anthos, Data Fusion, Composer, and Data Catalog. By the end of this book, you'll have gained the knowledge required to take and pass the Google Cloud Certification – Professional Cloud Architect exam and become an expert in GCP services.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introduction to GCP
5
Section 2: Manage, Design, and Plan a Cloud Solution Architecture
14
Chapter 12: Exploring Storage and Database Options in GCP – Part 2
17
Section 3: Secure, Manage and Monitor a Google Cloud Solution
21
Section 4: Exam Focus

Cloud Monitoring

With the Monitoring service, you can discover and monitor all GCP resources and services. The Monitoring console allows you to view all of your resources, create alerting policies, and view uptime checks, groups, and custom dashboards. It also allows you to navigate to the debug, trace, logging, and error reporting consoles.

Let's have a look at what can be configured from here. We will look into the following topics:

  • Groups
  • Dashboards
  • Alerting policies
  • Change screen
  • Uptime checks
  • Monitoring agents

Groups

Resources such as VM instances, applications, and databases can be grouped into logical groups. This allows us to manage them together and display them in dashboards. Constraints are used to define the criteria to filter the resources. They can be based on names, regions, applications, and so on. The groups can be nested in one another, and the nesting can be six levels deep:

Figure 17.6 –...