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main.tf
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# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# DEPLOY A CONSUL CLUSTER IN AWS
# These templates show an example of how to use the consul-cluster module to deploy Consul in AWS. We deploy two Auto
# Scaling Groups (ASGs): one with a small number of Consul server nodes and one with a larger number of Consul client
# nodes. Note that these templates assume that the AMI you provide via the ami_id input variable is built from
# the examples/consul-ami/consul.json Packer template.
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# REQUIRE A SPECIFIC TERRAFORM VERSION OR HIGHER
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
terraform {
# This module is now only being tested with Terraform 1.0.x. However, to make upgrading easier, we are setting
# 0.14.0 as the minimum version, as that version added support for validation and the alltrue function
# Removing the validation completely will yield a version compatible with 0.12.26 as that added support for
# required_providers with source URLs
required_version = ">= 0.14.0"
}
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# AUTOMATICALLY LOOK UP THE LATEST PRE-BUILT AMI
# This repo contains a CircleCI job that automatically builds and publishes the latest AMI by building the Packer
# template at /examples/consul-ami upon every new release. The Terraform data source below automatically looks up the
# latest AMI so that a simple "terraform apply" will just work without the user needing to manually build an AMI and
# fill in the right value.
#
# !! WARNING !! These exmaple AMIs are meant only convenience when initially testing this repo. Do NOT use these example
# AMIs in a production setting because it is important that you consciously think through the configuration you want
# in your own production AMI.
#
# NOTE: This Terraform data source must return at least one AMI result or the entire template will fail. See
# /_ci/publish-amis-in-new-account.md for more information.
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
data "aws_ami" "consul" {
most_recent = true
# If we change the AWS Account in which test are run, update this value.
owners = ["562637147889"]
filter {
name = "virtualization-type"
values = ["hvm"]
}
filter {
name = "is-public"
values = ["true"]
}
filter {
name = "name"
values = ["consul-ubuntu-*"]
}
}
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# DEPLOY THE CONSUL SERVER NODES
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
module "consul_servers" {
# When using these modules in your own templates, you will need to use a Git URL with a ref attribute that pins you
# to a specific version of the modules, such as the following example:
# source = "git::git@github.com:hashicorp/terraform-aws-consul.git//modules/consul-cluster?ref=v0.0.1"
source = "./modules/consul-cluster"
cluster_name = "${var.cluster_name}-server"
cluster_size = var.num_servers
instance_type = "t2.micro"
spot_price = var.spot_price
# The EC2 Instances will use these tags to automatically discover each other and form a cluster
cluster_tag_key = var.cluster_tag_key
cluster_tag_value = var.cluster_name
ami_id = var.ami_id == null ? data.aws_ami.consul.image_id : var.ami_id
user_data = templatefile("${path.module}/examples/root-example/user-data-server.sh", {
cluster_tag_key = var.cluster_tag_key
cluster_tag_value = var.cluster_name
})
vpc_id = data.aws_vpc.default.id
subnet_ids = data.aws_subnet_ids.default.ids
# If set to true, this allows access to the consul HTTPS API
enable_https_port = var.enable_https_port
# To make testing easier, we allow Consul and SSH requests from any IP address here but in a production
# deployment, we strongly recommend you limit this to the IP address ranges of known, trusted servers inside your VPC.
allowed_ssh_cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
allowed_inbound_cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
ssh_key_name = var.ssh_key_name
tags = [
{
key = "Environment"
value = "development"
propagate_at_launch = true
}
]
}
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# DEPLOY THE CONSUL CLIENT NODES
# Note that you do not have to use the consul-cluster module to deploy your clients. We do so simply because it
# provides a convenient way to deploy an Auto Scaling Group with the necessary IAM and security group permissions for
# Consul, but feel free to deploy those clients however you choose (e.g. a single EC2 Instance, a Docker cluster, etc).
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
module "consul_clients" {
# When using these modules in your own templates, you will need to use a Git URL with a ref attribute that pins you
# to a specific version of the modules, such as the following example:
# source = "git::git@github.com:hashicorp/terraform-aws-consul.git//modules/consul-cluster?ref=v0.0.1"
source = "./modules/consul-cluster"
cluster_name = "${var.cluster_name}-client"
cluster_size = var.num_clients
instance_type = "t2.micro"
spot_price = var.spot_price
cluster_tag_key = "consul-clients"
cluster_tag_value = var.cluster_name
ami_id = var.ami_id == null ? data.aws_ami.consul.image_id : var.ami_id
user_data = templatefile("${path.module}/examples/root-example/user-data-client.sh", {
cluster_tag_key = var.cluster_tag_key
cluster_tag_value = var.cluster_name
})
vpc_id = data.aws_vpc.default.id
subnet_ids = data.aws_subnet_ids.default.ids
# To make testing easier, we allow Consul and SSH requests from any IP address here but in a production
# deployment, we strongly recommend you limit this to the IP address ranges of known, trusted servers inside your VPC.
allowed_ssh_cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
allowed_inbound_cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
ssh_key_name = var.ssh_key_name
}
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# DEPLOY CONSUL IN THE DEFAULT VPC AND SUBNETS
# Using the default VPC and subnets makes this example easy to run and test, but it means Consul is accessible from the
# public Internet. For a production deployment, we strongly recommend deploying into a custom VPC with private subnets.
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
data "aws_vpc" "default" {
default = var.vpc_id == null ? true : false
id = var.vpc_id
}
data "aws_subnet_ids" "default" {
vpc_id = data.aws_vpc.default.id
}
data "aws_region" "current" {
}