The Cloud SQL Proxy allows a user with the appropriate permissions to connect to a Second Generation Cloud SQL database without having to deal with IP whitelisting or SSL certificates manually. It works by opening unix/tcp sockets on the local machine and proxying connections to the associated Cloud SQL instances when the sockets are used.
To build from source, ensure you have go installed and have set GOPATH. Then, simply do a go get:
GO111MODULE=on go get github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/cloudsql-proxy/cmd/cloud_sql_proxy
The cloud_sql_proxy will be placed in $GOPATH/bin
after go get
completes.
cloud_sql_proxy takes a few arguments to configure what instances to connect to and connection behavior:
-fuse
: requires access to/dev/fuse
as well as thefusermount
binary. An optional-fuse_tmp
flag can specify where to place temporary files. The directory indicated by-dir
is mounted.-instances="project1:region:instance1,project3:region:instance1"
: A comma-separated list of instances to open inside-dir
. Also supports exposing a tcp port and renaming the default Unix Domain Sockets; see examples below. Same list can be provided via INSTANCES environment variable, in case when both are provided - proxy will use command line flag.-instances_metadata=metadata_key
: Usable on GCE only. The given GCE metadata key will be polled for a list of instances to open in-dir
. The metadata key is relative fromcomputeMetadata/v1/
. The format for the value is the same as the 'instances' flag. A hanging-poll strategy is used, meaning that changes to the metadata value will be reflected in the-dir
even while the proxy is running. When an instance is removed from the list the corresponding socket will be removed from-dir
as well (unless it was also specified in-instances
), but any existing connections to this instance will NOT be terminated.-ip_address_types=PUBLIC,PRIVATE
: A comma-delimited list of preferred IP types for connecting to an instance. For example, setting this to PRIVATE will force the proxy to connect to instances using an instance's associated private IP. Defaults toPUBLIC,PRIVATE
-term_timeout=30s
: How long to wait for connections to close before shutting down the proxy. Defaults to 0.-skip_failed_instance_config
: Setting this flag will allow you to prevent the proxy from terminating when some instance configurations could not be parsed and/or are unavailable.-log_debug_stdout=true
: This is to log non-error output to stdOut instead of stdErr. For example, if you don't want connection related messages to log as errors, set this flag to true. Defaults to false.
Note: -instances
and -instances_metadata
may be used at the same time but
are not compatible with the -fuse
flag.
cloud_sql_proxy authentication can be configured in a few different ways. Those listed higher on the list will override options lower on the list:
-
credential_file
flag -
token
flag -
Service account key at path stored in
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
-
gcloud user credentials (set from
gcloud auth login
) -
Default Application Credentials via goauth:
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
(again)- gcloud application default credentials (set from
gcloud auth application-default login
) - appengine.AccessToken (for App Engine Go < =1.9)
- GCE/GAE metadata credentials
When the proxy authenticates under the default service account of the Compute Engine VM it is running on the VM must have at least the sqlservice.admin API scope ("https://www.googleapis.com/auth/sqlservice.admin") and the associated project must have the SQL Admin API enabled. The default service account must also have at least WRITER/EDITOR priviledges to any projects of target SQL instances.
Specifying the -credential_file
flag allows use of the proxy outside of
Google's cloud. Simply create a new service
account,
download the associated JSON file, and set -credential_file
to the path of the
JSON file. You can also set the GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS environment variable
instead of passing this flag.
./cloud_sql_proxy -dir=/cloudsql -instances=my-project:us-central1:sql-inst &
mysql -u root -S /cloudsql/my-project:us-central1:sql-inst
# To retrieve instances from a custom metadata value (only when running on GCE)
./cloud_sql_proxy -dir=/cloudsql -instances_metadata instance/attributes/<custom-metadata-key> &
mysql -u root -S /cloudsql/my-project:us-central1:sql-inst
# For -fuse you do not need to specify instance names ahead of time:
./cloud_sql_proxy -dir=/cloudsql -fuse &
mysql -u root -S /cloudsql/my-project:us-central1:sql-inst
# For programs which do not support using Unix Domain Sockets, specify tcp:
./cloud_sql_proxy -dir=/cloudsql -instances=my-project:us-central1:sql-inst=tcp:3306 &
mysql -u root -h 127.0.0.1
# For programs which require a certain Unix Domain Socket name:
./cloud_sql_proxy -dir=/cloudsql -instances=my-project:us-central1:sql-inst=unix:custom_socket_name &
mysql -u root -S /cloudsql/custom_socket_name
# For programs which require a the Unix Domain Socket at a specific location, set an absolute path (overrides -dir):
./cloud_sql_proxy -dir=/cloudsql -instances=my-project:us-central1:sql-inst=unix:/my/custom/sql-socket &
mysql -u root -S /my/custom/sql-socket
For convenience, we maintain several containerized versions. These images are currently hosted in the following GCR repositories:
gcr.io/cloudsql-docker/gce-proxy
us.gcr.io/cloudsql-docker/gce-proxy
eu.gcr.io/cloudsql-docker/gce-proxy
asia.gcr.io/cloudsql-docker/gce-proxy
Note:
Each image is tagged with the version of the proxy it was released with. The following tags are currently supported:
$VERSION
- default image (recommended)$VERSION-alpine
- usesalpine:3
as a base image (only supported from v1.17 up)$VERSION-buster
- usesdebian:buster
as a base image (only supported from v1.17 up)
Note: We strongly recommend to always use the latest version of the proxy,
and to update the version regularly. However, we recommend pinning to a
specific tag and avoid the latest
tag. Additionally, please note that
the tagged version is only that of the proxy - changes in base images may
break specific setups, even on non-major version increments. As such,
it's a best practice to test changes before deployment, and use automated
rollbacks to revert potential failures.
Follow this page. See also Connecting from Google Kubernetes Engine.
WARNING: These distributions are not officially supported by Google.
You can find a formula for with Homebrew here.
Follow these instructions. This chart creates a Deployment and a Service, but we recommend deploying the proxy as a sidecar container in your pods.
Install via Nuget, follow these instructions.