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---
title: Rancher GCP Quick Start Guide
description: Read this step by step Rancher GCP guide to quickly deploy a Rancher server with a single-node downstream Kubernetes cluster attached.
---
<head>
<link rel="canonical" href="https://ranchermanager.docs.rancher.com/getting-started/quick-start-guides/deploy-rancher-manager/gcp"/>
</head>
The following steps will quickly deploy a Rancher server on GCP in a single-node K3s Kubernetes cluster, with a single-node downstream Kubernetes cluster attached.
>**Note:** The intent of these guides is to quickly launch a sandbox that you can use to evaluate Rancher. These guides are not intended for production environments. For comprehensive setup instructions, see [Installation](../../installation-and-upgrade/installation-and-upgrade.md).
## Prerequisites
>**Note**
>Deploying to Google GCP will incur charges.
- [Google GCP Account](https://console.cloud.google.com/): A Google GCP Account is required to create resources for deploying Rancher and Kubernetes.
- [Google GCP Project](https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/standard/nodejs/building-app/creating-project): Use this link to follow a tutorial to create a GCP Project if you don't have one yet.
- [Google GCP Service Account](https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/creating-managing-service-account-keys): Use this link and follow instructions to create a GCP service account and token file.
- [Terraform](https://www.terraform.io/downloads.html): Used to provision the server and cluster in Google GCP.
## Getting Started
1. Clone [Rancher Quickstart](https://github.com/rancher/quickstart) to a folder using `git clone https://github.com/rancher/quickstart`.
2. Go into the GCP folder containing the Terraform files by executing `cd quickstart/rancher/gcp`.
3. Rename the `terraform.tfvars.example` file to `terraform.tfvars`.
4. Edit `terraform.tfvars` and customize the following variables:
- `gcp_account_json` - GCP service account file path and file name
- `rancher_server_admin_password` - Admin password for created Rancher server
5. **Optional:** Modify optional variables within `terraform.tfvars`.
See the [Quickstart Readme](https://github.com/rancher/quickstart) and the [GCP Quickstart Readme](https://github.com/rancher/quickstart/tree/master/rancher/gcp) for more information.
Suggestions include:
- `gcp_region` - Google GCP region, choose the closest instead of the default (`us-east4`)
- `gcp_zone` - Google GCP zone, choose the closest instead of the default (`us-east4-a`)
- `prefix` - Prefix for all created resources
- `machine_type` - Compute instance size used, minimum is `n1-standard-1` but `n1-standard-2` or `n1-standard-4` could be used if within budget
6. Run `terraform init`.
7. To initiate the creation of the environment, run `terraform apply --auto-approve`. Then wait for output similar to the following:
```
Apply complete! Resources: 16 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed.
Outputs:
rancher_node_ip = xx.xx.xx.xx
rancher_server_url = https://rancher.xx.xx.xx.xx.sslip.io
workload_node_ip = yy.yy.yy.yy
```
8. Paste the `rancher_server_url` from the output above into the browser. Log in when prompted (default username is `admin`, use the password set in `rancher_server_admin_password`).
9. ssh to the Rancher Server using the `id_rsa` key generated in `quickstart/rancher/gcp`.
#### Result
Two Kubernetes clusters are deployed into your GCP account, one running Rancher Server and the other ready for experimentation deployments. Please note that while this setup is a great way to explore Rancher functionality, a production setup should follow our high availability setup guidelines. SSH keys for the VMs are auto-generated and stored in the module directory.
### What's Next?
Use Rancher to create a deployment. For more information, see [Creating Deployments](../deploy-workloads/deploy-workloads.md).
## Destroying the Environment
1. From the `quickstart/rancher/gcp` folder, execute `terraform destroy --auto-approve`.
2. Wait for confirmation that all resources have been destroyed.