Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

How to deploy on GCE

Google Compute Engine is a popular subsidiary of Google that provides on-demand cloud computing platforms on a metered pay-as-you-go basis. Access the GCloud web console at console.cloud.google.com.

Summary


Install GCloud and Juju tooling

Install Juju via snap:

sudo snap install juju
sudo snap install google-cloud-cli --classic

Check the official the Google Cloud (GCloud) CLI documentation about other installation options.

To check they are all correctly installed, run the commands demonstrated below with sample outputs:

> juju version
3.5.4-genericlinux-amd64

> gcloud --version
Google Cloud SDK 474.0.0
...

Authenticate

Login to GCloud:

gcloud auth login

Create an service IAM account for Juju to operate GCE:

> gcloud iam service-accounts create juju-gce-account --display-name="Juju GCE service account"
Created service account [juju-gce-account].

> gcloud iam service-accounts list
DISPLAY NAME                   EMAIL                                                               DISABLED
...
Juju GCE service account       [email protected]      False
...

> gcloud iam service-accounts keys create sa-private-key.json  --iam-account=juju-gce-account@canonical-data-123456.iam.gserviceaccount.com
created key [aaaaaaa....aaaaaaa] of type [json] as [sa-private-key.json] for [[email protected]]

> gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding canonical-data-123456 --role=roles/compute.admin \
--member serviceAccount:[email protected]

Bootstrap Juju controller on GCE

It is necessary to move the newly exported GCloud json file into a SNAP-accessible folder due to a known Juju issue.

sudo mv sa-private-key.json /var/snap/juju/common/sa-private-key.json
sudo chmod a+r /var/snap/juju/common/sa-private-key.json

Add GCE credentials to Juju:

> juju add-credential google
...
Enter credential name: juju-gce-account
...

Auth Types
  jsonfile
  oauth2

Select auth type [jsonfile]: jsonfile

Enter path to the .json file containing a service account key for your project
Path: /var/snap/juju/common/sa-private-key.json

Credential "juju-gce-account" added locally for cloud "google".

Bootstrap a Juju controller (check all supported configuration options):

juju bootstrap google gce
Output example
> juju bootstrap google gce
Creating Juju controller "gce" on google/us-east1
Looking for packaged Juju agent version 3.5.4 for amd64
Located Juju agent version 3.5.4-ubuntu-amd64 at https://streams.canonical.com/juju/tools/agent/3.5.4/juju-3.5.4-linux-amd64.tgz
Launching controller instance(s) on google/us-east1...
 - juju-33f662-0 (arch=amd64 mem=3.6G cores=4)
Installing Juju agent on bootstrap instance
Waiting for address
Attempting to connect to 35.231.246.157:22
Attempting to connect to 10.142.0.17:22
Connected to 35.231.246.157
Running machine configuration script...
Bootstrap agent now started
Contacting Juju controller at 35.231.246.157 to verify accessibility...

Bootstrap complete, controller "gce" is now available
Controller machines are in the "controller" model

Now you can run
	juju add-model <model-name>
to create a new model to deploy workloads.

You can check the GCE instance availability (ensure the right GCloud project chosen!):

Create a new Juju model:

juju add-model welcome

(Optional) Increase the debug level if you are troubleshooting charms:

juju model-config logging-config='<root>=INFO;unit=DEBUG'

Deploy charms

The following command deploys MySQL and Data-Integrator (the charm to request a test DB):

juju deploy mysql
juju deploy data-integrator --config database-name=test123
juju relate mysql data-integrator

Check the status:

> juju status --relations
Model    Controller  Cloud/Region     Version  SLA          Timestamp
welcome  gce         google/us-east1  3.5.4    unsupported  23:49:56+02:00

App              Version          Status  Scale  Charm            Channel        Rev  Exposed  Message
data-integrator                   active      1  data-integrator  latest/stable   41  no       
mysql            8.0.36-0ubun...  active      1  mysql            8.0/stable     240  no       

Unit                Workload  Agent  Machine  Public address   Ports           Message
data-integrator/0*  active    idle   1        104.196.104.248                  
mysql/0*            active    idle   0        34.138.135.20    3306,33060/tcp  Primary

Machine  State    Address          Inst id        Base          AZ          Message
0        started  34.138.135.20    juju-257803-0  [email protected]  us-east1-c  RUNNING
1        started  104.196.104.248  juju-257803-1  [email protected]  us-east1-d  RUNNING

Integration provider                   Requirer                               Interface              Type     Message
data-integrator:data-integrator-peers  data-integrator:data-integrator-peers  data-integrator-peers  peer     
mysql:database                         data-integrator:mysql                  mysql_client           regular  
mysql:database-peers                   mysql:database-peers                   mysql_peers            peer     
mysql:restart                          mysql:restart                          rolling_op             peer     
mysql:upgrade                          mysql:upgrade                          upgrade                peer  

Once deployed, request the credentials for your newly bootstrapped MySQL database.

For Juju 2.9 use:

juju run-action --wait data-integrator/leader get-credentials

and for newer Juju 3+ use:

juju run data-integrator/leader get-credentials

Output example:

mysql:
  data: '{"database": "test123", "external-node-connectivity": "true", "requested-secrets":
    "[\"username\", \"password\", \"tls\", \"tls-ca\", \"uris\"]"}'
  database: test123
  endpoints: 10.142.0.21:3306
  password: zDPalkEi1Uaj26oDSYjCoWYl
  username: relation-4
  version: 8.0.36-0ubuntu0.22.04.1
ok: "True"

At this point, you can access your DB inside GCloud using the internal IP address. All further Juju applications will use the database through the internal network:

> mysql -h 10.142.0.21 -P 3306 -u relation-4 -pzDPalkEi1Uaj26oDSYjCoWYl test123
...
mysql> show databases;
+--------------------+
| Database           |
+--------------------+
| information_schema |
| performance_schema |
| test123            |
+--------------------+
3 rows in set (0.13 sec)

From here you can use/scale/backup/restore/refresh your newly deployed Charmed MySQL.

Expose database (optional)

To access the database from outside of GCloud (warning: opening ports to public is risky) open the GCloud firewall using the simple juju expose functionality:

juju expose mysql

Once exposed, you can connect your database using the same credentials as above. Important: this time, use the GCE Public IP assigned to the MySQL instance:

> juju status mysql
...
Unit                Workload  Agent  Machine  Public address   Ports           Message
mysql/0*            active    idle   0        34.138.135.20    3306,33060/tcp  Primary
...

> mysql -h 34.138.135.20 -P 3306 -u relation-4 -pzDPalkEi1Uaj26oDSYjCoWYl test123
...
mysql> show databases;
+--------------------+
| Database           |
+--------------------+
| information_schema |
| performance_schema |
| test123            |
+--------------------+
3 rows in set (0.13 sec)

To close public access, run:

juju unexpose mysql

Clean up

Always clean GCE resources that are no longer necessary - they could be costly!

To destroy the Juju controller and remove GCE instance, run:

Warning: all your data will be permanently removed

> juju controllers
Controller  Model    User   Access     Cloud/Region     Models  Nodes    HA  Version
gce*        welcome  admin  superuser  google/us-east1       2      1  none  3.5.4  

> juju destroy-controller gce --destroy-all-models --destroy-storage --force

Next, check and manually delete all unnecessary GCloud resources, to show the list of all your GCE instances run the following command (make sure the correct region used!):

gcloud compute instances list
Output example
NAME           ZONE        MACHINE_TYPE   PREEMPTIBLE  INTERNAL_IP  EXTERNAL_IP     STATUS
juju-33f662-0  us-east1-b  n1-highcpu-4                10.142.0.17  35.231.246.157  RUNNING
juju-e2b96f-0  us-east1-b  n2d-highcpu-2               10.142.0.18  35.237.64.81    STOPPING
juju-e2b96f-1  us-east1-d  n2d-highcpu-2               10.142.0.19  34.73.238.173   STOPPING

List your Juju credentials:

> juju credentials
...
Client Credentials:
Cloud        Credentials
google       juju-gce-account
...

Remove GCloud credentials from Juju:

> juju remove-credential google juju-gce-account

Finally, remove the GCloud json file user credentials (to avoid forgetting and leaking):

rm -f /var/snap/juju/common/sa-private-key.json

Last updated a month ago. Help improve this document in the forum.