I was in the process of uploading a file to Google cloud. I get the following error:
ERROR: (gcloud.app.deploy) An error occurred while parsing file: [C:\Users\Samuel\app.yaml]
mapping values are not allowed here
in "C:\Users\Samuel\app.yaml", line 5, column 7
This is the content of the .yaml file
runtime: go
api_version: go1
handlers:
- url: /
script: _go_app
I do not know the issue exactly; it does not run and how do I connect the VS code to my google cloud project? Thanks
I noticed 2 things in your app.yaml file:
There is no runtime: go' entry in known documentation there is only like g111` up to g114 (for GO 1.14 which currently is in beta) - reference
api_version is available and required only for old runtimes ( I found it only in Python2 and PHP5.5) and depreciated in others, for sure not available in Go - reference
I would start with correcting this.
Related
At $DAYJOB we are using a Go 1.9-based AppEngine application. Now that Google is deprecating version 1.9, I am trying to move to 1.11, using the migration guide. It says that I should set runtime: go111 and remove the api_version: go1.9 value from app.yaml, but when doing so, I get an error message deploying:
ERROR: (gcloud.app.deploy) Staging command [/usr/lib/google-cloud-sdk/platform/google_appengine/go-app-stager /home/peter/src/licensemanager/src/web/app.yaml /home/peter/src/licensemanager/src/web /home/peter/tmp/tmpBB3Yk8/tmpQQPTFj] failed with return code [1].
------------------------------------ STDOUT ------------------------------------
------------------------------------ STDERR ------------------------------------
2019/08/21 07:59:20 invalid api_version value
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If I try to add it back, no matter what value I put in it, I get an error message:
╔════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╗
╠═ Uploading 12 files to Google Cloud Storage ═╣
╚════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╝
File upload done.
ERROR: (gcloud.app.deploy) INVALID_ARGUMENT: The following fields are not allowed in app.yaml: api_version.
I am a bit at a loss here, what am I doing wrong?
Running locally with dev_appserver.py works fine.
I had mismatching SDK packages installed:
ii google-cloud-sdk 259.0.0-0 all Utilities for the Google Cloud Platform
ii google-cloud-sdk-app-engine-go 194.0.0-0 amd64 Go runtime for Google App Engine
Upgrading the mismatching packages fixed the issue. Thanks to #icza for the tip!
I'm new on Google App Engine. And, I'm getting an issue that I can't solve.
I've a very simple app (developped in Go) like this :
main/
| model/
| | user.go
| main.go
| app.yaml
These are the imports of main.go :
import (
"github.com/julienschmidt/httprouter"
"log"
"net/http"
)
My code works well when I run it locally.
But, when I try to publish it on my Google App Engine instance, I receive this error :
$ gcloud app deploy
You are about to deploy the following services:
- <MY_APP_ENGINE_URL> (from [<MY_LOCAL_YAML_PATH>])
Deploying to URL: [<MY_APP_ENGINE_URL>]
Do you want to continue (Y/n)? Y
Beginning deployment of service [default]...
Some files were skipped. Pass `--verbosity=info` to see which ones.
You may also view the gcloud log file, found at
[<LOCAL_APP_ENGINE_LOG>].
File upload done.
Updating service [default]...failed.
ERROR: (gcloud.app.deploy) Error Response: [9] Deployment contains files that cannot be compiled: Compile failed:
2017/05/27 14:48:24 go-app-builder: build timing: 5×compile (301ms total), 0×link (0s total)
2017/05/27 14:48:24 go-app-builder: failed running compile: exit status 2
main.go:4: can't find import: "github.com/julienschmidt/httprouter"
What did I do wrong ?
EDIT :
This is the content of my app.yaml file :
runtime: go
api_version: go1
handlers:
- url: /.*
script: _go_app
App Engine environment doesn't contain your dependencies, you can add an script to do a go get ... for each one but it's too hacky and Go has a solution for that, we can save our dependencies in a vendor folder on the root of our project.
Quick solution:
# Instal godep:
go get -v -u github.com/tools/godep
cd your/project/path
godep save
Now try to deploy again, you'll see a vendor folder in your project, don't remove it and add it to your git source, that folder contains all your third party dependencies like your httprouter (it's my favorite :) )
Note You can use other tools to save your dependencies
I haven't used the gcloud tool, but back in the day when goapp was the tool you had to create github.com/julienschmidt/httprouter (with the lib's source in it, of course) directly under you'r main and then deploy.
AFAIK the App Engine's go version is currently 1.6 which means that while the vendoring is on by default, it can be switched off - perhaps thats the case and thats why #Yandry Pozo's suggestion doesn't work.
I am currently writing an application in Go and trying to deploy multiple services. I am running the following command : gcloud app deploy dispatch.yaml app/app.yaml mod1/mod1.yaml.
The app.yaml file corresponds to the default service and is successfully deployed however the service mod1 returns this error:
ERROR: (gcloud.app.deploy) Error Response: [9] Deployment contains files that cannot be compiled: Compile failed: 2016/07/22 18:17:14 go-app-builder: build timing: 1×compile (53ms total), 0×link (0 total) 2016/07/22 18:17:14 go-app-builder: failed running compile: exit status 1
mod1.go:4: can't find import: "myapp/mod1/web_console"
My-Macbook: myapp$ gcloud app deploy dispatch.yaml app/app.yaml mod1/mod1.yaml
My file structure is as follows:
/My_Project
/src
/myapp
/app
app.go
app.yaml
/mod1
mod1.go
mod1.yaml
/web_console
web_console.go
mod1.go :
package mod1
import (
"myapp/mod1/web_console"
)
func init() {
// Initializing Web Console establishes connection
// to the database and also creates routes
var wc *web_console.WebConsole
wc = web_console.NewWebConsole(true)
wc.Configure()
}
mod1.yaml :
module: mod1
runtime: go
api_version: go1
handlers:
- url: /.*
script: _go_app
app.yaml :
module: default
runtime: go
api_version: go1
handlers:
- url: /.*
script: _go_app
Thanks for taking the time to help!
Each GAE service/module is standalone and can not access anything outside the service/module dir which:
is the directory where the .yaml file exists
is what's uploaded during deployment
is considered the "root" directory for that service/module, everything is relative to it
In your particular case you need to make sure no service/module makes references to the parent myapp dir (which is nothing but an organisational placeholder for the app stuff, relevant on your side but with no actual presence on GAE). I believe your mod1.go import should looks like this:
package mod1
import (
"web_console"
)
But take it with a grain of salt, I'm not actually familiar with go.
It seems like I was using the wrong tool to deploy. I ran the command with goapp deploy app/app.yaml mod1/mod1.yaml and was able to successfully deploy the services without issue.
I am following the instructions on https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/go/googlecloudstorageclient/download to begin migrating some code from the, now deprecated, Files API to the new Cloud Storage API without success.
The steps I'm following are ...
I'm running appengine v1.9.23 which is later than the required appengine v1.8.1.
My $GOPATH is set, so I skip step #1.
I proceed to step #2:
goapp get -u golang.org/x/oauth2
goapp get -u google.golang.org/cloud/storage
I am not developing on a managed VM, so I skip step #3.
Now when I run the application, I get:
go-app-builder: Failed parsing input: parser: bad import "syscall" in goapp/src/golang.org/x/net/internal/nettest/error_posix.go
What am I doing wrong?
Steps to reproduce
Download an install the Google Appengine runtime, version 1.9.23 from https://console.cloud.google.com/storage/browser/appengine-sdks/featured/ . Follow the installation instructions documented on https://cloud.google.com/appengine/downloads?hl=en
Create an appengine project directory:
% mkdir $HOME/myapp
Create a new app.yaml file as ~/myapp/app.yaml. Read the directions on the Google website for details: https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/go/config/appconfig
I use a version that does not have the static resources:
application: myapp
version: alpha-001
runtime: go
api_version: go1
handlers:
- url: /.*
script: _go_app
Create a location for the Go source files.
% mkdir $HOME/myapp/go
Set your GOPATH to the location of your sources
% export GOPATH=$HOME/myapp/go
Get the Go appengine example project: https://github.com/golang/example
% goapp get github.com/golang/example/appengine-hello
This command will download the example app to the first path entry in the GOPATH
Install the Google Cloud Storage client libraries as directed in https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/go/googlecloudstorageclient/download . Reference the steps at the top of this question for more details. Following the directions should result in you running 2 commands:
% go get -u golang.org/x/oauth2
% go get -u google.golang.org/cloud/storage
Attempt to run your go application
% goapp serve
You will see the following compilation error (no stack trace):
2015/12/23 10:37:07 go-app-builder: Failed parsing input: parser: bad import "syscall" in go/src/golang.org/x/net/ipv6/control_unix.go
This error is caused by either of two scenarios:
1) Implicitly importing syscall by importing another package that uses it, as referenced in this related question.
2) Having your package source files in your GOPATH located in a directory at or below the same level as your project's app.yaml (eg. app.yaml in ~/go, and packages sources in ~/go/gopath/src). If a package like x/net/internal/nettest exists in your GOPATH the syscall import will be parsed by goapp at compile time and throw the compilation error.
Avoiding these two scenarios should be sufficient to prevent any bad import "syscall" errors or related compilation errors.
Reproduced the initial steps above and got a similar error, even if not explicitly mentioning syscall. However, running “goapp serve” in the appengine-hello directory results in no error at all.
Adam’s explanation at point 2 applies here correctly: one needs to place the app.yaml file at the right level in the directory structure.
sirupsen/logrus references syscall.
They have an appengine tag specified, not to include syscall so it's usable in AppEngine, something like go build -tags appengine as per issue 310.
However I haven't yet succeeded including it in an AppEngine project so that this build param could be forwarded and specified somewhere so that it goes through. I'll come back to update if I manage.
I'm following the instructions here https://console.developers.google.com/start/appengine
I've downloaded and unzipped the project file from that page - it's the python and flask one. When I get to the instruction dev_appserver.py appending-try-python-flask it gives the error.
google.appengine.tools.devappserver2.errors.AppConfigNotFoundError: "." is a directory but does not contain app.yaml or app.yml
It most certainly does contain an app.yaml file. It looks like this.
application: hello-flask-app-engine
version: 1
runtime: python27
api_version: 1
threadsafe: yes
handlers:
- url: .*
script: main.app
libraries:
- name: jinja2
version: "2.6"
- name: markupsafe
version: "0.15"
Unlike this post Uploading a static project to google app engines mine doesn't have any skip files lines to delete.
There is a README.md that mostly follows the Google Dev web page, except that instead of downloading the project from that page it instructs to git clone https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/appengine-python-flask-skeleton.git and that doesn't exactly match the zip file I downloaded.
The requirement.txt file says Run 'pip install -r requirements.txt -t lib/' but Windows 7 says pip is not a recognized command.
Is my app.yaml not correct? Why would it say it doesn't exist?
Simply closing the command prompt window and reopening it made it work. I don't know how or why.
You may be mis-typing appengine-try-python-flask (the real name) as appending-try-python-flask (which is what you show in your question).
If that's not the case, can you please show the effects of dir appengine-try-python-flask and dir appending-try-python-flask from the directory (AKA folder) you're now trying to run dev_appserver.py from?
probably you use py-charm, you need to add to configuration in line 'Working directory' the path of project like: C:\Users\user\Desktop\projects\water
It's repose to work