Mesh gateways are specialized proxies that route data between services that cannot communicate directly. Learn how to enable service-to-service traffic across wan-federated datacenters and review example configuration entries.
Mesh gateways operate by sniffing and extracting the server name indication (SNI) header from the service mesh session and routing the connection to the appropriate destination based on the server name requested. The gateway does not decrypt the data within the mTLS session.
-> **Mesh Gateway Tutorial**: Follow the [mesh gateway tutorial](/consul/tutorials/developer-mesh/service-mesh-gateways) to learn important concepts associated with using mesh gateways for connecting services across datacenters.
* The [primary datacenter](/consul/docs/agent/config/config-files#primary_datacenter) must be set to the same value in both datacenters. This specifies which datacenter is the authority for service mesh certificates and is required for services in all datacenters to establish mutual TLS with each other.
* [gRPC](/consul/docs/agent/config/config-files#grpc_port) must be enabled.
* If you want to [enable gateways globally](/consul/docs/connect/gateways/mesh-gateway/service-to-service-traffic-wan-datacenters#enabling-gateways-globally) you must enable [centralized configuration](/consul/docs/agent/config/config-files#enable_central_service_config).
Consul can only translate mesh gateway registration information into Envoy configuration.
Sidecar proxies that send traffic to an upstream service through a gateway need to know the location of that gateway. They discover the gateway based on their sidecar proxy registrations. Consul can only translate the gateway registration information into Envoy configuration.
Sidecar proxies that do not send upstream traffic through a gateway are not affected when you deploy gateways. If you are using Consul's built-in proxy as a service mesh sidecar it will continue to work for intra-datacenter traffic and will receive incoming traffic even if that traffic has passed through a gateway.
* Configure the `proxy.upstreams` parameters to route traffic to the correct service, namespace, and datacenter. Refer to the [`upstreams` documentation](/consul/docs/connect/proxies/proxy-config-reference#upstream-configuration-reference) for details. The service `proxy.upstreams.destination_name` is always required. The `proxy.upstreams.datacenter` must be configured to enable cross-datacenter traffic. The `proxy.upstreams.destination_namespace` configuration is only necessary if the destination service is in a different namespace.
* Define the `Proxy.Config` settings using opaque parameters compatible with your proxy (i.e., Envoy). For Envoy, refer to the [Gateway Options](/consul/docs/connect/proxies/envoy#gateway-options) and [Escape-hatch Overrides](/consul/docs/connect/proxies/envoy#escape-hatch-overrides) documentation for additional configuration information.
* If ACLs are enabled, a token granting `service:write` for the gateway's service name and `service:read` for all services in the datacenter or partition must be added to the gateway's service definition. These permissions authorize the token to route communications for other Consul service mesh services, but does not allow decrypting any of their communications.
Depending on your network, the proxy's connection to the gateway can operate in one of the following modes (refer to the [mesh-architecture-diagram](#mesh-architecture-diagram)):
Set the proxy to the preferred [mode](#modes) to configure the service mesh proxy. You can specify the mode globally or within child configurations to control proxy behaviors at a lower level. Consul recognizes the following order of precedence if the gateway mode is configured in multiple locations the order of precedence:
The following service definition will enable gateways in the `local` mode for one upstream, the `remote` mode for a second upstream and will disable gateways for a third upstream.
<CodeTabs heading="Example: Enabling gateways for a proxy upstream.">