Before you begin
- Labs create a Google Cloud project and resources for a fixed time
- Labs have a time limit and no pause feature. If you restart it, you'll have to start from the beginning.
- On the top left of your screen, click Start lab to begin
Create multiple web server instances
/ 30
Configure the load balancing service
/ 20
Create an HTTP load balancer
/ 50
In this hands-on lab you learn the differences between a Network Load Balancer and an Application Load Balancer, and how to set them up for your applications running on Compute Engine virtual machines (VMs).
There are several ways you can load balance on Google Cloud. This lab takes you through the setup of the following load balancers:
You are encouraged to type the commands yourself, which can help you learn the core concepts. Many labs include a code block that contains the required commands. You can easily copy and paste the commands from the code block into the appropriate places during the lab.
In this lab, you learn how to perform the following tasks:
Read these instructions. Labs are timed and you cannot pause them. The timer, which starts when you click Start Lab, shows how long Google Cloud resources are made available to you.
This hands-on lab lets you do the lab activities in a real cloud environment, not in a simulation or demo environment. It does so by giving you new, temporary credentials you use to sign in and access Google Cloud for the duration of the lab.
To complete this lab, you need:
Click the Start Lab button. If you need to pay for the lab, a dialog opens for you to select your payment method. On the left is the Lab Details pane with the following:
Click Open Google Cloud console (or right-click and select Open Link in Incognito Window if you are running the Chrome browser).
The lab spins up resources, and then opens another tab that shows the Sign in page.
Tip: Arrange the tabs in separate windows, side-by-side.
If necessary, copy the Username below and paste it into the Sign in dialog.
You can also find the Username in the Lab Details pane.
Click Next.
Copy the Password below and paste it into the Welcome dialog.
You can also find the Password in the Lab Details pane.
Click Next.
Click through the subsequent pages:
After a few moments, the Google Cloud console opens in this tab.
Cloud Shell is a virtual machine that is loaded with development tools. It offers a persistent 5GB home directory and runs on the Google Cloud. Cloud Shell provides command-line access to your Google Cloud resources.
Click Activate Cloud Shell at the top of the Google Cloud console.
Click through the following windows:
When you are connected, you are already authenticated, and the project is set to your Project_ID,
gcloud
is the command-line tool for Google Cloud. It comes pre-installed on Cloud Shell and supports tab-completion.
Output:
Output:
gcloud
, in Google Cloud, refer to the gcloud CLI overview guide.
Set the default region:
In Cloud Shell, set the default zone:
Learn more about choosing zones and regions in Compute Engine's Regions and zones documentation.
For this load balancing scenario, you create three Compute Engine VM instances and install Apache on them, then add a firewall rule that allows HTTP traffic to reach the instances.
The code provided sets the zone to tags
field lets you reference these instances all at once, such as with a firewall rule.
These commands also install Apache on each instance and give each instance a unique home page.
Create a virtual machine, www1
, in your default zone using the following code:
Create a virtual machine, www2
, in your default zone using the following code:
Create a virtual machine, www3
, in your default zone.
Create a firewall rule to allow external traffic to the VM instances:
Now you need to get the external IP addresses of your instances and verify that they are running.
Run the following to list your instances. You'll see their IP addresses in the EXTERNAL_IP
column:
Verify that each instance is running with curl
, replacing [IP_ADDRESS] with the external IP address for each of your VMs:
Click Check my progress to verify that you've created a group of web servers.
When you configure the load balancing service, your virtual machine instances receives packets that are destined for the static external IP address you configure. Instances made with a Compute Engine image are automatically configured to handle this IP address.
Create a static external IP address for your load balancer:
Output:
Add a legacy HTTP health check resource:
Add a target pool in the same region as your instances. Run the following to create the target pool and use the health check, which is required for the service to function:
Add the instances to the pool:
Add a forwarding rule:
Click Check my progress to verify that you've created an L4 Network Load Balancer that points to the web servers.
Now that the load balancing service is configured, you can start sending traffic to the forwarding rule and watch the traffic be dispersed to different instances.
Enter the following command to view the external IP address of the www-rule forwarding rule used by the load balancer:
Access the external IP address:
Show the external IP address:
Use the curl
command to access the external IP address, replacing IP_ADDRESS
with an external IP address from the previous command:
The response from the curl
command alternates randomly among the three instances.
If your response is initially unsuccessful, wait approximately 30 seconds for the configuration to be fully loaded and for your instances to be marked healthy before trying again.
Use Ctrl + C to stop running the command.
Application Load Balancing is implemented on Google Front End (GFE). GFEs are distributed globally and operate together using Google's global network and control plane. You can configure URL rules to route some URLs to one set of instances and route other URLs to other instances.
Requests are always routed to the instance group that is closest to the user, if that group has enough capacity and is appropriate for the request. If the closest group does not have enough capacity, the request is sent to the closest group that does have capacity.
To set up a load balancer with a Compute Engine backend, your VMs need to be in an instance group. The managed instance group provides VMs running the backend servers of an external Application Load Balancer. For this lab, backends serve their own hostnames.
First, create the load balancer template:
Managed instance groups (MIGs) let you operate apps on multiple identical VMs. You can make your workloads scalable and highly available by taking advantage of automated MIG services, including: autoscaling, autohealing, regional (multiple zone) deployment, and automatic updating.
Create a managed instance group based on the template:
Create the fw-allow-health-check
firewall rule.
130.211.0.0/22
and 35.191.0.0/16
).
This lab uses the target tag allow-health-check
to identify the VMs
Now that the instances are up and running, set up a global static external IP address that your customers use to reach your load balancer:
Note the IPv4 address that was reserved:
Create a health check for the load balancer:
Create a backend service:
Add your instance group as the backend to the backend service:
Create a URL map to route the incoming requests to the default backend service:
Create a target HTTP proxy to route requests to your URL map:
Create a global forwarding rule to route incoming requests to the proxy:
Click Check my progress to verify that you've created an L7 Application Load Balancer.
On the Google Cloud console title bar, type Load balancing in the Search field, then choose Load balancing from the search results.
Click on the load balancer that you just created, web-map-http.
In the Backend section, click on the name of the backend and confirm that the VMs are Healthy. If they are not healthy, wait a few moments and try reloading the page.
When the VMs are healthy, test the load balancer using a web browser, going to http://IP_ADDRESS/
, replacing IP_ADDRESS
with the load balancer's IP address that you copied previously.
Your browser should render a page with content showing the name of the instance that served the page, along with its zone (for example, Page served from: lb-backend-group-xxxx
).
In this lab, you have built a Network Load Balancer and an Application Load Balancer as well as practiced using instance templates and managed instance groups.
Refer to the following guides to learn more:
Continue learning with this lab:
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Manual Last Updated December 11, 2024
Lab Last Tested December 11, 2024
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