gcloud init
Connect a Micronaut Data JDBC Application to a Google MySQL Database
Learn how to connect to a Google MySQL Database
Authors: John Shingler
Micronaut Version: 3.9.2
1. Getting Started
In this guide, we will create a Micronaut application written in Java.
The application uses Micronaut Data JDBC and a MySQL database.
2. What you will need
To complete this guide, you will need the following:
-
Some time on your hands
-
A decent text editor or IDE
-
JDK 1.8 or greater installed with
JAVA_HOME
configured appropriately -
A Google Cloud Platform (GCP) account and a GCP project.
3. Costs
This guide uses paid services; you may need to enable Billing in Google Cloud to complete some steps in this guide. |
4. Google Cloud Platform
Signup for the Google Cloud Platform
4.1. Cloud SDK
Install the Cloud SDK CLI for your operating system.
Cloud SDK includes the gcloud
command-line tool. Run the init
command in your terminal:
Log in to your Google Cloud Platform:
gcloud auth login
4.2. Google Cloud Platform Project
Create a new project with a unique name (replace xxxxxx
with alphanumeric characters of your choice):
gcloud projects create micronaut-guides-xxxxxx
In GCP, project ids are globally unique, so the id you used above is the one you should use in the rest of this guide. |
Change your project:
gcloud config set project micronaut-guides-xxxxxx
If you forget the project id, you can list all projects:
gcloud projects list
5. Creating a MySQL Database instance in the Google Cloud
We will create the database with the Google Cloud CLI. See the MySQL CLI command reference for more information.
5.1. Create the MySQL instance
gcloud sql instances create micronaut-guides-mysql \
--database-version=MYSQL_8_0 \
--tier=db-f1-micro \
--region=us-east1 \
--root-password=<YOUR_ROOT_PASSWORD> \
--authorized-networks=<LOCAL_IP_ADDRESS>
-
micronaut-guides-mysql
- Change if you would like to use a different instance name -
--database-version
- Specifying MySQL v8.0 (See SQL DB Versions for other options) -
--tier
- Change to match your needs. (Instead of using tiers, you can specify the CPU and memory, with the--cpu
and--memory
flags) -
--region
- Defaults tous-central1
if omitted -
--root-password
- Default topassword123
if omitted -
--authorized-networks
- A single IP or a range of IP Addresses in the CIDR notation -
LOCAL_IP_ADDRESS
- This is the local IP address where the Micronaut application is running. You can find out the value your local machine by visiting http://whatismyip.akamai.com/.
You might be prompted to enable the Google SQL Admin API
|
You will see the following output:
NAME DATABASE_VERSION LOCATION TIER PRIMARY_ADDRESS PRIVATE_ADDRESS STATUS
micronaut-guides-mysql MYSQL_8_0 us-east1-c db-f1-micro 34.xxx.xxx.65 - RUNNABLE
Make note of the "Primary Address"
; you will need this later.
If you need to change the authorized-networks
, use:
gcloud sql instances patch micronaut-guides-mysql \
--authorized-networks=<DIFFERENT_IP>
5.1.1. Create a User
Instead of using the root DB User account, create one for the application to use:
gcloud sql users create <USER_NAME> \
--instance=micronaut-guides-mysql \
--password=<USER_PASSWORD>
5.2. Create the Database
Now that we have our MySQL instance running, we need to create a database.
gcloud sql databases create demo \
--instance=micronaut-guides-mysql
-
demo
- Change if you would like to use a different database name.
6. Creating the Application
Download the complete solution of the Access a database with Micronaut Data JDBC guide. You will use the sample application as a starting point.
7. Running the Application
With almost everything in place, we can start the application and try it out. First, we need to set environment variables to configure the application datasource. Then we can start the app.
Create environment variables for DATASOURCES_DEFAULT_URL
, DATASOURCES_DEFAULT_USERNAME
, and DATASOURCES_DEFAULT_PASSWORD
, which will be used in the Micronaut app’s application.yml
datasource:
export DATASOURCES_DEFAULT_URL=jdbc:mysql://<DB_INSTANCE_IP>:3306/demo
export DATASOURCES_DEFAULT_USERNAME=<USER_NAME>
export DATASOURCES_DEFAULT_PASSWORD=<USER_PASSWORD>
-
DB_INSTANCE_IP
- Is your MySQL instance’s primary address -
demo
- Change if you used a different database name -
DATASOURCES_DEFAULT_USERNAME
- Not needed if you are using the root user
Window System
|
Micronaut Framework populates the properties datasources.default.url
, datasources.default.username
and datasources.default.password
with those environment variables' values. Learn more about JDBC Connection Pools.
To run the application, use the ./gradlew run
command, which starts the application on port 8080.
You can test the application in a web browser or with cURL.
Run from a terminal window to create a Genre
:
curl -X "POST" "http://localhost:8080/genres" \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8' \
-d $'{ "name": "music" }'
and run this to list the genres:
curl http://localhost:8080/genres/list
7.1. Stopping the Instance
gcloud sql instances patch micronaut-guides-mysql \
--activation-policy=NEVER
8. Cleaning Up
After you’ve finished this guide, you can clean up the resources you created on Google Cloud Platform so you won’t be billed for them in the future. The following sections describe how to delete or turn off these resources.
8.1. Deleting the project
The easiest way to eliminate billing is to delete the project you created for the tutorial.
Deleting a project has the following consequences:
|
8.1.1. Via the CLI
To delete the project using the Cloud SDK, run the following command, replacing YOUR_PROJECT_ID
with the project ID:
gcloud projects delete YOUR_PROJECT_ID
8.1.2. Via the Cloud Platform Console
In the Cloud Platform Console, go to the Projects page.
In the project list, select the project you want to delete and click Delete project. After selecting the checkbox next to the project name, click Delete project
In the dialog, type the project ID, and then click Shut down to delete the project.
Deleting or turning off specific resources
You can individually delete or turn off some of the resources that you created during the tutorial.
9. Next Steps
Read more about Micronaut Data.