WARNING: Backwards incompatible changes happen in order to more easily support new versions of consul. Pin to the version that works for your setup!
Consul Version | Recommended Puppet Module Version |
---|---|
>= 1.1.0 | >= 4.0.0 |
1.1.0- 0.9.0 | <= 3.4.2 |
0.8.x | <= 3.2.4 |
0.7.0 | <= 2.1.1 |
0.6.0 | <= 2.1.1 |
0.5.x | 1.0.3 |
0.4.x | 0.4.6 |
- Installs the consul daemon (via url or package)
- If installing from zip, you must ensure the unzip utility is available.
- If installing from docker, you must ensure puppetlabs-docker_platform module is available.
- Optionally installs a user to run it under
- Installs a configuration file (/etc/consul/config.json)
- Manages the consul service via upstart, sysv, systemd, or nssm.
- Optionally installs the Web UI
To set up a single consul server, with several agents attached: On the server:
class { '::consul':
config_hash => {
'bootstrap_expect' => 1,
'data_dir' => '/opt/consul',
'datacenter' => 'east-aws',
'log_level' => 'INFO',
'node_name' => 'server',
'server' => true,
}
}
On the agent(s):
class { '::consul':
config_hash => {
'data_dir' => '/opt/consul',
'datacenter' => 'east-aws',
'log_level' => 'INFO',
'node_name' => 'agent',
'retry_join' => ['172.16.0.1'],
}
}
Disable install and service components:
class { '::consul':
install_method => 'none',
init_style => false,
manage_service => false,
config_hash => {
'data_dir' => '/opt/consul',
'datacenter' => 'east-aws',
'log_level' => 'INFO',
'node_name' => 'agent',
'retry_join' => ['172.16.0.1'],
}
}
To install and run the Web UI on the server, include ui => true
in the
config_hash
. You may also want to change the client_addr
to 0.0.0.0
from
the default 127.0.0.1
, for example:
class { '::consul':
config_hash => {
'bootstrap_expect' => 1,
'client_addr' => '0.0.0.0',
'data_dir' => '/opt/consul',
'datacenter' => 'east-aws',
'log_level' => 'INFO',
'node_name' => 'server',
'server' => true,
'ui' => true,
}
}
For more security options, consider leaving the client_addr
set to 127.0.0.1
and use with a reverse proxy:
$aliases = ['consul', 'consul.example.com']
# Reverse proxy for Web interface
include 'nginx'
$server_names = [$::fqdn, $aliases]
nginx::resource::vhost { $::fqdn:
proxy => 'http://localhost:8500',
server_name => $server_names,
}
To declare the availability of a service, you can use the service
define. This
will register the service through the local consul client agent and optionally
configure a health check to monitor its availability.
::consul::service { 'redis':
checks => [
{
script => '/usr/local/bin/check_redis.py',
interval => '10s'
}
],
port => 6379,
tags => ['master']
}
See the service.pp docstrings for all available inputs.
You can also use consul::services
which accepts a hash of services, and makes
it easy to declare in hiera. For example:
consul::services:
service1:
address: "%{::ipaddress}"
checks:
- http: http://localhost:42/status
interval: 5s
port: 42
tags:
- "foo:%{::bar}"
service2:
address: "%{::ipaddress}"
checks:
- http: http://localhost:43/status
interval: 5s
port: 43
tags:
- "foo:%{::baz}"
::consul::watch { 'my_watch':
handler => 'handler_path',
passingonly => true,
service => 'serviceName',
service_tag => 'serviceTagName',
type => 'service',
}
See the watch.pp docstrings for all available inputs.
You can also use consul::watches
which accepts a hash of watches, and makes
it easy to declare in hiera.
::consul::check { 'true_check':
interval => '30s',
script => '/bin/true',
}
See the check.pp docstrings for all available inputs.
You can also use consul::checks
which accepts a hash of checks, and makes
it easy to declare in hiera.
Do ensure => absent
while removing existing service, check and watch
definitions. This ensures consul will be reloaded via SIGHUP
. If you have
purge_config_dir
set to true
and simply remove the definition it will cause
consul to restart.
consul_acl { 'ctoken':
ensure => 'present',
rules => {'key' => {'test' => {'policy' => 'read'}}},
type => 'client',
}
Do not use duplicate names, and remember that the ACL ID (a read-only property for this type) is used as the token for requests, not the name
Optionally, you may supply an acl_api_token
. This will allow you to create
ACLs if the anonymous token doesn't permit ACL changes (which is likely).
The api token may be the master token, another management token, or any
client token with sufficient privileges.
NOTE: This module currently cannot parse ACL tokens generated through means other than this module. Don't mix Puppet and Non-puppet ACLs for best results! (pull requests welcome to allow it to co-exist with ACLs generated with normal HCL)
consul_prepared_query { 'consul':
ensure => 'present',
service_name => 'consul',
service_failover_n => 1,
service_failover_dcs => [ 'dc1', 'dc2' ],
service_only_passing => true,
service_tags => [ 'tag1', 'tag2' ],
ttl => 10,
}
or a prepared query template:
consul_prepared_query { 'consul':
ensure => 'present',
service_name => 'consul',
service_name => 'consul-${match(1)}' # lint:ignore:single_quote_string_with_variables
service_failover_n => 1,
service_failover_dcs => [ 'dc1', 'dc2' ],
service_only_passing => true,
service_tags => [ '${match(2)}' ], # lint:ignore:single_quote_string_with_variables
template => true,
template_regexp => '^consul-(.*)-(.*)$',
template_type => 'name_prefix_match',
}
Example:
consul_key_value { 'key/path':
ensure => 'present',
value => 'myvaluestring',
flags => 12345,
datacenter => 'dc1'
}
This provider allows you to manage key/value pairs. It tries to be smart in two ways:
- It caches the data accessible from the kv store with the specified acl token.
- It does not update the key if the value & flag are already correct.
These parameters are mandatory when using consul_key_value
:
name
Name of the key/value object. Path in key/value store.value
value of the key.
The optional parameters only need to be specified if you require changes from default behaviour.
flags
{Integer} an opaque unsigned integer that can be attached to each entry. Clients can choose to use this however makes sense for their application. Default is0
.acl\_api_token
{String} Token for accessing the ACL API. Default is''
.datacenter
{String} Use the key/value store in specified datacenter. If''
(default) it will use the datacenter of the Consul agent at the HTTP address.protocol
{String} protocol to use. Either'http'
(default) or'https'
.port
{Integer} consul port. Defaults to8500
.hostname
{String} consul hostname. Defaults to'localhost'
.api_tries
{Integer} number of tries when contacting the Consul REST API. Timeouts are not retried because a timeout already takes long. Defaults to3
.
Depends on the JSON gem, or a modern ruby. (Ruby 1.8.7 is not officially supported) Depending on the version of puppetserver deployed it may not be new enough (1.8.0 is too old, 2.0.3 is known to work).
Windows service support is provided by NSSM, which is expected to be installed separately. The following caveats apply:
- The user and group parameter must be different (Administrator/Administrators recommended).
- The NSSM executable must be passed as a parameter like in the following example:
class { '::consul':
nssm_exec => 'C:/Program Files/nssm/nssm-2.24/win64/nssm.exe',
bin_dir => 'C:/Consul',
user => 'Administrator',
group => 'Administrators',
config_hash => {
'bootstrap_expect' => 1,
'data_dir' => 'C:/Consul',
'datacenter' => 'dc1',
'log_level' => 'INFO',
'node_name' => 'server',
'server' => true,
}
}
##Telemetry The Consul agent collects various runtime metrics about the performance of different libraries and subsystems. These metrics are aggregated on a ten second interval and are retained for one minute.
To view this data, you must send a signal to the Consul process: on Unix, this is USR1 while on Windows it is BREAK. Once Consul receives the signal, it will dump the current telemetry information to the agent's stderr.
This telemetry information can be used for debugging or otherwise getting a better view of what Consul is doing.
##Usage
class { '::consul':
config_hash => {
'bootstrap_expect' => 1,
'data_dir' => '/opt/consul',
'datacenter' => 'east-aws',
'log_level' => 'INFO',
'node_name' => 'server',
'server' => true,
'telemetry' => {
'statsd_address' => 'localhost:9125',
'prefix_filter' => [
'+consul.client.rpc',
'+consul.client.rpc.exceeded',
'+consul.acl.cache_hit',
'+consul.acl.cache_miss',
'+consul.dns.stale_queries',
'+consul.raft.state.leader',
'+consul.raft.state.candidate',
'+consul.raft.apply',
'+consul.raft.commitTime',
'+consul.raft.leader.dispatchLog',
'+consul.raft.replication.appendEntries',
'+consul.raft.leader.lastContact',
'+consul.rpc.accept_conn',
'+consul.catalog.register',
'+consul.catalog.deregister',
'+consul.kvs.apply',
'+consul.leader.barrier',
'+consul.leader.reconcile',
'+consul.leader.reconcileMember',
'+consul.leader.reapTombstones',
'+consul.rpc.raft_handoff',
'+consul.rpc.request_error',
'+consul.rpc.request',
'+consul.rpc.query',
'+consul.rpc.consistentRead',
'+consul.memberlist.msg.suspect',
'+consul.serf.member.flap',
'+consul.serf.events',
'+consul.session_ttl.active',
]
}
}
}
The metrics for the consul system you can look them in the Official Consul Site with all the description for every metric. Url: https://www.consul.io/docs/agent/telemetry.html
Consul Template is a piece of software to dynamically write out config files using templates that are populated with values from Consul. This module does not configure consul template. See gdhbashton/consul_template for a module that can do that.
Open an issue or fork and open a Pull Request