Sign In Start Free Trial
Account

Add to playlist

Create a Playlist

Modal Close icon
You need to login to use this feature.
  • Mastering Google App Engine
  • Toc
  • feedback
Mastering Google App Engine

Mastering Google App Engine

3 (2)
close
Mastering Google App Engine

Mastering Google App Engine

3 (2)

Overview of this book

Developing web applications that serve millions of users is no easy task, as it involves a number of configurations and administrative tasks for the underlying software and hardware stack. This whole configuration requires not only expertise, but also a fair amount of time as well. Time that could have been spent on actual application functionality. Google App Engine allows you develop highly scalable web applications or backends for mobile applications without worrying about the system administration plumbing or hardware provisioning issues. Just focus writing on your business logic, the meat of the application, and let Google's powerful infrastructure scale it to thousands of requests per second and millions of users without any effort on your part. This book takes you from explaining how scalable applications work to designing and developing robust scalable web applications of your own, utilizing services available on Google App Engine. Starting with a walkthrough of scalability is and how scalable web applications work, this book introduces you to the environment under which your applications exist on Google App Engine. Next, you will learn about Google's datastore, which is a massively scalable distributed NoSQL solution built on top of BigTable. You will examine the BigTable concepts and operations in detail and reveal how it is used to build Google datastore. Armed with this knowledge, you will then advance towards how to best model your data and query that along with transactions. To augment the powerful distributed dataset, you will deep dive into search functionality offered on Google App Engine. With the search and storage sorted out, you will get a look into performing long running tasks in the background using Google App Engine task queues along with sending and receiving emails. You will also examine the memcache to boost web application performance, image processing for common image manipulation tasks. You will then explore uploading, storing, and serving large files using Blobstore and Cloud storage. Finally, you will be presented with the deployment and monitoring of your applications in production along with a detailed look at dividing applications into different working modules.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
close
11
Index

Receiving e-mails


Receiving e-mails is pretty much a simple thing in Google App Engine. First, you have to enable the incoming e-mails for your app. This can only be done in your app.yaml file (as there's nothing on the application settings when deployed). To do this, you add the following line to app.yaml:

inbound_services:
- mail

Now, how are the e-mails delivered to your app? Can you pull them on your own? The answer is that the e-mails are delivered to your application as HTTP POST requests. So, which URL do they hit? That's actually /_ah/mail/address, where address is the e-mail address to which the e-mail is sent.

The e-mail address should be of the following form:

[email protected]

Here, account can be anything that you like, and appid is your application ID from app.yaml. To handle the incoming requests at [email protected], you can have the following handler:

- url: /_ah/mail/sales@myapp\.appspotmail\.com
script: my_email_handler.app
login: admin

Let's look at the...

Unlock full access

Continue reading for free

A Packt free trial gives you instant online access to our library of over 7000 practical eBooks and videos, constantly updated with the latest in tech
bookmark search playlist font-size

Change the font size

margin-width

Change margin width

day-mode

Change background colour

Close icon Search
Country selected

Close icon Your notes and bookmarks

Delete Bookmark

Modal Close icon
Are you sure you want to delete it?
Cancel
Yes, Delete