mirror of https://github.com/status-im/consul.git
458 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
458 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: Federation Between Kubernetes Clusters
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description: >-
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Federating multiple Kubernetes clusters.
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---
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# Federation Between Kubernetes Clusters
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-> **1.8.0+:** This feature is available in Consul versions 1.8.0 and higher
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~> This topic requires familiarity with [Mesh Gateways](/docs/connect/gateways/mesh-gateway/service-to-service-traffic-datacenters) and [WAN Federation Via Mesh Gateways](/docs/connect/gateways/mesh-gateway/wan-federation-via-mesh-gateways).
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-> Looking for a step-by-step guide? Please follow our Learn tutorial: [Secure and Route Service Mesh Communication Across Kubernetes](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/consul/kubernetes-mesh-gateways).
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This page describes how to federate multiple Kubernetes clusters. See [Multi-Cluster Overview](/docs/k8s/installation/multi-cluster)
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for more information on use-cases and how it works.
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## Primary Datacenter
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Consul treats each Kubernetes cluster as a separate Consul datacenter.
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In order to federate clusters, one cluster must be designated the
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primary datacenter. This datacenter will be
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responsible for creating the certificate authority that signs the TLS certificates
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Connect uses to encrypt and authorize traffic. It also handles validating global ACL tokens. All other clusters
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that are federated are considered secondaries.
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#### First Time Installation
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If you haven't installed Consul on your cluster, continue reading below. If you've
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already installed Consul on a cluster and want to upgrade it to
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support federation, see [Upgrading An Existing Cluster](#upgrading-an-existing-cluster).
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You will need to use the following `config.yaml` file for your primary cluster,
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with the possible modifications listed below.
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<CodeBlockConfig filename="config.yaml">
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```yaml
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global:
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name: consul
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datacenter: dc1
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# TLS configures whether Consul components use TLS.
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tls:
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# TLS must be enabled for federation in Kubernetes.
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enabled: true
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federation:
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enabled: true
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# This will cause a Kubernetes secret to be created that
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# can be imported by secondary datacenters to configure them
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# for federation.
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createFederationSecret: true
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acls:
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manageSystemACLs: true
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# If ACLs are enabled, we must create a token for secondary
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# datacenters to replicate ACLs.
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createReplicationToken: true
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# Gossip encryption secures the protocol Consul uses to quickly
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# discover new nodes and detect failure.
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gossipEncryption:
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secretName: consul-gossip-encryption-key
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secretKey: key
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connectInject:
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# Consul Connect service mesh must be enabled for federation.
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enabled: true
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controller:
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enabled: true
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meshGateway:
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# Mesh gateways are gateways between datacenters. They must be enabled
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# for federation in Kubernetes since the communication between datacenters
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# goes through the mesh gateways.
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enabled: true
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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Modifications:
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1. The Consul datacenter name is `dc1`. The datacenter name in each federated
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cluster **must be unique**.
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1. ACLs are enabled in the above config file. They can be disabled by setting:
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```yaml
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global:
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acls:
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manageSystemACLs: false
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createReplicationToken: false
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```
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ACLs secure Consul by requiring every API call to present an ACL token that
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is validated to ensure it has the proper permissions. If you are only testing Consul,
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this is not required.
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1. Gossip encryption is enabled in the above config file. To disable it, comment
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out or delete the `gossipEncryption` key:
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```yaml
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global:
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# gossipEncryption:
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# secretName: consul-gossip-encryption-key
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# secretKey: key
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```
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Gossip encryption encrypts the communication layer used to discover other
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nodes in the cluster and report on failure. If you are only testing Consul,
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this is not required.
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**NOTE:** This config assumes you've already
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created a Kubernetes secret called `consul-gossip-encryption-key`. See
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[the docs for this setting](/docs/k8s/helm#v-global-gossipencryption) for
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more information on how to create this secret.
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1. The default mesh gateway configuration
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creates a Kubernetes Load Balancer service. If you wish to customize the
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mesh gateway, for example using a Node Port service or a custom DNS entry,
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see the [Helm reference](/docs/k8s/helm#v-meshgateway) for that setting.
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With your `config.yaml` ready to go, follow our [Installation Guide](/docs/k8s/installation/install)
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to install Consul on your primary cluster.
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-> **NOTE:** You must be using consul-helm 0.21.0+. To update, run `helm repo update`.
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#### Upgrading An Existing Cluster
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If you have an existing cluster, you will need to upgrade it to ensure it has
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the following config:
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<CodeBlockConfig filename="config.yaml">
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```yaml
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global:
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tls:
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enabled: true
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federation:
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enabled: true
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createFederationSecret: true
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acls:
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manageSystemACLs: true
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createReplicationToken: true
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meshGateway:
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enabled: true
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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1. `global.tls.enabled` must be `true`. See [Configuring TLS on an Existing Cluster](/docs/k8s/operations/tls-on-existing-cluster)
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for more information on safely upgrading a cluster to use TLS.
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If you've set `enableAutoEncrypt: true`, this is also supported.
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1. `global.federation.enabled` must be set to `true`. This is a new config setting.
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1. If using ACLs, you'll already have `global.acls.manageSystemACLs: true`. For the
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primary cluster, you'll also need to set `global.acls.createReplicationToken: true`.
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This ensures that an ACL token is created that secondary clusters can use to authenticate
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with the primary.
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1. Mesh Gateways are enabled with the default configuration. The default configuration
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creates a Kubernetes Load Balancer service. If you wish to customize the
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mesh gateway, see the [Helm reference](/docs/k8s/helm#v-meshgateway) for that setting.
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With the above settings added to your existing config, follow the [Upgrading](/docs/k8s/upgrade)
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guide to upgrade your cluster and then come back to the [Federation Secret](#federation-secret) section.
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-> **NOTE:** You must be using consul-helm 0.21.0+.
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#### ProxyDefaults
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If you are using consul-helm 0.30.0+ you must also create a [`ProxyDefaults`](/docs/connect/config-entries/proxy-defaults)
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resource to configure Consul to use the mesh gateways for service mesh traffic.
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```yaml
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apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
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kind: ProxyDefaults
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metadata:
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name: global
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spec:
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meshGateway:
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mode: 'local'
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```
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The `spec.meshGateway.mode` can be set to `local` or `remote`. If set to `local`,
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traffic from one datacenter to another will egress through the local mesh gateway.
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This may be useful if you prefer all your cross-cluster network traffic to egress
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from the same locations.
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If set to `remote`, traffic will be routed directly from the pod to the remote mesh gateway
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(resulting in one less hop).
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Verify that the resource was synced to Consul:
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```shell-session
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$ kubectl get proxydefaults global
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NAME SYNCED AGE
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global True 1s
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```
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Its `SYNCED` status should be `True`.
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-> **NOTE:** The `ProxyDefaults` resource can be created in any namespace, but
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we recommend creating it in the same namespace that Consul is installed in.
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Its name must be `global`.
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## Federation Secret
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The federation secret is a Kubernetes secret containing information needed
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for secondary datacenters/clusters to federate with the primary. This secret is created
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automatically by setting:
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<CodeBlockConfig highlight="2-3">
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```yaml
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global:
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federation:
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createFederationSecret: true
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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After the installation into your primary cluster you will need to export
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this secret:
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```shell-session
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$ kubectl get secret consul-federation --output yaml > consul-federation-secret.yaml
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```
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!> **Security note:** The federation secret makes it possible to gain
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full admin privileges in Consul. This secret must be kept securely, i.e.
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it should be deleted from your filesystem after importing it to your secondary
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cluster and you should use RBAC permissions to ensure only administrators
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can read it from Kubernetes.
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~> **Secret doesn't exist?** If you haven't set `global.name` to `consul` then the name of the secret will
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be your Helm release name suffixed with `-consul-federation` e.g. `helm-release-consul-federation`.
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Now you're ready to import the secret into your secondary cluster(s).
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Switch `kubectl` context to your secondary Kubernetes cluster. In this example
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our context for our secondary cluster is `dc2`:
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```shell-session
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$ kubectl config use-context dc2
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Switched to context "dc2".
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```
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And import the secret:
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```shell-session
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$ kubectl apply --filename consul-federation-secret.yaml
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secret/consul-federation configured
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```
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#### Federation Secret Contents
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The automatically generated federation secret contains:
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- **Server certificate authority certificate** - This is the certificate authority
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used to sign Consul server-to-server communication. This is required by secondary
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clusters because they must communicate with the Consul servers in the primary cluster.
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- **Server certificate authority key** - This is the signing key for the server certificate
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authority. This is required by secondary clusters because they need to create
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server certificates for each Consul server using the same certificate authority
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as the primary.
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!> **Security note:** The certificate authority key would enable an attacker to compromise Consul,
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it should be kept securely.
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- **Consul server config** - This is a JSON snippet that must be used as part of the server config for secondary datacenters.
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It sets:
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- [`primary_datacenter`](/docs/agent/config/agent-config-files#primary_datacenter) to the name of the primary datacenter.
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- [`primary_gateways`](/docs/agent/config/agent-config-files#primary_gateways) to an array of IPs or hostnames
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for the mesh gateways in the primary datacenter. These are the addresses that
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Consul servers in secondary clusters will use to communicate with the primary
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datacenter.
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Even if there are multiple secondary datacenters, only the primary gateways
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need to be configured. Upon first connection with a primary datacenter, the
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addresses for other secondary datacenters will be discovered.
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- **ACL replication token** - If ACLs are enabled, secondary datacenters need
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an ACL token in order to authenticate with the primary datacenter. This ACL
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token is also used to replicate ACLs from the primary datacenter so that
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components in each datacenter can authenticate with one another.
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- **Gossip encryption key** - If gossip encryption is enabled, secondary datacenters
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need the gossip encryption key in order to be part of the gossip pool.
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Gossip is the method by which Consul discovers the addresses and health of other
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nodes.
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!> **Security note:** This gossip encryption key would enable an attacker to compromise Consul,
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it should be kept securely.
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## Secondary Cluster(s)
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With the primary cluster up and running, and the [federation secret](#federation-secret) imported
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into the secondary cluster, we can now install Consul into the secondary
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cluster.
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You will need to use the following `config.yaml` file for your secondary cluster(s),
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with the possible modifications listed below.
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-> **NOTE: ** You must use a separate Helm config file for each cluster (primary and secondaries) since their
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settings are different.
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<CodeBlockConfig filename="config-cluster2.yaml">
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```yaml
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global:
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name: consul
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datacenter: dc2
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tls:
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enabled: true
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# Here we're using the shared certificate authority from the primary
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# datacenter that was exported via the federation secret.
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caCert:
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secretName: consul-federation
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secretKey: caCert
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caKey:
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secretName: consul-federation
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secretKey: caKey
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acls:
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manageSystemACLs: true
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# Here we're importing the replication token that was
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# exported from the primary via the federation secret.
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replicationToken:
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secretName: consul-federation
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secretKey: replicationToken
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federation:
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enabled: true
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gossipEncryption:
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secretName: consul-federation
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secretKey: gossipEncryptionKey
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connectInject:
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enabled: true
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controller:
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enabled: true
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meshGateway:
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enabled: true
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server:
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# Here we're including the server config exported from the primary
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# via the federation secret. This config includes the addresses of
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# the primary datacenter's mesh gateways so Consul can begin federation.
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extraVolumes:
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- type: secret
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name: consul-federation
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items:
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- key: serverConfigJSON
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path: config.json
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load: true
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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Modifications:
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1. The Consul datacenter name is `dc2`. The primary datacenter's name was `dc1`.
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The datacenter name in **each** federated cluster **must be unique**.
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1. ACLs are enabled in the above config file. They can be disabled by removing
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the whole `acls` block:
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```yaml
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acls:
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manageSystemACLs: false
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replicationToken:
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secretName: consul-federation
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secretKey: replicationToken
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```
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If ACLs are enabled in one datacenter, they must be enabled in all datacenters
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because in order to communicate with that one datacenter ACL tokens are required.
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1. Gossip encryption is enabled in the above config file. To disable it, don't
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set the `gossipEncryption` key:
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```yaml
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global:
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# gossipEncryption:
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# secretName: consul-federation
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# secretKey: gossipEncryptionKey
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```
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If gossip encryption is enabled in one datacenter, it must be enabled in all datacenters
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because in order to communicate with that one datacenter the encryption key is required.
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1. The default mesh gateway configuration
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creates a Kubernetes Load Balancer service. If you wish to customize the
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mesh gateway, for example using a Node Port service or a custom DNS entry,
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see the [Helm reference](/docs/k8s/helm#v-meshgateway) for that setting.
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With your `config.yaml` ready to go, follow our [Installation Guide](/docs/k8s/installation/install)
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to install Consul on your secondary cluster(s).
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## Verifying Federation
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To verify that both datacenters are federated, run the
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`consul members -wan` command on one of the Consul server pods:
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```shell-session
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$ kubectl exec statefulset/consul-server -- consul members -wan
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Node Address Status Type Build Protocol DC Segment
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consul-server-0.dc1 10.32.4.216:8302 alive server 1.8.0 2 dc1 <all>
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consul-server-0.dc2 192.168.2.173:8302 alive server 1.8.0 2 dc2 <all>
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consul-server-1.dc1 10.32.5.161:8302 alive server 1.8.0 2 dc1 <all>
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consul-server-1.dc2 192.168.88.64:8302 alive server 1.8.0 2 dc2 <all>
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consul-server-2.dc1 10.32.1.175:8302 alive server 1.8.0 2 dc1 <all>
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consul-server-2.dc2 192.168.35.174:8302 alive server 1.8.0 2 dc2 <all>
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```
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In this example (run from `dc1`), you can see that this datacenter knows about
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the servers in dc2 and that they have status `alive`.
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You can also use the `consul catalog services` command with the `-datacenter` flag to ensure
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each datacenter can read each other's services. In this example, our `kubectl`
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context is `dc1` and we're querying for the list of services in `dc2`:
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```shell-session
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$ kubectl exec statefulset/consul-server -- consul catalog services -datacenter dc2
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consul
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mesh-gateway
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```
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You can switch kubectl contexts and run the same command in `dc2` with the flag
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`-datacenter dc1` to ensure `dc2` can communicate with `dc1`.
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### Consul UI
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We can also use the Consul UI to verify federation.
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See [Viewing the Consul UI](/docs/k8s/installation/install#viewing-the-consul-ui)
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for instructions on how to view the UI.
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~> NOTE: If ACLs are enabled, your kubectl context must be in the primary datacenter
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to retrieve the bootstrap token mentioned in the UI documentation.
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With the UI open, you'll be able to switch between datacenters via the dropdown
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in the top left:
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![Consul Datacenter Dropdown](/img/data-center-dropdown.png 'Consul Datacenter Dropdown')
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## Next Steps
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With your Kubernetes clusters federated, try out using Consul service mesh to
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route between services deployed on each cluster by following our Learn tutorial: [Secure and Route Service Mesh Communication Across Kubernetes](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/consul/kubernetes-mesh-gateways#deploy-microservices).
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You can also read our in-depth documentation on [Consul Service Mesh In Kubernetes](/docs/k8s/connect).
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If you are still considering a move to Kubernetes, or to Consul on Kubernetes specifically, our [Migrate to Microservices with Consul Service Mesh on Kubernetes](https://learn.hashicorp.com/collections/consul/microservices?utm_source=WEBSITE&utm_medium=WEB_IO&utm_offer=ARTICLE_PAGE&utm_content=DOCS)
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collection uses an example application written by a fictional company to illustrate why and how organizations can
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migrate from monolith to microservices using Consul service mesh on Kubernetes. The case study in this collection
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should provide information valuable for understanding how to develop services that leverage Consul during any stage
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of your microservices journey.
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