Set up regional external Application Load Balancers with Shared VPC

This document shows you two sample configurations for setting up a regional external Application Load Balancer in a Shared VPC environment:

  • The first example creates all of the load balancer components and backends in one service project.
  • The second example creates the load balancer's frontend components and URL map in one service project, while the load balancer's backend service and backends are created in a different service project. This type of deployment, where the URL map references a backend service in another project, is referred to as Cross-project service referencing.

Both examples require the same initial configuration to grant permissions and set up Shared VPC before you can start creating load balancers.

These are not the only Shared VPC configurations supported by the regional external Application Load Balancer. For other valid Shared VPC architectures, see Shared VPC architectures.

If you don't want to use a Shared VPC network, see Set up a regional external Application Load Balancer with VM instance group backends.

Before you begin

  1. Read Shared VPC overview.
  2. Read External Application Load Balancer overview, including the Shared VPC architectures section.

Permissions required

Setting up a load balancer on a Shared VPC network requires some initial setup and provisioning by an administrator. After the initial setup, a service project owner can do one of the following:

  • Deploy all the load balancer's components and its backends in a service project.
  • Deploy the load balancer's backend components (backend service and backends) in service projects that can be referenced by a URL map in another service or host project.

This section summarizes the permissions required to follow this guide to set up a load balancer on a Shared VPC network.

Set up Shared VPC

The following roles are required for the following tasks:

  1. Perform one-off administrative tasks such as setting up the Shared VPC and enabling a host project.
  2. Perform administrative tasks that must be repeated every time you want to onboard a new service project. This includes attaching the service project, provisioning and configuring networking resources, and granting access to the service project administrator.

These tasks must be performed in the Shared VPC host project. We recommend that the Shared VPC Admin also be the owner of the Shared VPC host project. This automatically grants the Network Admin and Security Admin roles.

Task Required role
Set up Shared VPC, enable host project, and grant access to service project administrators Shared VPC Admin
Create subnets in the Shared VPC host project and grant access to service project administrators Network Admin
Add and remove firewall rules Security Admin

After the subnets have been provisioned, the host project owner must grant the Network User role in the host project to anyone (typically service project administrators, developers, or service accounts) who needs to use these resources.

Task Required role
Use VPC networks and subnets belonging to the host project Network User

This role can be granted on the project level or for individual subnets. We recommend that you grant the role on individual subnets. Granting the role on the project provides access to all current and future subnets in the VPC network of the host project.

Deploy load balancer and backends

Service project administrators need the following roles in the service project to create load balancing resources and backends. These permissions are granted automatically to the service project owner or editor.

Roles granted in the service project
Task Required role
Create load balancer components Network Admin
Create instances Instance Admin
Create and modify SSL certificates Security Admin

Prerequisites

In this section, you need to perform the following steps:

  1. Configure the network and subnets in the host project.
  2. Set up Shared VPC in the host project.

The steps in this section do not need to be performed every time you want to create a new load balancer. However, you must ensure that you have access to the resources described here before you proceed to creating the load balancer.

Configure the network and subnets in the host project

You need a Shared VPC network with two subnets: one for the load balancer's frontend and backends and one for the load balancer's proxies.

This example uses the following network, region, and subnets:

  • Network. The network is named lb-network.

  • Subnet for load balancer's frontend and backends. A subnet named lb-frontend-and-backend-subnet in the us-west1 region uses 10.1.2.0/24 for its primary IP range.

  • Subnet for proxies. A subnet named proxy-only-subnet in the us-west1 region uses 10.129.0.0/23 for its primary IP range.

Configure the subnet for the load balancer's frontend and backends

This step does not need to be performed every time you want to create a new load balancer. You only need to ensure that the service project has access to a subnet in the Shared VPC network (in addition to the proxy-only subnet).

All the steps in this section must be performed in the host project.

Console

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the VPC networks page.

    Go to VPC networks

  2. Click Create VPC network.
  3. For Name, enter lb-network.
  4. In the Subnets section:

    1. Set the Subnet creation mode to Custom.
    2. In the New subnet section, enter the following information:

      • Name: lb-frontend-and-backend-subnet
      • Region: us-west1

      • IP address range: 10.1.2.0/24

    3. Click Done.

  5. Click Create.

gcloud

  1. Create a VPC network with the gcloud compute networks create command:

    gcloud compute networks create lb-network --subnet-mode=custom
    
  2. Create a subnet in the lb-network network in the us-west1 region:

    gcloud compute networks subnets create lb-frontend-and-backend-subnet 
    --network=lb-network
    --range=10.1.2.0/24
    --region=us-west1

Terraform

  1. Create a VPC network:

    # Shared VPC network
    resource "google_compute_network" "lb_network" {
      name                    = "lb-network"
      provider                = google-beta
      project                 = "my-host-project-id"
      auto_create_subnetworks = false
    }

  2. Create a subnet in the us-west1 region:

    # Shared VPC network - backend subnet
    resource "google_compute_subnetwork" "lb_frontend_and_backend_subnet" {
      name          = "lb-frontend-and-backend-subnet"
      provider      = google-beta
      project       = "my-host-project-id"
      region        = "us-west1"
      ip_cidr_range = "10.1.2.0/24"
      role          = "ACTIVE"
      network       = google_compute_network.lb_network.id
    }

Configure the proxy-only subnet

The proxy-only subnet is used by all regional Envoy-based load balancers in the us-west1 region, in the lb-network VPC network. There can only be one active proxy-only subnet per region, per network.

Do not perform this step if there is already a proxy-only subnet reserved in the us-west1 region in this network.

All the steps in this section must be performed in the host project.

Console

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the VPC networks page.

    Go to VPC networks

  2. Click the name of the Shared VPC network: lb-network.
  3. Click Add subnet.
  4. For Name, enter proxy-only-subnet.
  5. For Region, select us-west1.
  6. Set Purpose to Regional Managed Proxy.
  7. For IP address range, enter 10.129.0.0/23.
  8. Click Add.

gcloud

Create the proxy-only subnet with the gcloud compute networks subnets create command:

gcloud compute networks subnets create proxy-only-subnet \
    --purpose=REGIONAL_MANAGED_PROXY \
    --role=ACTIVE \
    --region=us-west1 \
    --network=lb-network \
    --range=10.129.0.0/23

Terraform

Create the proxy-only subnet:

# Shared VPC network - proxy-only subnet
resource "google_compute_subnetwork" "proxy_only_subnet" {
  name          = "proxy-only-subnet"
  provider      = google-beta
  project       = "my-host-project-id"
  region        = "us-west1"
  ip_cidr_range = "10.129.0.0/23"
  role          = "ACTIVE"
  purpose       = "REGIONAL_MANAGED_PROXY"
  network       = google_compute_network.lb_network.id
}

Give service project admins access to the backend subnet

Service project administrators require access to the lb-frontend-and-backend-subnet subnet so that they can provision the load balancer's backends.

A Shared VPC Admin must grant access to the backend subnet to service project administrators (or developers who deploy resources and backends that use the subnet). For instructions, see Service Project Admins for some subnets.

Configure firewall rules in the host project

This example uses the following firewall rules:
  • fw-allow-health-check. An ingress rule, applicable to the instances being load balanced, that allows all TCP traffic from the Google Cloud health checking systems in 130.211.0.0/22 and 35.191.0.0/16. This example uses the target tag load-balanced-backend to identify the instances to which it should apply.
  • fw-allow-proxies. An ingress rule, applicable to the instances being load balanced, that allows TCP traffic on ports 80, 443, and 8080 from the load balancer's managed proxies. This example uses the target tag load-balanced-backend to identify the instances to which it should apply.
Without these firewall rules, the default deny ingress rule blocks incoming traffic to the backend instances.

All the steps in this section must be performed in the host project.

Console

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Firewall policies page.

    Go to Firewall policies

  2. Click Create firewall rule to create the rule to allow Google Cloud health checks:
    • Name: fw-allow-health-check
    • Network: lb-network
    • Direction of traffic: Ingress
    • Action on match: Allow
    • Targets: Specified target tags
    • Target tags: load-balanced-backend
    • Source filter: IPv4 ranges
    • Source IPv4 ranges: 130.211.0.0/22 and 35.191.0.0/16
    • Protocols and ports:
      • Choose Specified protocols and ports.
      • Check TCP and enter 80 for the port number.
      • As a best practice, limit this rule to just the protocols and ports that match those used by your health check. If you use tcp:80 for the protocol and port, Google Cloud can use HTTP on port 80 to contact your VMs, but it cannot use HTTPS on port 443 to contact them.

  3. Click Create.
  4. Click Create firewall rule to create the rule to allow Google Cloud health checks:
    • Name: fw-allow-proxies
    • Network: lb-network
    • Direction of traffic: Ingress
    • Action on match: Allow
    • Targets: Specified target tags
    • Target tags: load-balanced-backend
    • Source filter: IPv4 ranges
    • Source IPv4 ranges: 10.129.0.0/23
    • Protocols and ports:
      • Choose Specified protocols and ports.
      • Check TCP and enter 80, 443, 8080 for the port numbers.
  5. Click Create.

gcloud

  1. Create the fw-allow-health-check firewall rule to allow Google Cloud health checks. This example allows all TCP traffic from health check probers. However, you can configure a narrower set of ports to meet your needs.

    gcloud compute firewall-rules create fw-allow-health-check \
       --network=lb-network \
       --action=allow \
       --direction=ingress \
       --source-ranges=130.211.0.0/22,35.191.0.0/16 \
       --target-tags=load-balanced-backend \
       --rules=tcp
    
  2. Create the fw-allow-proxies firewall rule to allow traffic from the Envoy proxy-only subnet to reach your backends.

    gcloud compute firewall-rules create fw-allow-proxies \
       --network=lb-network \
       --action=allow \
       --direction=ingress \
       --source-ranges=10.129.0.0/23 \
       --target-tags=load-balanced-backend \
       --rules=tcp:80,tcp:443,tcp:8080
    

Terraform

  1. Create a firewall rule to allow Google Cloud health checks.

    resource "google_compute_firewall" "fw_allow_health_check" {
      name          = "fw-allow-health-check"
      provider      = google-beta
      project       = "my-host-project-id"
      direction     = "INGRESS"
      network       = google_compute_network.lb_network.id
      source_ranges = ["130.211.0.0/22", "35.191.0.0/16"]
      allow {
        protocol = "tcp"
      }
      target_tags = ["load-balanced-backend"]
    }

  2. Create a firewall rule to allow traffic from the Envoy proxy-only subnet to reach your backends.

    resource "google_compute_firewall" "fw_allow_proxies" {
      name          = "fw-allow-proxies"
      provider      = google-beta
      project       = "my-host-project-id"
      direction     = "INGRESS"
      network       = google_compute_network.lb_network.id
      source_ranges = ["10.129.0.0/23"]
      allow {
        protocol = "tcp"
        ports    = ["80", "443", "8080"]
      }
      target_tags = ["load-balanced-backend"]
    }

Set up Shared VPC in the host project

This step entails enabling a Shared VPC host project, sharing subnets of the host project, and attaching service projects to the host project so that the service projects can use the Shared VPC network. To set up Shared VPC in the host project, see the following pages:

The rest of these instructions assume that you have already set up Shared VPC. This includes setting up IAM policies for your organization and designating the host and service projects.

Don't proceed until you have set up Shared VPC and enabled the host and service projects.

After completing the steps defined in this prerequisites section, you can pursue either of the following setups:

Configure a load balancer in the service project

This example creates a regional external Application Load Balancer where all the load balancing components (forwarding rule, target proxy, URL map, and backend service) and backends are created in the service project.

The regional external Application Load Balancer's networking resources such as the proxy-only subnet and the subnet for the backend instances are created in the host project. The firewall rules for the backend instances are also created in the host project.

Figure 1. Regional external HTTP(S) load balancer on Shared VPC
Figure 1. Regional external Application Load Balancer on Shared VPC

This section shows you how to set up the load balancer and backends. These steps should be carried out by the service project administrator (or a developer operating within the service project) and do not require involvement from the host project administrator. The steps in this section are largely similar to the standard steps to set up regional external Application Load Balancers.

The example on this page explicitly sets a reserved IP address for the regional external Application Load Balancer's forwarding rule, rather than allowing an ephemeral IP address to be allocated. As a best practice, we recommend reserving IP addresses for forwarding rules.

Create a managed instance group backend

This section shows you how to create an instance template and a managed instance group backend. Traffic from clients is load balanced to VMs in these instance groups.

Console

  1. Create an instance template. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Instance templates page.

    Go to Instance templates

    1. Click Create instance template.
    2. For Name, enter l7-xlb-backend-template.
    3. Ensure that the Boot disk is set to a Debian image, such as Debian GNU/Linux 12 (bookworm). These instructions use commands that are only available on Debian, such as apt-get. If you need to change the Boot disk, click Change.
      1. For Operating System, select Debian.
      2. For Version, select one of the available Debian images such as Debian GNU/Linux 12 (bookworm).
      3. Click Select.
    4. Click Advanced options, and then click Networking.
    5. Enter the following Network tags: load-balanced-backend.
    6. For Network interfaces, select Networks shared with me (from host project: HOST_PROJECT_ID).
    7. Select the lb-frontend-and-backend-subnet subnet from the lb-network network.
    8. Click Management. For Management, insert the following script into the Startup script field.

      #! /bin/bash
      apt-get update
      apt-get install apache2 -y
      a2ensite default-ssl
      a2enmod ssl
      vm_hostname="$(curl -H "Metadata-Flavor:Google" \
      http://metadata.google.internal/computeMetadata/v1/instance/name)"
      echo "Page served from: $vm_hostname" | \
      tee /var/www/html/index.html
      systemctl restart apache2
      
    9. Click Create.

  2. Create a managed instance group. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Instance groups page.

    Go to Instance groups

    1. Click Create instance group.
    2. Choose New managed instance group (stateless). For more information, see Stateless or stateful MIGs.
    3. For Name, enter l7-xlb-backend-example.
    4. For Location, select Single zone.
    5. For Region, select us-west1.
    6. For Zone, select us-west1-a.
    7. For Instance template, select l7-xlb-backend-template.
    8. Specify the number of instances that you want to create in the group.

      For this example, specify the following options for Autoscaling:

      • For Autoscaling mode, select Off:do not autoscale.
      • For Maximum number of instances, enter 2.

      Optionally, in the Autoscaling section, you can configure the instance group to automatically add or remove instances based on instance CPU usage.

    9. Click Create.

gcloud

The gcloud instructions in this guide assume that you are using Cloud Shell or another environment with bash installed.

  1. Create a VM instance template with HTTP server with the gcloud compute instance-templates create command.

    gcloud compute instance-templates create l7-xlb-backend-template \
    --region=us-west1 \
    --network=projects/HOST_PROJECT_ID/global/networks/lb-network \
    --subnet=projects/HOST_PROJECT_ID/regions/us-west1/subnetworks/lb-frontend-and-backend-subnet \
    --tags=load-balanced-backend \
    --image-family=debian-12 \
    --image-project=debian-cloud \
    --metadata=startup-script='#! /bin/bash
    apt-get update
    apt-get install apache2 -y
    a2ensite default-ssl
    a2enmod ssl
    vm_hostname="$(curl -H "Metadata-Flavor:Google" \
    http://metadata.google.internal/computeMetadata/v1/instance/name)"
    echo "Page served from: $vm_hostname" | \
    tee /var/www/html/index.html
    systemctl restart apache2' \
    --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_ID
    
  2. Create a managed instance group in the zone with the gcloud compute instance-groups managed create command.

    gcloud compute instance-groups managed create l7-xlb-backend-example \
        --zone=us-west1-a \
        --size=2 \
        --template=l7-xlb-backend-template \
        --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_ID
    

Reserve the load balancer's IP address in the service project

Reserve a regional static external IP address for the load balancer in the service project.

All the steps in this section must be performed in the service project.

Console

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Reserve a static address page.

    Go to Reserve a static address

  2. Enter a name for the new address.

  3. For Network Service Tier, select Standard.

  4. For IP version, select IPv4. IPv6 addresses can only be global and can only be used with global load balancers.

  5. For Type, select Regional.

  6. For Region, select us-west1.

  7. Leave the Attached to option set to None. After you create the load balancer, this IP address is attached to the load balancer's forwarding rule.

  8. To reserve the IP address, click Reserve.

gcloud

To reserve a static external IP address, use the compute addresses create command.

gcloud compute addresses create IP_ADDRESS_NAME  \
    --region=us-west1 \
    --network-tier=STANDARD \
    --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_ID

Replace the following:

  • IP_ADDRESS_NAME: the name that you want to call this address.
  • SERVICE_PROJECT_ID: the project ID for the service project where the load balancer is being created.

Configure the load balancer

This section shows you how to create the following regional external Application Load Balancer resources:

  • HTTP health check
  • Backend service with a managed instance group as the backend
  • A URL map
  • SSL certificate (required only for HTTPS)
  • Target proxy
  • Forwarding rule

Proxy availability

Depending on the number of service projects that are using the same Shared VPC network, you might reach quotas or limits more quickly than in the network deployment model where each Google Cloud project hosts its own network.

For example, sometimes Google Cloud regions don't have enough proxy capacity for a new regional external Application Load Balancer. If this happens, the Google Cloud console provides a proxy availability warning message when you are creating your load balancer. To resolve this issue, you can do one of the following:

  • Wait for the capacity issue to be resolved.
  • Contact your Google Cloud sales team to increase these limits.

Console

Switch context to the service project

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Dashboard page.

    Go to Dashboard

  2. Click the Select from list at the top of the page. In the Select from window that appears, select the service project where you want to create the load balancer.

Start your configuration

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Load balancing page.

    Go to Load balancing

  2. Click Create load balancer.
  3. For Type of load balancer, select Application Load Balancer (HTTP/HTTPS) and click Next.
  4. For Public facing or internal, select Public facing (external) and click Next.
  5. For Global or single region deployment, select Best for regional workloads and click Next.
  6. Click Configure.

Basic configuration

  1. For the Name of the load balancer, enter l7-xlb-shared-vpc.
  2. For the Region, select us-west1.
  3. For the Network, select lb-network (from Project: HOST_PROJECT_ID).

    If you see a Proxy-only subnet required in Shared VPC network warning, confirm that the host project admin has created the proxy-only-subnet in the us-west1 region in the lb-network Shared VPC network. Load balancer creation will succeed even if you do not have permission to view the proxy-only subnet on this page.

  4. Keep the page open to continue.

Configure the frontend

For HTTP:

  1. Click Frontend configuration.
  2. Click Add frontend IP and port.
  3. Set the Name to l7-xlb-forwarding-rule.
  4. Set the Protocol to HTTP.
  5. Set the Port to 80.
  6. For the IP address that you created in Reserving the load balancer's IP address.

  7. Click Done.

For HTTPS:

If you are using HTTPS between the client and the load balancer, you need one or more SSL certificate resources to configure the proxy. For information about how to create SSL certificate resources, see SSL certificates. Google-managed certificates aren't currently supported with regional external Application Load Balancers.

  1. Click Frontend configuration.
  2. Click Add frontend IP and port.
  3. In the Name field, enter l7-xlb-forwarding-rule.
  4. In the Protocol field, select HTTPS (includes HTTP/2).
  5. Ensure that the Port is set to 443, to allow HTTPS traffic.
  6. Select the IP address that you created in Reserving the load balancer's IP address.
  7. Click the Certificate list.
    1. If you already have a self-managed SSL certificate resource you want to use as the primary SSL certificate, select it from the menu.
    2. Otherwise, select Create a new certificate.
      1. Fill in a Name of l7-xlb-cert.
      2. In the appropriate fields upload your PEM-formatted files:
        • Public key certificate
        • Certificate chain
        • Private key
      3. Click Create.
  8. To add certificate resources in addition to the primary SSL certificate resource:
    1. Click Add certificate.
    2. Select a certificate from the Certificates list or click Create a new certificate and follow the instructions above.
  9. Click Done.

Configure the backend

  1. Click Backend configuration.
  2. From the Create or select backend services menu, select Create a backend service.
  3. Set the Name of the backend service to l7-xlb-backend-service.
  4. Set the Backend type to Instance groups.
  5. In the New backend section:
    1. Set the Instance group to l7-xlb-backend-example.
    2. Set the Port numbers to 80.
    3. Set the Balancing mode to Utilization.
    4. Click Done.
  6. In the Health check section, choose Create a health check with the following parameters:
    1. Name: l7-xlb-basic-check
    2. Protocol: HTTP
    3. Port: 80
  7. Click Save and Continue.
  8. Click Create.

Configure the routing rules

  • Click Routing rules. Ensure that the l7-xlb-backend-service is the only backend service for any unmatched host and any unmatched path.

For information about traffic management, see Setting up traffic management.

Review and finalize the configuration

  • Click Create.

gcloud

  1. Define the HTTP health check with the gcloud compute health-checks create http command.

    gcloud compute health-checks create http l7-xlb-basic-check \
       --region=us-west1 \
       --use-serving-port \
       --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_ID
    
  2. Define the backend service with the gcloud compute backend-services create command.

    gcloud compute backend-services create l7-xlb-backend-service \
      --load-balancing-scheme=EXTERNAL_MANAGED \
      --protocol=HTTP \
      --health-checks=l7-xlb-basic-check \
      --health-checks-region=us-west1 \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_ID
    
  3. Add backends to the backend service with the gcloud compute backend-services add-backend command.

    gcloud compute backend-services add-backend l7-xlb-backend-service \
      --balancing-mode=UTILIZATION \
      --instance-group=l7-xlb-backend-example \
      --instance-group-zone=us-west1-a \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_ID
    
  4. Create the URL map with the gcloud compute url-maps create command.

    gcloud compute url-maps create l7-xlb-map \
      --default-service=l7-xlb-backend-service \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_ID
    
  5. Create the target proxy.

    For HTTP:

    For an HTTP load balancer, create the target proxy with the gcloud compute target-http-proxies create command.

    gcloud compute target-http-proxies create l7-xlb-proxy \
      --url-map=l7-xlb-map \
      --url-map-region=us-west1 \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_ID
    

    For HTTPS:

    For information about how to create SSL certificate resources, see SSL certificates. Google-managed certificates aren't currently supported with regional external Application Load Balancers.

    Assign your filepaths to variable names.

    export LB_CERT=path to PEM-formatted file
    
    export LB_PRIVATE_KEY=path to PEM-formatted file
    

    Create a regional SSL certificate using the gcloud compute ssl-certificates create command.

    gcloud compute ssl-certificates create l7-xlb-cert \
      --certificate=$LB_CERT \
      --private-key=$LB_PRIVATE_KEY \
      --region=us-west1
    

    Use the regional SSL certificate to create a target proxy with the gcloud compute target-https-proxies create command.

    gcloud compute target-https-proxies create l7-xlb-proxy \
      --url-map=l7-xlb-map \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --ssl-certificates=l7-xlb-cert \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_ID
    
  6. Create the forwarding rule.

    For custom networks, you must reference the subnet in the forwarding rule.

    For the forwarding rule's IP address, use the lb-frontend-and-backend-subnet. If you try to use the proxy-only subnet, forwarding rule creation fails.

    For HTTP:

    Use the gcloud compute forwarding-rules create command with the correct flags.

    gcloud compute forwarding-rules create l7-xlb-forwarding-rule \
      --load-balancing-scheme=EXTERNAL_MANAGED \
      --network=projects/HOST_PROJECT_ID/global/networks/lb-network \
      --address=IP_ADDRESS_NAME \
      --ports=80 \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --target-http-proxy=l7-xlb-proxy \
      --target-http-proxy-region=us-west1 \
      --network-tier=STANDARD \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_ID
    

    For HTTPS:

    Create the forwarding rule with the gcloud compute forwarding-rules create command with the correct flags.

    gcloud compute forwarding-rules create l7-xlb-forwarding-rule \
      --load-balancing-scheme=EXTERNAL_MANAGED \
      --network=projects/HOST_PROJECT_ID/global/networks/lb-network \
      --address=IP_ADDRESS_NAME \
      --ports=443 \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --target-https-proxy=l7-xlb-proxy \
      --target-https-proxy-region=us-west1 \
      --network-tier=STANDARD \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_ID
    

Test the load balancer

When the load balancing service is running, you can send traffic to the forwarding rule and watch the traffic be dispersed to different instances.

Console

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Load balancing page.

    Go to Load balancing

  2. Click the load balancer that you just created.
  3. Note the load balancer's IP address. This IP address is referred to as LB_IP_ADDRESS in the following steps.
  4. In the Backend section, confirm that the VMs are healthy. The Healthy column should be populated, indicating that both VMs are healthy (2/2). If you see otherwise, first try reloading the page. It can take a few moments for the Google Cloud console to indicate that the VMs are healthy. If the backends do not appear healthy after a few minutes, review the firewall configuration and the network tag assigned to your backend VMs.
  5. After the Google Cloud console shows that the backend instances are healthy, you can test your load balancer using a web browser by going to https://LB_IP_ADDRESS (or http://LB_IP_ADDRESS). Replace LB_IP_ADDRESS with the load balancer's IP address.
  6. If you used a self-signed certificate for testing HTTPS, your browser displays a warning. You must explicitly instruct your browser to accept a self-signed certificate.
  7. Your browser should render a page with content showing the name of the instance that served the page, along with its zone (for example, Page served from: lb-backend-example-xxxx). If your browser doesn't render this page, review the configuration settings in this guide.

gcloud

Note the IP address that was reserved:

gcloud compute addresses describe IP_ADDRESS_NAME \
    --format="get(address)" \
    --region=us-west1

You can test your load balancer using a web browser by going to https://IP_ADDRESS_NAME (or http://IP_ADDRESS_NAME). Replace IP_ADDRESS_NAME with the load balancer's IP address.

If you used a self-signed certificate for testing HTTPS, your browser displays a warning. You must explicitly instruct your browser to accept a self-signed certificate.

Your browser should render a page with minimal information about the backend instance. If your browser doesn't render this page, review the configuration settings in this guide.

Configure a load balancer with a cross-project backend service

The previous example on this page shows you how to set up a Shared VPC deployment where all the load balancer components and its backends are created in the service project.

Regional external Application Load Balancers also let you configure Shared VPC deployments where a URL map in one host or service project can reference backend services (and backends) located across multiple service projects in Shared VPC environments. This is referred to as cross-project service referencing.

You can use the steps in this section as a reference to configure any of the supported combinations listed here:

  • Forwarding rule, target proxy, and URL map in the host project, and backend service in a service project
  • Forwarding rule, target proxy, and URL map in a service project, and backend service in another service project

Cross-project service referencing can be used with instance groups, serverless NEGs, or any other supported backend types.

Set up requirements

This example configures a sample load balancer with its frontend and backend in two different service projects.

If you haven't already done so, you must complete all of the prerequisite steps to set up Shared VPC and configure the network, subnets, and firewall rules required for this example. For instructions, see the following sections at the start of this page:

Figure 2. Load balancer frontend and backend in different service projects
Figure 2. Load balancer frontend and backend in different service projects

Reserve the load balancer's IP address in service project A

Reserve a regional static external IP address for the load balancer in service project A.

All the steps in this section must be performed in service project A.

Console

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Reserve a static address page.

    Go to Reserve a static address

  2. For the name of the new address, enter cross-ref-ip-address.

  3. For Network Service Tier, select Standard.

  4. For IP version, select IPv4. IPv6 addresses can only be global and can only be used with global load balancers.

  5. For Type, select Regional.

  6. For Region, select us-west1.

  7. Leave the Attached to option set to None. After you create the load balancer, this IP address is attached to the load balancer's forwarding rule.

  8. To reserve the IP address, click Reserve.

gcloud

To reserve a static external IP address, use the compute addresses create command.

gcloud compute addresses create IP_ADDRESS_CROSS_REF  \
    --region=us-west1 \
    --network-tier=STANDARD \
    --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_A_ID

Replace the following:

  • IP_ADDRESS_CROSS_REF: the name that you want to call this IP address.
  • SERVICE_PROJECT_A_ID: the project ID for service project A, where the load balancer's frontend is being created.

Create the backends and backend service in service project B

All the steps in this section must be performed in service project B.

Console

  1. Create an instance template. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Instance templates page.

    Go to Instance templates

    1. Click Create instance template.
    2. Enter a Name for the instance template: cross-ref-backend-template.
    3. Ensure that the Boot disk is set to a Debian image, such as Debian GNU/Linux 12 (bookworm). These instructions use commands that are only available on Debian, such as apt-get. If you need to change the Boot disk, click Change.
      1. For Operating System, select Debian.
      2. For Version, select one of the available Debian images such as Debian GNU/Linux 12 (bookworm).
      3. Click Select.
    4. Click Advanced options, and then click Networking.
    5. Enter the following Network tags: load-balanced-backend.
    6. For Network interfaces, select Networks shared with me (from host project: HOST_PROJECT_ID).
    7. Select the lb-frontend-and-backend-subnet subnet from the lb-network network.
    8. Click Management. For Management, insert the following script into the Startup script field:

      #! /bin/bash
      apt-get update
      apt-get install apache2 -y
      a2ensite default-ssl
      a2enmod ssl
      vm_hostname="$(curl -H "Metadata-Flavor:Google" \
      http://metadata.google.internal/computeMetadata/v1/instance/name)"
      echo "Page served from: $vm_hostname" | \
      tee /var/www/html/index.html
      systemctl restart apache2
      
    9. Click Create.

  2. Create a managed instance group. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Instance groups page.

    Go to Instance groups

    1. Click Create instance group.
    2. Choose New managed instance group (stateless). For more information, see Stateless or stateful MIGs.
    3. Enter a Name for the instance group: cross-ref-ig-backend.
    4. For Location, select Single zone.
    5. For Region, select us-west1.
    6. For Zone, select us-west1-a.
    7. For Instance template, select cross-ref-backend-template.
    8. Specify the number of instances that you want to create in the group.

      For this example, specify the following options for Autoscaling:

      • For Autoscaling mode, select Off:do not autoscale.
      • For Maximum number of instances, enter 2.

      Optionally, in the Autoscaling section, you can configure the instance group to automatically add or remove instances based on instance CPU usage.

    9. Click Create.

  3. Create a regional backend service. As a part of this step, we also create the health check and add backends to the backend service. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Backends page.

    Go to Backends

    1. Click Create regional backend service.
    2. Enter a Name for the backend service: cross-ref-backend-service.
    3. For Region, select us-west1.
    4. For Load balancer type, select Regional external Application Load Balancer (EXTERNAL_MANAGED).
    5. Set Backend type to Instance groups.
    6. In the Backends section, set Network to lb-network.
    7. Click Add backend and set the following fields:
      1. Set Instance group to cross-ref-ig-backend.
      2. Set Port numbers to 80.
      3. Set Balancing mode to Utilization.
      4. Click Done.
    8. In the Health check section, choose Create a health check with the following parameters:
      1. Name: cross-ref-http-health-check
      2. Protocol: HTTP
      3. Port: 80
      4. Click Save.
    9. Optional: In the Add permissions section, enter the IAM principals (typically an email address) of Load Balancer Admins from other projects so that they can use this backend service for load balancers in their own projects. Without this permission, you cannot use cross-project service referencing.

      If you don't have permission to set access control policies for backend services in this project, you can still create the backend service now, and an authorized user can perform this step later as described in the section, Grant permissions to the Load Balancer Admin to use the backend service. That section also describes how to grant access to all the backend services in this project, so that you don't have to grant access every time you create a new backend service.

    10. Click Create.

gcloud

  1. Create a VM instance template with an HTTP server with the gcloud compute instance-templates create command.

    gcloud compute instance-templates create BACKEND_IG_TEMPLATE \
        --region=us-west1 \
        --network=projects/HOST_PROJECT_ID/global/networks/lb-network \
        --subnet=projects/HOST_PROJECT_ID/regions/us-west1/subnetworks/lb-frontend-and-backend-subnet \
        --tags=load-balanced-backend \
        --image-family=debian-12 \
        --image-project=debian-cloud \
        --metadata=startup-script='#! /bin/bash
        apt-get update
        apt-get install apache2 -y
        a2ensite default-ssl
        a2enmod ssl
        vm_hostname="$(curl -H "Metadata-Flavor:Google" \
        http://metadata.google.internal/computeMetadata/v1/instance/name)"
        echo "Page served from: $vm_hostname" | \
        tee /var/www/html/index.html
        systemctl restart apache2' \
        --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID
    

    Replace the following:

    • BACKEND_IG_TEMPLATE: the name for the instance group template.
    • SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID: the project ID for service project B, where the load balancer's backends and the backend service are being created.
    • HOST_PROJECT_ID: the project ID for the Shared VPC host project.
  2. Create a managed instance group in the zone with the gcloud compute instance-groups managed create command.

    gcloud compute instance-groups managed create BACKEND_MIG \
        --zone=us-west1-a \
        --size=2 \
        --template=BACKEND_IG_TEMPLATE \
        --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID
    

    Replace the following:

    • BACKEND_MIG: the name for the backend instance group.
  3. Define the HTTP health check with the gcloud compute health-checks create http command.

    gcloud compute health-checks create http HTTP_HEALTH_CHECK_NAME \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --use-serving-port \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID
    

    Replace the following:

    • HTTP_HEALTH_CHECK_NAME: the name for the HTTP health check.
  4. Define the backend service with the gcloud compute backend-services create command.

    gcloud compute backend-services create BACKEND_SERVICE_NAME \
      --load-balancing-scheme=EXTERNAL_MANAGED \
      --protocol=HTTP \
      --health-checks=HTTP_HEALTH_CHECK_NAME \
      --health-checks-region=us-west1 \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID
    

    Replace the following:

    • BACKEND_SERVICE_NAME: the name for the backend service created in service project B.
  5. Add backends to the backend service with the gcloud compute backend-services add-backend command.

    gcloud compute backend-services add-backend BACKEND_SERVICE_NAME \
      --balancing-mode=UTILIZATION \
      --instance-group=BACKEND_MIG \
      --instance-group-zone=us-west1-a \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID
    

Create the load balancer frontend and URL map in service project A

All the steps in this section must be performed in service project A.

Console

Start your configuration

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Load balancing page.

    Go to Load balancing

  2. Click Create load balancer.
  3. For Type of load balancer, select Application Load Balancer (HTTP/HTTPS) and click Next.
  4. For Public facing or internal, select Public facing (external) and click Next.
  5. For Global or single region deployment, select Best for regional workloads and click Next.
  6. Click Configure.

Prepare the load balancer

  1. Enter the Name of the load balancer: cross-ref-l7-xlb-shared-vpc.
  2. For the Region, select us-west1.
  3. For the Network, select lb-network (from Project: HOST_PROJECT_ID).

    If you see a Proxy-only subnet required in Shared VPC network warning, confirm that the host project administrator has created the proxy-only-subnet in the us-west1 region in the lb-network Shared VPC network. Load balancer creation will succeed even if you don't have permission to view the proxy-only subnet on this page.

  4. Keep the page open to continue.

Configure the frontend

For cross-project service referencing to work, the frontend must use the same network (lb-network) from the Shared VPC host project that was used to create the backend service.

For HTTP:

  1. Click Frontend configuration.
  2. Enter a Name for the forwarding rule: cross-ref-http-forwarding-rule.
  3. Set the Protocol to HTTP.
  4. Set the Subnetwork to lb-frontend-and-backend-subnet.

    Don't select the proxy-only subnet for the frontend even if it is an option in the list.

  5. Select the IP address that you created in Reserving the load balancer's IP address, called cross-ref-ip-address.

  6. Set the Port to 80.

  7. Click Done.

For HTTPS:

If you are using HTTPS between the client and the load balancer, you need one or more SSL certificate resources to configure the proxy. For information about how to create SSL certificate resources, see SSL certificates. Google-managed certificates aren't currently supported with regional external Application Load Balancers.

  1. Click Frontend configuration.
  2. Enter a Name for the forwarding rule: cross-ref-https-forwarding-rule.
  3. In the Protocol field, select HTTPS (includes HTTP/2).
  4. Set the Subnetwork to lb-frontend-and-backend-subnet.

    Don't select the proxy-only subnet for the frontend even if it is an option in the list.

  5. Select the IP address that you created in Reserving the load balancer's IP address, called cross-ref-ip-address.

  6. Ensure that the Port is set to 443 to allow HTTPS traffic.

  7. Click the Certificate list.

    1. If you already have a self-managed SSL certificate resource that you want to use as the primary SSL certificate, select it from the menu.
    2. Otherwise, select Create a new certificate.
      1. Enter a Name for the SSL certificate.
      2. In the appropriate fields upload your PEM-formatted files:
        • Public key certificate
        • Certificate chain
        • Private key
      3. Click Create.
  8. To add certificate resources in addition to the primary SSL certificate resource:

    1. Click Add certificate.
    2. Select a certificate from the Certificates list or click Create a new certificate and follow the previous instructions.
  9. Click Done.

Configure the backend

  1. Click Backend configuration.
  2. Click Cross-project backend services.
  3. For Project ID, enter the project ID for service project B.
  4. From the Select backend services list, select the backend services from service project B that you want to use. For this example, you enter cross-ref-backend-service.
  5. Click OK.

Configure the routing rules

  • Click Routing rules. Ensure that the cross-ref-backend-service is the only backend service for any unmatched host and any unmatched path.

For information about traffic management, see Setting up traffic management.

Review and finalize the configuration

  • Click Create.

Test the load balancer

After the load balancer is created, test the load balancer by using the steps described in Test the load balancer.

gcloud

  1. Optional: Before creating a load balancer with cross-referencing backend services, find out whether the backend services you want to refer to can be referenced using a URL map:

    gcloud compute backend-services list-usable \
        --region=us-west1 \
        --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID
    
  2. Create the URL map and set the default service to the backend service created in service project B.

    gcloud compute url-maps create URL_MAP_NAME \
        --default-service=projects/SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID/regions/us-west1/backendServices/BACKEND_SERVICE_NAME \
        --region=us-west1 \
        --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_A_ID
    

    Replace the following:

    • URL_MAP_NAME: the name for the URL map.
    • BACKEND_SERVICE_NAME: the name for the backend service created in service project B.
    • SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID: the project ID for service project B, where the load balancer's backends and the backend service are created.
    • SERVICE_PROJECT_A_ID: the project ID for service project A, where the load balancer's frontend is being created.

    URL map creation fails if you don't have the compute.backendServices.use permission for the backend service in service project B.

  3. Create the target proxy.

    For HTTP:

    gcloud compute target-http-proxies create HTTP_TARGET_PROXY_NAME \
      --url-map=URL_MAP_NAME \
      --url-map-region=us-west1 \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_A_ID
    

    Replace the following:

    • HTTP_TARGET_PROXY_NAME: the name for the target HTTP proxy.

    For HTTPS:

    Create a regional SSL certificate using the gcloud compute ssl-certificates create command.

    gcloud compute ssl-certificates create SSL_CERTIFICATE_NAME \
      --certificate=PATH_TO_CERTIFICATE \
      --private-key=PATH_TO_PRIVATE_KEY \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_A_ID
    

    Replace the following:

    • SSL_CERTIFICATE_NAME: the name for the SSL certificate resource.
    • PATH_TO_CERTIFICATE: the path to the local SSL certificate file in PEM format.
    • PATH_TO_PRIVATE_KEY: the path to the local SSL certificate private key in PEM format.

    Use the regional SSL certificate to create a target proxy with the gcloud compute target-https-proxies create command.

    gcloud compute target-https-proxies create HTTPS_TARGET_PROXY_NAME \
      --url-map=URL_MAP_NAME \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --ssl-certificates=SSL_CERTIFICATE_NAME \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_A_ID
    

    Replace the following:

    • HTTPS_TARGET_PROXY_NAME: the name for the target HTTPS proxy.
  4. Create the forwarding rule. For cross-project service referencing to work, the forwarding rule must use the same network (lb-network) from the Shared VPC host project that was used to create the backend service.

    For HTTP:

    gcloud compute forwarding-rules create HTTP_FORWARDING_RULE_NAME \
      --load-balancing-scheme=EXTERNAL_MANAGED \
      --network=projects/HOST_PROJECT_ID/global/networks/lb-network \
      --address=IP_ADDRESS_CROSS_REF \
      --ports=80 \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --target-http-proxy=HTTP_TARGET_PROXY_NAME \
      --target-http-proxy-region=us-west1 \
      --network-tier=STANDARD \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_A_ID
    

    Replace the following:

    • HTTP_FORWARDING_RULE_NAME: the name for the forwarding rule that is used to handle HTTP traffic.

    For HTTPS:

    gcloud compute forwarding-rules create HTTPS_FORWARDING_RULE_NAME \
      --load-balancing-scheme=EXTERNAL_MANAGED \
      --network=projects/HOST_PROJECT_ID/global/networks/lb-network \
      --address=IP_ADDRESS_CROSS_REF \
      --ports=443 \
      --region=us-west1 \
      --target-https-proxy=HTTPS_TARGET_PROXY_NAME \
      --target-https-proxy-region=us-west1 \
      --network-tier=STANDARD \
      --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_A_ID
    

    Replace the following:

    • HTTPS_FORWARDING_RULE_NAME: the name for the forwarding rule that is used to handle HTTPS traffic.
  5. To test the load balancer, use the steps described in Test the load balancer.

Grant permissions to the Load Balancer Admin to use the backend service

If you want load balancers to reference backend services in other service projects, the Load Balancer Admin must have the compute.backendServices.use permission. To grant this permission, you can use the predefined IAM role called Compute Load Balancer Services User (roles/compute.loadBalancerServiceUser). This role must be granted by the Service Project Admin and can be applied at the project level or at the individual backend service level.

This step is not required if you already granted the required permissions at the backend service level while creating the backend service. You can either skip this section or continue reading to learn how to grant access to all the backend services in this project so that you don't have to grant access every time you create a new backend service.

In this example, a Service Project Admin from service project B must run one of the following commands to grant the compute.backendServices.use permission to a Load Balancer Admin from service project A. This can be done either at the project level (for all backend services in the project) or per backend service.

Console

Project-level permissions

Use the following steps to grant permissions to all backend services in your project.

You require the compute.regionBackendServices.setIamPolicy and the resourcemanager.projects.setIamPolicy permissions to complete this step.

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the IAM page.

    Go to IAM

  2. Select your project.

  3. Click Grant access.

  4. In the New principals field, enter the principal's email address or other identifier.

  5. In the Select a role list, select the Compute Load Balancer Services User.

  6. Optional: Add a condition to the role.

  7. Click Save.

Resource-level permissions for individual backend services

Use the following steps to grant permissions to individual backend services in your project.

You require the compute.regionBackendServices.setIamPolicy permission to complete this step.

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Backends page.

    Go to Backends

  2. From the backends list, select the backend service that you want to grant access to and click Permissions.

  3. Click Add principal.

  4. In the New principals field, enter the principal's email address or other identifier.

  5. In the Select a role list, select the Compute Load Balancer Services User.

  6. Click Save.

gcloud

Project-level permissions

Use the following steps to grant permissions to all backend services in your project.

You require the compute.regionBackendServices.setIamPolicy and the resourcemanager.projects.setIamPolicy permissions to complete this step.

gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID \
    --member="user:LOAD_BALANCER_ADMIN" \
    --role="roles/compute.loadBalancerServiceUser"

Resource-level permissions for individual backend services

At the backend service level, Service Project Admins can use either of the following commands to grant the Compute Load Balancer Services User role (roles/compute.loadBalancerServiceUser).

You require the compute.regionBackendServices.setIamPolicy permission to complete this step.

gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID \
    --member="user:LOAD_BALANCER_ADMIN" \
    --role="roles/compute.loadBalancerServiceUser" \
    --condition='expression=resource.name=="projects/SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID/regions/us-west1/backend-services/BACKEND_SERVICE_NAME",title=Shared VPC condition'

or

gcloud compute backend-services add-iam-policy-binding BACKEND_SERVICE_NAME \
    --member="user:LOAD_BALANCER_ADMIN" \
    --role="roles/compute.loadBalancerServiceUser" \
    --project=SERVICE_PROJECT_B_ID \
    --region=us-west1

To use these commands, replace LOAD_BALANCER_ADMIN with the user's principal—for example, test-user@gmail.com.

You can also configure IAM permissions so that they only apply to a subset of regional backend services by using conditions and specifying condition attributes.

See URL maps referencing a Shared VPC backend service

To see URL maps referencing a particular Shared VPC backend service, follow these steps:

gcloud

To see resources referencing a regional Shared VPC backend service, run the following command:

gcloud compute backend-services describe BACKEND_SERVICE_NAME \
    --region REGION

Replace the following:

  • BACKEND_SERVICE_NAME: the name of the load balancer backend service
  • REGION: the region of the load balancer

In the command output, review the usedBy field, which displays the resources referencing the backend service, as shown in the following example:

id: '123456789'
kind: compute#backendService
loadBalancingScheme: INTERNAL_MANAGED
...
usedBy:
-   reference: https://www.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/my-project/region/us-central1/urlMaps/my-url-map

What's next