Book Image

Hands-On Serverless Computing with Google Cloud

By : Richard Rose
Book Image

Hands-On Serverless Computing with Google Cloud

By: Richard Rose

Overview of this book

Google Cloud's serverless platform allows organizations to scale fully managed solutions without worrying about the underlying infrastructure. With this book, you will learn how to design, develop, and deploy full stack serverless apps on Google Cloud. The book starts with a quick overview of the Google Cloud console, its features, user interface (UI), and capabilities. After getting to grips with the Google Cloud interface and its features, you will explore the core aspects of serverless products such as Cloud Run, Cloud Functions and App Engine. You will also learn essential features such as version control, containerization, and identity and access management with the help of real-world use cases. Later, you will understand how to incorporate continuous integration and continuous deployment (CI/CD) techniques for serverless applications. Toward the concluding chapters, you will get to grips with how key technologies such as Knative enable Cloud Run to be hosted on multiple platforms including Kubernetes and VMware. By the end of this book, you will have become proficient in confidently developing, managing, and deploying containerized applications on Google Cloud.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Section 1: App Engine
4
Section 2: Google Cloud Functions
9
Section 3: Google Cloud Run
14
Section 4: Building a Serverless Workload

Summary

In this chapter, we discussed Cloud Run at a high level and introduced the constituent components that make all of this a reality. Just like Google's other serverless products, Cloud Run scales to zero, except here, the deployment artifact is now a container. Utilizing a container artifact provides additional benefits as Cloud Run can be deployed with Kubernetes or without it. In addition, any language runtime can be used, making for a very flexible product.

Familiarity with container environments (for example, Docker) is a real advantage here, but Cloud Run removes much of the complexity of deploying code. Once the container has been successfully built, it can be deployed. Support for serverless request/response messages is inherent in Cloud Run, so there is always a simple and consistent method for developing components. For those of you who weren't previously...