Root-Relative URLs not working - google-app-engine

I just moved my website to a custom domain in GAE. But when I'm in the website in the new domain, the root-relative URLs are pointing to *.appspot.com. As a result, I would like to know if root-relative URLs work on GAE. If so, someone knows how to make them work?
Thanks

Related

How do I call an API in another project but same solution without hard-coding the url?

I have two projects. One for my front-end angular code. Another for Web API. When I'm in the front-end project, I want to make a call to an API in my other project.
The Web API tutorials I have seen show a relative url involving /api such as this:
$http.get("/api/trivia")
That works great if the javascript is in the same project as Web API, but it's not for my Solution.
I can hard-code the url to my API's localhost port and it works fine, but of course that won't work when I deploy the app to Azure. How should I be handling these urls?
Thank you.
When you make a $http with full url (http://...) it directly look at given address. But when you specify relative path (without http://...) it look at your current site + given relative path url.
So If your api also hosted in same site you can still make the reference as $http.get("/api/trivia") or else as you said if you know where you host your site in Azure you can make it hard code in in your script.

Custom domain issue

We have added a custom domain to our appengine app. We followed the instructions when we made our changes, but apparently something went wrong and we can't find the way to fix it.
In our google apps appengine tab, the main URL specified is https://appid.appspot.com. That means, however, that all traffic from the domain mappings will be sent to the https url, and of course this won't work. I don't know how this https url ended up there as in the app engine admin console, the app url is http://appid.appspot.com.
We haven't find the way to change this url. We have tried to disable this app in google apps but it didn't work, it stays there.
in your app.ymal
-secure: optional
for more details:
http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/python/config/appconfig.html
scroll to Secure URLs

Duplicate subdomain mapping on Google App Engine with www prefix

Some of my clients are having problems accessing my Google App Engine website from typing in the URL. Despite it being written down - it's on a printed invite - as http://subdomain.domain.com (which works), people insist on putting in http://www.subdomain.domain.com
Is there some way of adding another mapping to make www.subdomain.domain.com point at subdomain.domain.com??
Help greatly appreciated.
You should be able to simply add that subdomain in Google Apps (following the instructions here). Failing that, you could use a third-party redirection service to send a 302 to your 'real' subdomain.

Redirecting domain (not google apps) to appengine

I'm building a application that supports different domains. A small CMS that supports different domains.
But what I can't figure out is how to redirect other domains that's outside google apps. I have a domain at google apps, that work's perfectly.
When I create a cname that points at either my appid.appspot.com or www.appsdomain.com it just goes to google.com.
What do I need to do so the other domains point to my appengine application.
..fredrik
You can't just use a cname because google needs to know how to direct the requests through their infrastructure to your app.
You should follow the instructions here: http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/domain.html to set up your name with their infrastructure so that requests to the cname get routed correctly.
Update: You do not have to move your domain to google, only inform them of the names you are going to set up cnames to point to them.
You can do that without a cname.
You need to set up a redirection mechanism of your second domain name. You can do that either by telling your registrar to redirect that url to your Google Apps url (that's how I do it with my registrar, name.com), or you could set up a small [php] script on a server you manage that would receive the queries on the second domain and issue a 301 redirect to your Google Apps domain.
EDIT: It all depends on what you want to do. If you want your app to live at both urls, then this solution will not work. I wrote this in the idea that you want the second url to redirect to your main url, if that's not what you want to do, then issuing redirects won't do the trick.

How are people using Google App-Engine apps with their own domains?

I've been fooling around with the Google App Engine for a few days and I have a little hobby application that I want to write and deploy.
However I'd like to set it up so that users are not directly accessing the app via appspot.com.
Is hosting it through Google Apps and then pointing it at my own domain the only way to go? I looked at that a little bit and it seemed like a pain to implement but maybe I'm just missing something.
My other thought was to write the app-engine piece as a more generic web-service.
Then I could have the user-facing piece be hosted anywhere, written in any language, and have it query the appspot.com url.
Anyone have any luck with the web-service approach?
The reason Google Apps is required is because you need somewhere to a) verify you own the domain (otherwise, you might point it at app engine, then I might hijack it by adding it to my account) and b) set up domain mappings (which subdomains point to which of your appengine apps).
Since this stuff already exists in Apps, it seems silly to duplicate it in AppEngine.
As has been pointed out, it doesn't cost anything, and you do not need to "move" anything to Google. You simple created a cname record with a random name to verify you own the domain, and a cname for the subdomain you wish to point at App Engine. This only takes a few minutes, and once it's done, it's done forever.
Note: If you host your site elsewhere and use webservices, you need to scale the site/frontend. If you host on app engine, you get this for free :-)
I wrote an article on my blog about redirecting *.appspot.com domains to your custom domain to keep your branding:
http://blog.dantup.com/2009/12/redirecting-requests-from-appid-appspot-com-to-a-custom-domain
To do this, I believe you need to be using Google Apps and have a custom domain setup for Google Apps. Then, you deploy your app into your Google Apps domain.
Here is google's official instructions on how to do that:
http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/domain.html
I have used this process for a couple of sites and it is easy and painless, provided you have control on the DNS records for your domain (you should).
OK, we're now at the end of 2017 and things are a lot different regarding App Engine and custom domains. It's easy now!
Go to the app engine dashboard for your app and choose Settings, then go to the Custom Domains tab. From there, choose Add custom domain.
The tricky part is that Google needs to verify that you control the domain, so they ask you to put a TXT record in the DNS for your domain. Once you do that and Google it, you become "verified" as the owner of the domain.
After that, Google will give you a bunch of A and AAAA (for IP6) records to put in your DNS. Once you've done that, you should be good to go.
It can be easily done using request.getRequestURI() method. If the URL doesn't include your domain, just redirect it to the desired URL using
resp.sendRedirect("<your domain>")
Otherwise load a error page using
request.getRequestDispatcher("<error-page>").forward(request, response);

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