masakari-monitors/doc/source/consul-usage.rst

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Consul Usage

Consul overview

Consul is a service mesh solution providing a full featured control plane with service discovery, configuration, and segmentation functionality. Each of these features can be used individually as needed, or they can be used together to build a full service mesh.

The Consul agent is the core process of Consul. The Consul agent maintains membership information, registers services, runs checks, responds to queries, and more.

Consul clients can provide any number of health checks, either associated with a given service or with the local node. This information can be used by an operator to monitor cluster health.

Please refer to Consul Agent Overview.

Test Environment

There are three controller nodes and two compute nodes in the test environment. Every node has three network interfaces. The first interface is used for management, with an ip such as '192.168.101.'. The second interface is used to connect to storage, with an ip such as '192.168.102.'. The third interface is used for tenant, with an ip such as '192.168.103.*'.

Download Consul

Download Consul package for CentOS. Other OS please refer to Download Consul.

sudo yum install -y yum-utils
sudo yum-config-manager --add-repo https://rpm.releases.hashicorp.com/RHEL/hashicorp.repo
sudo yum -y install Consul

Configure Consul agent

Consul agent must runs on every node. Consul server agent runs on controller nodes, while Consul client agent runs on compute nodes, which makes up one Consul cluster.

The following is an example of a config file for Consul server agent which binds to management interface of the host.

management.json

{
    "bind_addr": "192.168.101.1",
    "datacenter": "management",
    "data_dir": "/tmp/consul_m",
    "log_level": "INFO",
    "server": true,
    "bootstrap_expect": 3,
    "node_name": "node01",
    "addresses": {
        "http": "192.168.101.1"
    },
    "ports": {
        "http": 8500,
        "serf_lan": 8501
    },
    "retry_join": ["192.168.101.1:8501", "192.168.101.2:8501", "192.168.101.3:8501"]
}

The following is an example of a config file for Consul client agent which binds to management interface of the host.

management.json

{
    "bind_addr": "192.168.101.4",
    "datacenter": "management",
    "data_dir": "/tmp/consul_m",
    "log_level": "INFO",
    "node_name": "node04",
    "addresses": {
        "http": "192.168.101.4"
    },
    "ports": {
        "http": 8500,
        "serf_lan": 8501
    },
    "retry_join": ["192.168.101.1:8501", "192.168.101.2:8501", "192.168.101.3:8501"]
}

Use the tenant or storage interface ip and ports when config agent in tenant or storage datacenter.

Please refer to Consul Agent Configuration.

Start Consul agent

The Consul agent is started by the following command.

# Consul agent config-file management.json

Test Consul installation

After all Consul agents installed and started, you can see all nodes in the cluster by the following command.

# Consul members -http-addr=192.168.101.1:8500
Node    Address              Status  Type    Build   Protocol  DC
node01  192.168.101.1:8501   alive   server  1.10.2  2         management
node02  192.168.101.2:8501   alive   server  1.10.2  2         management
node03  192.168.101.3:8501   alive   server  1.10.2  2         management
node04  192.168.101.4:8501   alive   client  1.10.2  2         management
node05  192.168.101.5:8501   alive   client  1.10.2  2         management