Run a python script on schedule on Google App Engine
Finally my kids will love me again. Turns out I was looking at the wrong GCP resource, as @Dan_Cornilescu pointed out that might be a way to do it, but the easiest way to do it is "Cloud Functions" in Conjunction with "Cloud Scheduler" and I found it just by mere chance.
This Article was the very first one that mentioned it, at the moment I passed on it because the autor again uses a web app to illustrate the case, for my needs and lack of technical argot, I just couldn't dig it. But it is really as simple as it was supposed to be, in your Google Cloud Console:
- Go to the Functions Section
- Choose as trigger "Cloud Pub/Sub"
- Add/Choose a topic
- Select your runtime(Python3.7 of course)
- Select function to execute
- Create
- Make sure you fill the "requirements.txt" file on the next tab
- Go to Cloud Scheduler section of GCP and Create a job(cron job)
- Choose as target: "Pub/Sub"
- Enter the topic you chose for your function
- If you want to send arguments for your functions, use the payload for that purpose.
To use an argument or arguments for your Python function you want to use the payload and using the following from their initial function:
pubsub_message = base64.b64decode(event['data']).decode('utf-8')
This pubsub_message
you can use it as an argument for your python functions.
And that's all folks, easy, super easy, at the end I think is just the same of a GAE without the visual page, just what I was needed, I knew there's gotta be a better way.
EDIT: The article I mention here describe how to use gcloud to upload your function(s) directly from your computer.
The answer I mentioned still applies - you won't be able to run your scripts in a standalone manner on GAE cron, simply because the cron service is really just a set of scheduled GET requests. You may be able to achieve the same end result, but by:
- installing a skeleton app
- breaking down your scripts into code that you'd stuff into the app's handlers, with arguments passed in the request's query strings
- configuring the cron service to build and trigger those requests
You can find a Python 3 skeleton in Quickstart for Python 3 in the App Engine Standard Environment
Alternatively you could, of course, use an IaaS service instead of GAE, like Google Compute Engine, where you could run your scripts directly, with a traditional cron service.