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Google Cloud Platform for Architects

You're reading from   Google Cloud Platform for Architects Design and manage powerful cloud solutions

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788834308
Length 372 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Loonycorn Ravi Loonycorn Ravi
Author Profile Icon Loonycorn Ravi
Loonycorn Ravi
Judy Raj Judy Raj
Author Profile Icon Judy Raj
Judy Raj
Vitthal Srinivasan Vitthal Srinivasan
Author Profile Icon Vitthal Srinivasan
Vitthal Srinivasan
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Case for Cloud Computing FREE CHAPTER 2. Introduction to Google Cloud Platform 3. Compute Choices – VMs and the Google Compute Engine 4. GKE, App Engine, and Cloud Functions 5. Google Cloud Storage – Fishing in a Bucket 6. Relational Databases 7. NoSQL Databases 8. BigQuery 9. Identity and Access Management 10. Managing Hadoop with Dataproc 11. Load Balancing 12. Networking in GCP 13. Logging and Monitoring 14. Infrastructure Automation 15. Security on the GCP 16. Pricing Considerations 17. Effective Use of the GCP 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Taxonomy of GCP load balancers

Each of the major cloud providers supports several different types of load balancer, and cloud architects can choose the type that best suits their use cases. Here is a taxonomy of load balancers that are available on the GCP:

As this diagram illustrates, load balancers can operate at different layers of the OSI stack. HTTP(S) load balancers operate at the application layer, SSL is a session-layer protocol, TCP is a transport-layer protocol, and network load balancers operate at the level of IP, which, of course, is a network protocol.

The rule of thumb is this: go with the highest layer of the OSI stack possible. So, for instance, if your application is based on HTTP or HTTPS, use HTTP(S) load balancing. If not, try to work at the session layer, and so on. The reason for this is the higher in the stack you are, the more real-world the abstractions...

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