How to run a pyramid app in Google App engine












2















I have been trying to get pyramid to run in google app engine but is not working out.
I have tried to follow the instruction here but it seems obsolete because gae doesn't have appcfg.py anymore. I followed the flask app tutorial on app engine documentation combining it with the one above to get this: app.yaml



runtime: python
env: flex

runtime_config:
python_version: 3
threadsafe: false

handlers:
- url: /static
static_dir: contractors/static
- url: /.*
script: auto


then main.py:



from pyramid.paster import get_app, setup_logging
ini_path = 'production.ini'
setup_logging(ini_path)
app = get_app(ini_path, 'main')


In appengine shell console, I cloned the project repo, installed everything in a virtualenv then tried to run python main.py
But it returns that the Distribution for my project was not found. I then used easy_install paste then the distribution error resolved but python main.py still couldn't run. Help!



Actually, this is frustrating. i keep wondering why aws,gcloud and azure clouds didn't include pyramid tutorial while flask and django are all there. The community doesn't also have working tutorial for these cloud services. Being a newbie, i'm thinking there's something wrong with pyramid.










share|improve this question





























    2















    I have been trying to get pyramid to run in google app engine but is not working out.
    I have tried to follow the instruction here but it seems obsolete because gae doesn't have appcfg.py anymore. I followed the flask app tutorial on app engine documentation combining it with the one above to get this: app.yaml



    runtime: python
    env: flex

    runtime_config:
    python_version: 3
    threadsafe: false

    handlers:
    - url: /static
    static_dir: contractors/static
    - url: /.*
    script: auto


    then main.py:



    from pyramid.paster import get_app, setup_logging
    ini_path = 'production.ini'
    setup_logging(ini_path)
    app = get_app(ini_path, 'main')


    In appengine shell console, I cloned the project repo, installed everything in a virtualenv then tried to run python main.py
    But it returns that the Distribution for my project was not found. I then used easy_install paste then the distribution error resolved but python main.py still couldn't run. Help!



    Actually, this is frustrating. i keep wondering why aws,gcloud and azure clouds didn't include pyramid tutorial while flask and django are all there. The community doesn't also have working tutorial for these cloud services. Being a newbie, i'm thinking there's something wrong with pyramid.










    share|improve this question



























      2












      2








      2








      I have been trying to get pyramid to run in google app engine but is not working out.
      I have tried to follow the instruction here but it seems obsolete because gae doesn't have appcfg.py anymore. I followed the flask app tutorial on app engine documentation combining it with the one above to get this: app.yaml



      runtime: python
      env: flex

      runtime_config:
      python_version: 3
      threadsafe: false

      handlers:
      - url: /static
      static_dir: contractors/static
      - url: /.*
      script: auto


      then main.py:



      from pyramid.paster import get_app, setup_logging
      ini_path = 'production.ini'
      setup_logging(ini_path)
      app = get_app(ini_path, 'main')


      In appengine shell console, I cloned the project repo, installed everything in a virtualenv then tried to run python main.py
      But it returns that the Distribution for my project was not found. I then used easy_install paste then the distribution error resolved but python main.py still couldn't run. Help!



      Actually, this is frustrating. i keep wondering why aws,gcloud and azure clouds didn't include pyramid tutorial while flask and django are all there. The community doesn't also have working tutorial for these cloud services. Being a newbie, i'm thinking there's something wrong with pyramid.










      share|improve this question
















      I have been trying to get pyramid to run in google app engine but is not working out.
      I have tried to follow the instruction here but it seems obsolete because gae doesn't have appcfg.py anymore. I followed the flask app tutorial on app engine documentation combining it with the one above to get this: app.yaml



      runtime: python
      env: flex

      runtime_config:
      python_version: 3
      threadsafe: false

      handlers:
      - url: /static
      static_dir: contractors/static
      - url: /.*
      script: auto


      then main.py:



      from pyramid.paster import get_app, setup_logging
      ini_path = 'production.ini'
      setup_logging(ini_path)
      app = get_app(ini_path, 'main')


      In appengine shell console, I cloned the project repo, installed everything in a virtualenv then tried to run python main.py
      But it returns that the Distribution for my project was not found. I then used easy_install paste then the distribution error resolved but python main.py still couldn't run. Help!



      Actually, this is frustrating. i keep wondering why aws,gcloud and azure clouds didn't include pyramid tutorial while flask and django are all there. The community doesn't also have working tutorial for these cloud services. Being a newbie, i'm thinking there's something wrong with pyramid.







      pyramid gcloud






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Nov 23 '18 at 0:43







      splbuddy

















      asked Nov 22 '18 at 10:02









      splbuddysplbuddy

      629




      629
























          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          4














          It seems like this Pyramid tutorial it's outdated. Also I think it is made to work with App Engine standard, as the 'dev_appserver.py' command does not work with the flexible environment (notice the env:flex tag in your app.yaml file).



          Besides, I managed to get pyramid to work on App Engine Standard, similarly to a Flask application, by following this Pyramid Documentation:



          Notice the line where you are configuring the server, if you use this direction and port(127.0.0.1:8080), you will be able to view the webpage from the Cloud Shell preview 'locally'.



          The main.py file:



          from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server
          from pyramid.config import Configurator
          from pyramid.response import Response


          def hello_world(request):
          return Response('Hello World!')

          def bye_world(request):
          return Response('Bye!')

          config = Configurator()

          config.add_route('hello', '/')
          config.add_view(hello_world, route_name='hello')

          config.add_route('newHandler', '/bye')
          config.add_view(bye_world, route_name='newHandler')

          app = config.make_wsgi_app()

          if __name__ == '__main__':
          server = make_server('127.0.0.1', 8080, app)
          server.serve_forever()


          app.yaml:



          runtime: python27
          api_version: 1
          service: default
          threadsafe: yes

          handlers:
          - url: /.*
          script: main.app


          As you are using third party libraries (pyramid) you need to specify them. First create the requirements.txt file and enter the following lines:



          pyramid
          repoze.lru


          (repoze.lru library seems to be a pyramid requirement)



          Create a directory via the CLI (named lib in this example), in the same path as the rest of the files, and install the libraries:



          mkdir lib 
          pip install -t lib -r requirements.txt


          This command will install all the libraries listed in the 'requirements.txt' file and copy them to the 'lib' folder.



          Now create a file called appengine_config.py that will direct the App Engine deployment to upload the libraries inside the 'lib' folder, and type in:



          from google.appengine.ext import vendor

          vendor.add('lib')


          As a side note, you don't need to do this with Flask as it's a bundled library in App Engine, therefore you don't need to specifically upload the library.



          Finally to test the application 'locally' in Cloud Shell, you can run in your CLI:



          python main.py


          And then use the preview function in the Cloud Shell.



          To deploy the application from your CLI:



          gcloud app deploy


          And see it in your browser by using the command:



          gcloud app browse -s <service_name_defined_in_app.yaml>


          In this example this command would be



          gcloud app browse -s default





          share|improve this answer


























          • If you submit a PR to the Pyramid Community Cookbook, I'd accept it.

            – Steve Piercy
            Nov 23 '18 at 15:06











          • Thanks for the answer, this worked for a single file app but i'm getting the error "pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound: The 'contractors' distribution was not found and is required by the application" on the cloud and i'm still unable to resolve the error .

            – splbuddy
            Nov 24 '18 at 23:16











          • @splbuddy Do you have the folder named 'contractors' in the same path as the app.yaml? The 'static_dir' element will search in the folder you specified (in your case 'contractors/static') and upload any files inside to your App Engine application. When you do a request to '/static' in your application, i.e. '/static/<static_file>', this handler will serve the file stored in 'contractors/static/<static_file>'. See more about how this handler works here

            – Joan Grau
            Nov 26 '18 at 8:39













          • @Steve Piercy Sure I will take a look! Also if there is something unclear about the explaination let me know.

            – Joan Grau
            Nov 26 '18 at 8:41











          • Yes @Joan Grau, I have the folder in the same path with app.yaml, my issues are DistributionNotFound error. And I guess it's because the cloud shell has python 3.5 while appengine is running python3.7, I'll try python2 and see what happens. Thanks once more for the help.

            – splbuddy
            Nov 26 '18 at 11:31











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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          4














          It seems like this Pyramid tutorial it's outdated. Also I think it is made to work with App Engine standard, as the 'dev_appserver.py' command does not work with the flexible environment (notice the env:flex tag in your app.yaml file).



          Besides, I managed to get pyramid to work on App Engine Standard, similarly to a Flask application, by following this Pyramid Documentation:



          Notice the line where you are configuring the server, if you use this direction and port(127.0.0.1:8080), you will be able to view the webpage from the Cloud Shell preview 'locally'.



          The main.py file:



          from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server
          from pyramid.config import Configurator
          from pyramid.response import Response


          def hello_world(request):
          return Response('Hello World!')

          def bye_world(request):
          return Response('Bye!')

          config = Configurator()

          config.add_route('hello', '/')
          config.add_view(hello_world, route_name='hello')

          config.add_route('newHandler', '/bye')
          config.add_view(bye_world, route_name='newHandler')

          app = config.make_wsgi_app()

          if __name__ == '__main__':
          server = make_server('127.0.0.1', 8080, app)
          server.serve_forever()


          app.yaml:



          runtime: python27
          api_version: 1
          service: default
          threadsafe: yes

          handlers:
          - url: /.*
          script: main.app


          As you are using third party libraries (pyramid) you need to specify them. First create the requirements.txt file and enter the following lines:



          pyramid
          repoze.lru


          (repoze.lru library seems to be a pyramid requirement)



          Create a directory via the CLI (named lib in this example), in the same path as the rest of the files, and install the libraries:



          mkdir lib 
          pip install -t lib -r requirements.txt


          This command will install all the libraries listed in the 'requirements.txt' file and copy them to the 'lib' folder.



          Now create a file called appengine_config.py that will direct the App Engine deployment to upload the libraries inside the 'lib' folder, and type in:



          from google.appengine.ext import vendor

          vendor.add('lib')


          As a side note, you don't need to do this with Flask as it's a bundled library in App Engine, therefore you don't need to specifically upload the library.



          Finally to test the application 'locally' in Cloud Shell, you can run in your CLI:



          python main.py


          And then use the preview function in the Cloud Shell.



          To deploy the application from your CLI:



          gcloud app deploy


          And see it in your browser by using the command:



          gcloud app browse -s <service_name_defined_in_app.yaml>


          In this example this command would be



          gcloud app browse -s default





          share|improve this answer


























          • If you submit a PR to the Pyramid Community Cookbook, I'd accept it.

            – Steve Piercy
            Nov 23 '18 at 15:06











          • Thanks for the answer, this worked for a single file app but i'm getting the error "pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound: The 'contractors' distribution was not found and is required by the application" on the cloud and i'm still unable to resolve the error .

            – splbuddy
            Nov 24 '18 at 23:16











          • @splbuddy Do you have the folder named 'contractors' in the same path as the app.yaml? The 'static_dir' element will search in the folder you specified (in your case 'contractors/static') and upload any files inside to your App Engine application. When you do a request to '/static' in your application, i.e. '/static/<static_file>', this handler will serve the file stored in 'contractors/static/<static_file>'. See more about how this handler works here

            – Joan Grau
            Nov 26 '18 at 8:39













          • @Steve Piercy Sure I will take a look! Also if there is something unclear about the explaination let me know.

            – Joan Grau
            Nov 26 '18 at 8:41











          • Yes @Joan Grau, I have the folder in the same path with app.yaml, my issues are DistributionNotFound error. And I guess it's because the cloud shell has python 3.5 while appengine is running python3.7, I'll try python2 and see what happens. Thanks once more for the help.

            – splbuddy
            Nov 26 '18 at 11:31
















          4














          It seems like this Pyramid tutorial it's outdated. Also I think it is made to work with App Engine standard, as the 'dev_appserver.py' command does not work with the flexible environment (notice the env:flex tag in your app.yaml file).



          Besides, I managed to get pyramid to work on App Engine Standard, similarly to a Flask application, by following this Pyramid Documentation:



          Notice the line where you are configuring the server, if you use this direction and port(127.0.0.1:8080), you will be able to view the webpage from the Cloud Shell preview 'locally'.



          The main.py file:



          from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server
          from pyramid.config import Configurator
          from pyramid.response import Response


          def hello_world(request):
          return Response('Hello World!')

          def bye_world(request):
          return Response('Bye!')

          config = Configurator()

          config.add_route('hello', '/')
          config.add_view(hello_world, route_name='hello')

          config.add_route('newHandler', '/bye')
          config.add_view(bye_world, route_name='newHandler')

          app = config.make_wsgi_app()

          if __name__ == '__main__':
          server = make_server('127.0.0.1', 8080, app)
          server.serve_forever()


          app.yaml:



          runtime: python27
          api_version: 1
          service: default
          threadsafe: yes

          handlers:
          - url: /.*
          script: main.app


          As you are using third party libraries (pyramid) you need to specify them. First create the requirements.txt file and enter the following lines:



          pyramid
          repoze.lru


          (repoze.lru library seems to be a pyramid requirement)



          Create a directory via the CLI (named lib in this example), in the same path as the rest of the files, and install the libraries:



          mkdir lib 
          pip install -t lib -r requirements.txt


          This command will install all the libraries listed in the 'requirements.txt' file and copy them to the 'lib' folder.



          Now create a file called appengine_config.py that will direct the App Engine deployment to upload the libraries inside the 'lib' folder, and type in:



          from google.appengine.ext import vendor

          vendor.add('lib')


          As a side note, you don't need to do this with Flask as it's a bundled library in App Engine, therefore you don't need to specifically upload the library.



          Finally to test the application 'locally' in Cloud Shell, you can run in your CLI:



          python main.py


          And then use the preview function in the Cloud Shell.



          To deploy the application from your CLI:



          gcloud app deploy


          And see it in your browser by using the command:



          gcloud app browse -s <service_name_defined_in_app.yaml>


          In this example this command would be



          gcloud app browse -s default





          share|improve this answer


























          • If you submit a PR to the Pyramid Community Cookbook, I'd accept it.

            – Steve Piercy
            Nov 23 '18 at 15:06











          • Thanks for the answer, this worked for a single file app but i'm getting the error "pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound: The 'contractors' distribution was not found and is required by the application" on the cloud and i'm still unable to resolve the error .

            – splbuddy
            Nov 24 '18 at 23:16











          • @splbuddy Do you have the folder named 'contractors' in the same path as the app.yaml? The 'static_dir' element will search in the folder you specified (in your case 'contractors/static') and upload any files inside to your App Engine application. When you do a request to '/static' in your application, i.e. '/static/<static_file>', this handler will serve the file stored in 'contractors/static/<static_file>'. See more about how this handler works here

            – Joan Grau
            Nov 26 '18 at 8:39













          • @Steve Piercy Sure I will take a look! Also if there is something unclear about the explaination let me know.

            – Joan Grau
            Nov 26 '18 at 8:41











          • Yes @Joan Grau, I have the folder in the same path with app.yaml, my issues are DistributionNotFound error. And I guess it's because the cloud shell has python 3.5 while appengine is running python3.7, I'll try python2 and see what happens. Thanks once more for the help.

            – splbuddy
            Nov 26 '18 at 11:31














          4












          4








          4







          It seems like this Pyramid tutorial it's outdated. Also I think it is made to work with App Engine standard, as the 'dev_appserver.py' command does not work with the flexible environment (notice the env:flex tag in your app.yaml file).



          Besides, I managed to get pyramid to work on App Engine Standard, similarly to a Flask application, by following this Pyramid Documentation:



          Notice the line where you are configuring the server, if you use this direction and port(127.0.0.1:8080), you will be able to view the webpage from the Cloud Shell preview 'locally'.



          The main.py file:



          from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server
          from pyramid.config import Configurator
          from pyramid.response import Response


          def hello_world(request):
          return Response('Hello World!')

          def bye_world(request):
          return Response('Bye!')

          config = Configurator()

          config.add_route('hello', '/')
          config.add_view(hello_world, route_name='hello')

          config.add_route('newHandler', '/bye')
          config.add_view(bye_world, route_name='newHandler')

          app = config.make_wsgi_app()

          if __name__ == '__main__':
          server = make_server('127.0.0.1', 8080, app)
          server.serve_forever()


          app.yaml:



          runtime: python27
          api_version: 1
          service: default
          threadsafe: yes

          handlers:
          - url: /.*
          script: main.app


          As you are using third party libraries (pyramid) you need to specify them. First create the requirements.txt file and enter the following lines:



          pyramid
          repoze.lru


          (repoze.lru library seems to be a pyramid requirement)



          Create a directory via the CLI (named lib in this example), in the same path as the rest of the files, and install the libraries:



          mkdir lib 
          pip install -t lib -r requirements.txt


          This command will install all the libraries listed in the 'requirements.txt' file and copy them to the 'lib' folder.



          Now create a file called appengine_config.py that will direct the App Engine deployment to upload the libraries inside the 'lib' folder, and type in:



          from google.appengine.ext import vendor

          vendor.add('lib')


          As a side note, you don't need to do this with Flask as it's a bundled library in App Engine, therefore you don't need to specifically upload the library.



          Finally to test the application 'locally' in Cloud Shell, you can run in your CLI:



          python main.py


          And then use the preview function in the Cloud Shell.



          To deploy the application from your CLI:



          gcloud app deploy


          And see it in your browser by using the command:



          gcloud app browse -s <service_name_defined_in_app.yaml>


          In this example this command would be



          gcloud app browse -s default





          share|improve this answer















          It seems like this Pyramid tutorial it's outdated. Also I think it is made to work with App Engine standard, as the 'dev_appserver.py' command does not work with the flexible environment (notice the env:flex tag in your app.yaml file).



          Besides, I managed to get pyramid to work on App Engine Standard, similarly to a Flask application, by following this Pyramid Documentation:



          Notice the line where you are configuring the server, if you use this direction and port(127.0.0.1:8080), you will be able to view the webpage from the Cloud Shell preview 'locally'.



          The main.py file:



          from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server
          from pyramid.config import Configurator
          from pyramid.response import Response


          def hello_world(request):
          return Response('Hello World!')

          def bye_world(request):
          return Response('Bye!')

          config = Configurator()

          config.add_route('hello', '/')
          config.add_view(hello_world, route_name='hello')

          config.add_route('newHandler', '/bye')
          config.add_view(bye_world, route_name='newHandler')

          app = config.make_wsgi_app()

          if __name__ == '__main__':
          server = make_server('127.0.0.1', 8080, app)
          server.serve_forever()


          app.yaml:



          runtime: python27
          api_version: 1
          service: default
          threadsafe: yes

          handlers:
          - url: /.*
          script: main.app


          As you are using third party libraries (pyramid) you need to specify them. First create the requirements.txt file and enter the following lines:



          pyramid
          repoze.lru


          (repoze.lru library seems to be a pyramid requirement)



          Create a directory via the CLI (named lib in this example), in the same path as the rest of the files, and install the libraries:



          mkdir lib 
          pip install -t lib -r requirements.txt


          This command will install all the libraries listed in the 'requirements.txt' file and copy them to the 'lib' folder.



          Now create a file called appengine_config.py that will direct the App Engine deployment to upload the libraries inside the 'lib' folder, and type in:



          from google.appengine.ext import vendor

          vendor.add('lib')


          As a side note, you don't need to do this with Flask as it's a bundled library in App Engine, therefore you don't need to specifically upload the library.



          Finally to test the application 'locally' in Cloud Shell, you can run in your CLI:



          python main.py


          And then use the preview function in the Cloud Shell.



          To deploy the application from your CLI:



          gcloud app deploy


          And see it in your browser by using the command:



          gcloud app browse -s <service_name_defined_in_app.yaml>


          In this example this command would be



          gcloud app browse -s default






          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Nov 24 '18 at 13:40

























          answered Nov 23 '18 at 9:17









          Joan GrauJoan Grau

          1,069113




          1,069113













          • If you submit a PR to the Pyramid Community Cookbook, I'd accept it.

            – Steve Piercy
            Nov 23 '18 at 15:06











          • Thanks for the answer, this worked for a single file app but i'm getting the error "pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound: The 'contractors' distribution was not found and is required by the application" on the cloud and i'm still unable to resolve the error .

            – splbuddy
            Nov 24 '18 at 23:16











          • @splbuddy Do you have the folder named 'contractors' in the same path as the app.yaml? The 'static_dir' element will search in the folder you specified (in your case 'contractors/static') and upload any files inside to your App Engine application. When you do a request to '/static' in your application, i.e. '/static/<static_file>', this handler will serve the file stored in 'contractors/static/<static_file>'. See more about how this handler works here

            – Joan Grau
            Nov 26 '18 at 8:39













          • @Steve Piercy Sure I will take a look! Also if there is something unclear about the explaination let me know.

            – Joan Grau
            Nov 26 '18 at 8:41











          • Yes @Joan Grau, I have the folder in the same path with app.yaml, my issues are DistributionNotFound error. And I guess it's because the cloud shell has python 3.5 while appengine is running python3.7, I'll try python2 and see what happens. Thanks once more for the help.

            – splbuddy
            Nov 26 '18 at 11:31



















          • If you submit a PR to the Pyramid Community Cookbook, I'd accept it.

            – Steve Piercy
            Nov 23 '18 at 15:06











          • Thanks for the answer, this worked for a single file app but i'm getting the error "pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound: The 'contractors' distribution was not found and is required by the application" on the cloud and i'm still unable to resolve the error .

            – splbuddy
            Nov 24 '18 at 23:16











          • @splbuddy Do you have the folder named 'contractors' in the same path as the app.yaml? The 'static_dir' element will search in the folder you specified (in your case 'contractors/static') and upload any files inside to your App Engine application. When you do a request to '/static' in your application, i.e. '/static/<static_file>', this handler will serve the file stored in 'contractors/static/<static_file>'. See more about how this handler works here

            – Joan Grau
            Nov 26 '18 at 8:39













          • @Steve Piercy Sure I will take a look! Also if there is something unclear about the explaination let me know.

            – Joan Grau
            Nov 26 '18 at 8:41











          • Yes @Joan Grau, I have the folder in the same path with app.yaml, my issues are DistributionNotFound error. And I guess it's because the cloud shell has python 3.5 while appengine is running python3.7, I'll try python2 and see what happens. Thanks once more for the help.

            – splbuddy
            Nov 26 '18 at 11:31

















          If you submit a PR to the Pyramid Community Cookbook, I'd accept it.

          – Steve Piercy
          Nov 23 '18 at 15:06





          If you submit a PR to the Pyramid Community Cookbook, I'd accept it.

          – Steve Piercy
          Nov 23 '18 at 15:06













          Thanks for the answer, this worked for a single file app but i'm getting the error "pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound: The 'contractors' distribution was not found and is required by the application" on the cloud and i'm still unable to resolve the error .

          – splbuddy
          Nov 24 '18 at 23:16





          Thanks for the answer, this worked for a single file app but i'm getting the error "pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound: The 'contractors' distribution was not found and is required by the application" on the cloud and i'm still unable to resolve the error .

          – splbuddy
          Nov 24 '18 at 23:16













          @splbuddy Do you have the folder named 'contractors' in the same path as the app.yaml? The 'static_dir' element will search in the folder you specified (in your case 'contractors/static') and upload any files inside to your App Engine application. When you do a request to '/static' in your application, i.e. '/static/<static_file>', this handler will serve the file stored in 'contractors/static/<static_file>'. See more about how this handler works here

          – Joan Grau
          Nov 26 '18 at 8:39







          @splbuddy Do you have the folder named 'contractors' in the same path as the app.yaml? The 'static_dir' element will search in the folder you specified (in your case 'contractors/static') and upload any files inside to your App Engine application. When you do a request to '/static' in your application, i.e. '/static/<static_file>', this handler will serve the file stored in 'contractors/static/<static_file>'. See more about how this handler works here

          – Joan Grau
          Nov 26 '18 at 8:39















          @Steve Piercy Sure I will take a look! Also if there is something unclear about the explaination let me know.

          – Joan Grau
          Nov 26 '18 at 8:41





          @Steve Piercy Sure I will take a look! Also if there is something unclear about the explaination let me know.

          – Joan Grau
          Nov 26 '18 at 8:41













          Yes @Joan Grau, I have the folder in the same path with app.yaml, my issues are DistributionNotFound error. And I guess it's because the cloud shell has python 3.5 while appengine is running python3.7, I'll try python2 and see what happens. Thanks once more for the help.

          – splbuddy
          Nov 26 '18 at 11:31





          Yes @Joan Grau, I have the folder in the same path with app.yaml, my issues are DistributionNotFound error. And I guess it's because the cloud shell has python 3.5 while appengine is running python3.7, I'll try python2 and see what happens. Thanks once more for the help.

          – splbuddy
          Nov 26 '18 at 11:31


















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