I was moving all website to google cloud and encounter a performance problem.
I set up a VM instance on Compute Engine and a Cloud SQL server.
And connect the Joomla website from VM to Cloud SQL server using provided IP address. (Seems public IP)
The performance is really slow compared to the website using local database inside the VM itself.
So, my question is, is there a way to find local IP to connect to Cloud SQL since our web server is also on the Google Cloud infra itself.
Or, the only way is to stick with the database inside VM?
Update
I set up the Cloud proxy using this guide.
Can connect to mysql prompt with the proxy now.
But still cannot find a way to let joomla use this cloud proxy to connect to the database.
The fastest, easiest, and most secure way to connect to your Cloud SQL instance from your Compute instance is by using the Cloud SQL Proxy. There are multiple reasons for this, but here are the main ones:
Secure connections: The proxy automatically encrypts traffic to and from the database using TLS 1.2 with a 128-bit AES cipher; SSL certificates are used to verify client and server identities.
Easier connection management: The proxy handles authentication with Google Cloud SQL, removing the need to provide static IP addresses.
There's also the fact that you only need a static and small number of instances (1 in your case) connecting to the database, so you don't really need to overcomplicate your setup, you can just drop this binary into your instance, run it as a daemon, and instantly have a fast lane to your Cloud SQL instance (I use "fast lane" here because the traffic will go through Google Cloud's internal network).
Setting up the Cloud SQL Proxy comes down to enabling the Cloud SQL API, giving the service account of your intance access to the Cloud SQL API, making sure the binary has execution permissions (chmod +x), and giving it the connection string to the Cloud SQL instance. You seem to be having issues using the Proxy, so if you need more troubleshooting ideas, you can find them in the documentation. The tutorial you've followed should have detailed instructions on how to do these steps.
After all of that and after making sure the Proxy is running, connecting Joomla to the database should be similar to how you do it via the MySQL client. You should point your Joomla installation to localhost (or 127.0.0.1), give it a set of credentials to access the database itself (you can create database users via the Console), give your Joomla database's name, and that should be it!
Don't forget that the Proxy needs to be running in TCP mode! That should be as simple as adding =tcp:LOCAL_PORT_TO_LISTEN_ON to the connection string parameter you're passing to the Proxy. Here's an example of how to run the Proxy:
./cloud_sql_proxy -instances=<INSTANCE_CONNECTION_NAME>=tcp:3306
Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) helps to increase the performance.
Private Google access enables virtual machine (VM) instances on a subnetwork to reach Google APIs and Services using an internal IP address rather than an external IP address. You can use Private Google access to allow VMs without Internet access to reach Google services.
Here you get more details: https://cloud.google.com/vpc/docs/private-google-access
Related
I have a dotnet core 2.0 application running in Google App Engine Flexible Environment. Within the same Google project I have a Cloud SQL - MySQL database. On the Cloud SQL Instance details page, under the Authorizations tab, it states
Apps in this project: All authorized.
However, I cannot access the database from my application unless I add the 0.0.0.0/0 route to the Authorized networks section.
What can I do to give my application db access without opening my database to the world?
Update 2018-05-21 from Jeffery Rennie (accepted answer)
App Engine now supports connecting to a Cloud SQL instance using a port number instead of a unix domain socket. So now, you can add something like this to your app.yaml:
beta_settings:
cloud_sql_instances: "your-project-id:us-central1:instance-name=tcp:5432"
And specify Host=cloudsql in your connection string in your appsettings.json:
"ConnectionString": "Uid=aspnetuser;Pwd=;Host=cloudsql;Database=visitors"
In the sample above, the port is 5432, which is the default port for a PostgreSQL database. For a MySQL database, use port 3306.
A full example with instructions for deploying to App Engine can be found here:
https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/dotnet-docs-samples/tree/master/appengine/flexible/CloudSql
The ideal solution is to use a unix domain socket to connect from your app engine instance to Cloud SQL. That's how other programming languages like Python and PHP do it. Unfortunately, the MySQL connector does not work with domain sockets. I see no reason why it can't, but it doesn't. I hope they fix that issue soon.
As described in https://cloud.google.com/appengine/kb/#static-ip,
Note that using static IP address filtering is not considered a safe
and effective means of protection. For example, an attacker could set
up a malicious App Engine app which could share the same IP address
range as your application. Instead, we suggest that you take a defense
in depth approach using OAuth and Certs.
If certificates are not sufficient to protect your application, then the only remaining option I see today is to build a custom runtime that runs the Cloud SQL Proxy. The proxy can forward a local ip port number to a unix domain socket. If you have built a docker image or two, then it's not too bad.
I will update this answer as the situation improves.
Update 2018-05-21
App Engine now supports connecting to a Cloud SQL instance using a port number instead of a unix domain socket. So now, you can add something like this to your app.yaml:
beta_settings:
cloud_sql_instances: "your-project-id:us-central1:instance-name=tcp:5432"
And specify Host=cloudsql in your connection string in your appsettings.json:
"ConnectionString": "Uid=aspnetuser;Pwd=;Host=cloudsql;Database=visitors"
In the sample above, the port is 5432, which is the default port for a PostgreSQL database. For a MySQL database, use port 3306.
A full example with instructions for deploying to App Engine can be found here:
https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/dotnet-docs-samples/tree/master/appengine/flexible/CloudSql
While you are not wrong that "apps in this this project: All authorized" seems to suggest you can out-of-the-box just use your App Engine app with Cloud SQL, but there are limitations.
First of all, your Cloud SQL needs to be a 2nd generation instance, and secondly, there are specific instructions that's dependent on the language you use and the App Engine type (standard or flex).
If your situation fit all the requirements, it should work.
For your specific use case, you need the .Net instructions, it does say you need to add a network with 0.0.0.0/0 access and an user account. The user authentication + SSL should provide the security you need.
So Im following the google ruby guide to create and setup a cloud sql instance. Under 'Create and configure a Cloud SQL instance' step 4 it tells you to allow all network fields so the instance is open to all traffic, then underneath that it gives the warning:
This configuration leaves your Cloud SQL instance open to traffic from everyone, everywhere. It is used only for demonstration purposes. In production environments, restrict access to only those IP addresses that need access.
I haven't setup VM servers on a cloud environment before so I have no idea on what IP addresses I should be giving access to the SQL instance or what ones 'need access' do I just change it to the IP of my VMs?
In the context of the guide that you linked, the IP whitelist is necessary so you can access your Cloud SQL instance from your development server on your local computer. For that specific purpuse, you can just whitelist your computer's IP (see http://www.whatsmyip.org) instead off all the world.
When your application is going to be running on App Engine, you don't need to whitelist the IP. There is a separate access control list for that in the Cloud Console where you can list the App Engine applications authorized to connect.
I am currently test-driving Google Container Engine (GKE) and Kubernetes as a possible replacement to AWS/ElasticBeanstalk deployment. It was my understanding that just by the virtue of my dynamic servers being in the same project as the cloud sql instance, that they'd naturally be included in the firewall rules of that project. However, this appears not to be the case. My app servers and SQL server are in the same availability zone, and I have both ipv4 and ipv6 enabled on the sql server.
I don't want to statically assign IP Addresses to cluster members that are themselves ephemeral, so I'm looking for guidance on how I can properly enable SQL access to my docker-based app hosted inside GKE? As a stopgap, I've added the ephemeral IPs of the container cluster nodes and that has enabled me to use CloudSQL but I'd really like to have a more seamless way of handling this if my nodes somehow get a new ip address.
The current recommendations (SSL or HAProxy) are discussed in [1]. We are working on a client proxy that will use service accounts to authenticate to Cloud SQL.
[1] Is it possible to connect to Google Cloud SQL from a Google Managed VM?
Sadly, this is currently the only way to do this. A better option would be to write a controller that dynamically examined the managed instance group created by GKE and automatically updated the IP addresses in the Cloud SQL API. But I agree the integration should be more seamless.
I am trying to create an Autoscaling web application network over HTTP Load Balancing. The Web Server Instances are going to be connected to load balancer. Further the web instances have to be connected to mysql/cloud sql through the internal IP.
So just to conclude, I need to use the Linux Web Instance (Not App Engine) and Connect to MySql/Cloud SQL through Internal Network Only?
Is it possible?
Thanks!
It's not possible, you need to use an external IP as stated in the documentation:
Note: You must use the external (public) IP address of the GCE instance.
Also, you can find here that it's not possible to authorize a private network like the one specified:
You can not specify a private network (for example, 10.x.x.x) as an authorized network.
You should use the cloud SQL proxy.
It runs on the box providing secure access to your Cloud SQL database.
Example here for container engine: https://cloud.google.com/sql/docs/container-engine-connect
To access the CloudSQL the IP must be white listed. To white list an IP go to your project then on the side bar: Storage -> Cloud SQL. Select your instance then 'Access Control'. Under 'Authorization' click the '+' to add your IP.
How do I connect to Google Cloud Platform, specifically Cloud SQL, using SSH? I’m using Tera Term and can’t seem to get in. Maybe I’m just using the wrong host, port, password or configuration settings. I’ve tried several combinations.
I can connect to my Google Cloud SQL instance using MySQL workbench, so I’m pretty sure I’ve configured the Cloud SQL Access Controls correctly.
Cloud SQL provides a managed MySQL endpoint and not a virtual machine in which you can SSH into.