How to Create Cloud NAT on Google Cloud Platform

NAT enables private IP networks that use unregistered IP addresses to connect to the Internet. NAT operates on a router, usually connecting two networks together, and translates the private (not globally unique) addresses in the internal network into legal addresses, before packets are forwarded to another network.   Login to google cloud platform portal. Click …

How to Create Cloud Function in Google Cloud Platform

Google Cloud Functions is a serverless execution environment for building and connecting cloud services. With Cloud Functions you write simple, single-purpose functions that are attached to events emitted from your cloud infrastructure and services. Cloud Functions can respond to events from Google Cloud services such as Cloud Storage, Pub/Sub, and Cloud Firestore to process files …

How to Setup Google Cloud CLI (gcloud cli) on Ubuntu

The gcloud CLI manages authentication, local configuration, developer workflow, interactions with Google Cloud APIs. With the gcloud command-line tool,.it’s easy to perform many common cloud tasks, like creating a Compute Engine VM instance, and deploying an App Engine application, either from the command line or in scripts and other automations.   Add the Cloud SDK …

How to Create Routes on Google Cloud Platform

Google Cloud routes define the paths that network traffic takes from a virtual machine (VM) instance to other destinations. In a VPC network, a route consists of a single destination prefix in CIDR format and a single next hop. When an instance in a VPC network sends a packet, Google Cloud delivers the packet to …

How to Create high-availability VPNs on Google cloud platform.

HA VPN is a high-availability (HA) Cloud VPN solution that lets you securely connect your on-premises network to your VPC network through an IPsec VPN connection in a single region. HA VPN provides an SLA of 99.99% service availability. When you create an HA VPN gateway, Google Cloud automatically chooses two external IP addresses, one …