Goblet is a framework for writing serverless rest apis in python in google cloud. It allows you to quickly create and deploy python apis backed by cloudfunctions.
It provides:
- A command line tool for creating, deploying, and managing your api
- A decorator based API for integrating with GCP API Gateway, Storage, Cloudfunctions, PubSub, Scheduler, and other GCP services.
- Local environment for your api endpoints
- Dynamically generated openapispec
- Support for multiple stages
You can create Rest APIs:
from goblet import Goblet, jsonify, goblet_entrypoint
app = Goblet(function_name="goblet_example")
goblet_entrypoint(app)
@app.route('/home')
def home():
return {"hello": "world"}
@app.route('/home/{id}', methods=["POST"])
def post_example(id: int) -> List[int]:
return jsonify([id])
Once you've written your code, you just run goblet deploy and Goblet takes care of deploying your app.
$ goblet deploy -l us-central1
...
https://api.uc.gateway.dev
$ curl https://api.uc.gateway.dev/home
{"hello": "world"}
Note: Due to breaking changes in Cloudfunctions you will need to wrap your goblet class in a function. See issue #88. In the latest goblet version (0.5.0) there is a helper function
goblet_entrypoint
that can be used as well.
goblet_entrypoint(app)
To install goblet, open an interactive shell and run:
pip install goblet-gcp
Make sure to have the correct services enabled in your gcp project depending on what you want to deploy
api-gateway
, cloudfunctions
, storage
, pubsub
, scheduler
You will also need to install gcloud cli for authentication
In this tutorial, you'll use the goblet command line utility to create and deploy a basic REST API. This quickstart uses Python 3.7. You can find the latest versions of python on the Python download page.
To install Goblet, we'll first create and activate a virtual environment in python3.7:
$ python3 --version
Python 3.7.3
$ python3 -m venv venv37
$ . venv37/bin/activate
Next we'll install Goblet using pip:
python3 -m pip install goblet-gcp
You can verify you have goblet installed by running:
$ goblet --help
Usage: goblet [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
...
Before you can deploy an application, be sure you have credentials configured. You should run gcloud auth application-default login
and sign in to the desired project.
When setting the defaut location note that api-gateway is only available in asia-east1
, europe-west1
, us-east-1
and us-central1
.
create your project directory, which should include an main.py and a requirements.txt. Make sure requirements.txt includes goblet-gcp
$ ls -la
drwxr-xr-x .goblet
-rw-r--r-- main.py
-rw-r--r-- requirements.txt
You can ignore the .goblet directory for now, the two main files we'll focus on is app.py and requirements.txt.
Let's take a look at the main.py file:
from goblet import Goblet, goblet_entrypoint
app = Goblet(function_name="goblet_example")
goblet_entrypoint(app)
@app.route('/home')
def home():
return {"hello": "world"}
This app will deploy an api with endpoint /home
.
Running your functions locally for testing and debugging is easy to do with goblet. First set a local param in the goblet class
from goblet import Goblet
app = Goblet(function_name="goblet_example", local='test')
Then run goblet local test
and replace test with whatever variable you decide to use.
Now you can hit your functions endpoint at localhost:8080
with your routes.
Let's deploy this app. Make sure you're in the app directory and run goblet deploy making sure to specify the desired location:
$ goblet deploy -l us-central1
INFO:goblet.deployer:zipping function......
INFO:goblet.deployer:uploading function zip to gs......
INFO:goblet.deployer:function code uploaded
INFO:goblet.deployer:creating cloudfunction......
INFO:goblet.deployer:deploying api......
INFO:goblet.deployer:api successfully deployed...
INFO:goblet.deployer:api endpoint is goblet-example-yol8sbt.uc.gateway.dev
You now have an API up and running using API Gateway and cloudfunctions:
$ curl https://goblet-example-yol8sbt.uc.gateway.dev/home
{"hello": "world"}
Try making a change to the returned dictionary from the home() function. You can then redeploy your changes by running golet deploy
.
You've now created your first app using goblet. You can make modifications to your main.py file and rerun goblet deploy to redeploy your changes.
At this point, there are several next steps you can take.
Docs - Goblet Documentation
If you're done experimenting with Goblet and you'd like to cleanup, you can use the goblet destroy
command making sure to specify the desired location, and Goblet will delete all the resources it created when running the goblet deploy command.
$ goblet destroy -l us-central1
INFO:goblet.deployer:destroying api gateway......
INFO:goblet.deployer:api configs destroying....
INFO:goblet.deployer:apis successfully destroyed......
INFO:goblet.deployer:deleting google cloudfunction......
INFO:goblet.deployer:deleting storage bucket......
Building Python Serverless Applications on GCP
Serverless APIs made simple on GCP with Goblet backed by Cloud Functions and Cloud Run
Tutorial: Publishing GitHub Findings to Security Command Center
Tutorial: Setting Up Approval Processes with Slack Apps
Please file any issues, bugs or feature requests as an issue on our GitHub page.
☑ Integration Tests
☑ Api Gateway Auth
☑ Configuration Options (function names, ...)
☑ Use checksum for updates
☑ Cloudrun Backend
☑ Scheduler trigger
☑ Pub Sub trigger
☑ Cloud Storage trigger
☐ Firestore trigger
☐ Firebase trigger
☐ Cloud Tasks trigger
☐ Cloud Endpoints trigger
☑ EventArc trigger
If you would like to contribute to the library (e.g. by improving the documentation, solving a bug or adding a cool new feature) submit a pull request.
Based on chalice