The Cloud SQL Auth proxy is a binary that provides IAM-based authorization and encryption when connecting to a Cloud SQL instance.
See the Connecting Overview page for more information on connecting to a Cloud SQL instance, or the About the proxy page for details on how the Cloud SQL proxy works.
Note: The Proxy cannot provide a network path to a Cloud SQL instance if one is not already present (e.g., the proxy cannot access a VPC if it does not already have access to it).
For 64-bit Linux, run:
VERSION=v1.21.0 # see Releases for other versions
wget "https://storage.googleapis.com/cloudsql-proxy/$VERSION/cloud_sql_proxy.linux.amd64" -O cloud_sql_proxy
chmod +x cloud_sql_proxy
Releases for additional OS's and architectures and be found on the releases page.
For alternative distributions, see below under third party.
There are containerized versions of the proxy available from the following Google Cloud Container Registry 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
Each image is tagged with the associated proxy version. 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)
We recommend using the latest version of the proxy and updating the version regularly. However, we also recommend pinning to a specific tag and avoid the latest tag. Note: 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.
To install from source, ensure you have the latest version of Go installed.
Then, simply run:
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.
All the following invocations assume valid credentials are present in the
environment. The following examples all reference an INSTANCE_CONNECTION_NAME
,
which takes the form: myproject:myregion:myinstance
. To find the
INSTANCE_CONNECTION_NAME
, run gcloud sql instances describe <INSTANCE_NAME>
where INSTANCE_NAME
is the name of the database instance.
# Starts the proxy listening on 127.0.0.1:5432
cloud_sql_proxy -instances=<INSTANCE_CONNECTION_NAME>=tcp:5432
# Starts the proxy listening on port 5432 on *all* interfaces
cloud_sql_proxy -instances=<INSTANCE_CONNECTION_NAME>=tcp:0.0.0.0:5432
# The proxy will mount a Unix domain socket at /cloudsql/<INSTANCE_CONNECTION_NAME>
# Note: The directory specified by `-dir` must exist and the socket file path
# (i.e., dir plus INSTANCE_CONNECTION_NAME) must be under your platform's
# limit (typically 108 characters on many Unix systems, but varies by platform).
cloud_sql_proxy -dir=/cloudsql -instances=<INSTANCE_CONNECTION_NAME>
cloud_sql_proxy -instances=<INSTANCE_CONNECTION_NAME>=tcp:5432 -ip_address_types=PRIVATE
In order to connect using Private IP, you must have access through your project's VPC. For more details, see Private IP Requirements.
The Cloud SQL proxy uses a Cloud IAM account to authorize connections against a Cloud SQL instance. The proxy sources the credentials for these accounts in the following order:
- The
-credential_file
flag - The
-token
flag - The service account key at the path stored in the
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
environment variable. - The gcloud user credentials (set from
gcloud auth login
) - The Application Default Credentials
Note: Any account connecting to a Cloud SQL database will need one of the following IAM roles:
- Cloud SQL Client (preferred)
- Cloud SQL Editor
- Cloud SQL Admin
Or one may manually assign the following IAM permissions:
cloudsql.instances.connect
cloudsql.instances.get
See Roles and Permissions in Cloud SQL for details.
When the proxy authenticates under the Compute Engine VM's default service
account, the VM must have at least the sqlservice.admin
API scope (i.e.,
"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 or editor privileges to any projects of target SQL instances.
The Cloud SQL Auth proxy takes a few arguments to configure what instances to connect
to and connection behavior. For a full list of flags supported by the proxy,
use cloud_sql_proxy -help
.
Specifies the path to a JSON service account key the proxy uses to authorize or authenticate connections.
When set, the proxy uses this Bearer token for authorization.
Enables the proxy to use Cloud SQL IAM database authentication. This will cause the proxy to use IAM account credentials for database user authentication. For details, see Overview of Cloud SQL IAM database authentication. NOTE: This feature only works with Postgres database instances.
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.
Example
Using TCP sockets:
./cloud_sql_proxy -instances=my-project:us-central1:sql-inst=tcp:3306 &
mysql -u root -h 127.0.0.1
Using Unix sockets:
./cloud_sql_proxy -dir=/cloudsql -instances=my-project:us-central1:sql-inst &
mysql -u root -S /cloudsql/my-project:us-central1:sql-inst
To specify a custom Unix 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
To specify a custom location for a Unix socket (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
Requires access to /dev/fuse
as well as the fusermount
binary. An optional
-fuse_tmp
flag can specify where to place temporary files. The directory
indicated by -dir
is mounted.
Example
Using -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
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
from computeMetadata/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.
Example
./cloud_sql_proxy -dir=/cloudsql \
-instances_metadata instance/attributes/<custom-metadata-key> &
mysql -u root -S /cloudsql/my-project:us-central1:sql-inst
Note: -instances
and -instances_metadata
may be used at the same time but
are not compatible with the -fuse
flag.
If provided, the maximum number of connections to establish before refusing new connections. Defaults to 0 (no limit).
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 to PUBLIC,PRIVATE
How long to wait for connections to close before shutting down the proxy. Defaults to 0.
Setting this flag will prevent the proxy from terminating if any errors occur during instance configuration. Please note that this means some instances may fail to be set up correctly while others may work if the proxy restarts.
This is to log non-error output to standard out instead of standard error. For example, if you don't want connection related messages to log as errors, set this flag to true. Defaults to false.
Writes all logging output as JSON with the following keys: severity, timestamp, caller, message and optionally stacktrace. For example, the startup message looks like:
{"severity":"INFO","timestamp":"2020-10-12T07:20:50.52Z","caller":"cloud_sql_proxy/cloud_sql_proxy.go:510","message":"Using gcloud's active project: [my-project-id]"}
Enables HTTP health checks for the proxy, including startup, liveness, and readiness probing. Requires that you configure the Kubernetes container with HTTP probes (instructions).
Specifies the port that the health check server listens and serves on. Defaults to 8090.
See the example here as well as Connecting from Google Kubernetes Engine.
The Cloud SQL Auth Proxy includes support for sending requests through a SOCKs5
proxy. If a Socks5 proxy is running on localhost:8000
, the command to start
the Cloud SQL Auth Proxy would look like:
ALL_PROXY=socks5://localhost:8000 cloud_sql_proxy -instances=$INSTANCE_CONNECTION_NAME=tcp:5432
- Cloud SQL
- Cloud SQL Auth proxy Documentation
- Cloud SQL Auth proxy Quickstarts
- Cloud SQL Code Samples
- Cloud SQL Auth proxy Package Documentation
This project uses semantic versioning, and uses the following lifecycle regarding support for a major version:
Active - Active versions get all new features and security fixes (that wouldn’t otherwise introduce a breaking change). New major versions are guaranteed to be "active" for a minimum of 1 year. Deprecated - Deprecated versions continue to receive security and critical bug fixes, but do not receive new features. Deprecated versions will be publicly supported for 1 year. Unsupported - Any major version that has been deprecated for >=1 year is considered publicly unsupported.
The Cloud SQL Auth proxy aims for a minimum monthly release cadence. If no new features or fixes have been added, a new PATCH version with the latest dependencies is released.
Contributions are welcome. Please, see the CONTRIBUTING document for details.
Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms. See Contributor Code of Conduct for more information.
WARNING: These distributions are not officially supported by Google.
There is Homebrew formula for Cloud SQL Auth proxy 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.