Book Image

Google Cloud Platform for Developers

By : Ted Hunter, Steven Porter
Book Image

Google Cloud Platform for Developers

By: Ted Hunter, Steven Porter

Overview of this book

Google Cloud Platform (GCP) provides autoscaling compute power and distributed in-memory cache, task queues, and datastores to write, build, and deploy Cloud-hosted applications. With Google Cloud Platform for Developers, you will be able to develop and deploy scalable applications from scratch and make them globally available in almost any language. This book will guide you in designing, deploying, and managing applications running on Google Cloud. You’ll start with App Engine and move on to work with Container Engine, compute engine, and cloud functions. You’ll learn how to integrate your new applications with the various data solutions on GCP, including Cloud SQL, Bigtable, and Cloud Storage. This book will teach you how to streamline your workflow with tools such as Source Repositories, Container Builder, and StackDriver. Along the way, you’ll see how to deploy and debug services with IntelliJ, implement continuous delivery pipelines, and configure robust monitoring and alerting for your production systems. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-versed with all the development tools of Google Cloud Platform, and you’ll develop, deploy, and manage highly scalable and reliable applications.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)

Summary

Serverless technologies are one of the hottest areas of modern cloud computing. The very high level of abstraction associated with FaaS platforms makes it possible to get quite a lot done with very little code. Developers can choose to for go the ceremony and boilerplate coding associated with running web services and instead focus directly on writing the code that solves problems and adds real business value.

The Google Cloud Functions platform addresses this growing need with a fast, simple, and powerful platform. While still early, GCF offers tremendous value to teams looking to move quickly. With HTTP triggers, developers can create very thin API implementations that scale seamlessly. With background functions, teams can quickly construct event-driven service integrations on top of Cloud Storage and Pub/Sub. In both cases, Cloud Functions may offer tremendous advantages...