mirror of https://github.com/status-im/consul.git
243 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
243 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
---
|
|
layout: docs
|
|
page_title: Connect - Proxy Integration
|
|
description: >-
|
|
A Connect-aware proxy enables unmodified applications to use Connect. A
|
|
per-service proxy sidecar transparently handles inbound and outbound service
|
|
connections, automatically wrapping and verifying TLS connections.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
# Connect Custom Proxy Integration
|
|
|
|
Any proxy can be extended to support Connect. Consul ships with a built-in
|
|
proxy for a good development and out of the box experience, but production
|
|
users will require other proxy solutions.
|
|
|
|
A proxy must serve one or both of the following two roles: it must accept
|
|
inbound connections or establish outbound connections identified as a
|
|
particular service. One or both of these may be implemented depending on the
|
|
case, although generally both must be supported for full sidecar functionality.
|
|
|
|
There are also two different levels of compatibility as a sidecar: L4 or L7.
|
|
L4 integration is simpler and adequate to secure all traffic but treats all
|
|
traffic as TCP so no advanced routing or metrics features can be supported.
|
|
Full L7 support is built on top of L4 support and includes supporting most or
|
|
all of the L7 traffic routing features in Connect by dynamically configuring
|
|
routing, retries and more L7 features. Currently The built-in proxy only
|
|
supports L4 while Envoy supports the full L7 feature set.
|
|
|
|
Places where the integration approach diverges for L4/L7 support is indicated
|
|
below.
|
|
|
|
## Accepting Inbound Connections
|
|
|
|
For inbound connections, the proxy must accept TLS connections on some port.
|
|
The certificate served should be obtained from the
|
|
[`/v1/agent/connect/ca/leaf/`] API endpoint. The client certificate should be
|
|
validated against the root certificates provided by the
|
|
[`/v1/agent/connect/ca/roots`] endpoint. After validating the client
|
|
certificate from the caller, depending upon the [protocol] of the proxied
|
|
service service the proxy must either authorize the entire connection (L4) or
|
|
each request (L7).
|
|
|
|
Connection authorization can be performed one of two ways:
|
|
|
|
1. The first is by calling the
|
|
[`/v1/agent/connect/authorize`](/api/agent/connect) endpoint. The authorize
|
|
endpoint is expected to be called in the connection path, so if the local
|
|
Consul agent is down or unresponsive it will impact the success rate of new
|
|
connections. The agent uses locally cached data to authorize the connection
|
|
and typically responds in microseconds. Therefore, the impact to the TLS
|
|
handshake is typically microseconds.
|
|
|
|
~> **Note:** This endpoint is only suited for networking layer 4 (e.g. TCP)
|
|
integration. The endpoint will always treat intentions with Permissions
|
|
defined (i.e., layer 7 criteria) as deny intentions during evaluation.
|
|
|
|
2. Alternatively, proxies may list intentions that match the destination by
|
|
querying the [intention match
|
|
API](/api/connect/intentions#list-matching-intentions) endpoint, and
|
|
represent them in the native configuration of the proxy itself (such as RBAC
|
|
for Envoy). For performance and reliability reasons this is the desirable
|
|
method for implementing intention enforcement. The cached intentions should
|
|
be consulted for each incoming connection (L4) or request (L7) to determine
|
|
if the should be accepted or rejected.
|
|
|
|
All of these API endpoints operate on agent-local data that is updated in the
|
|
background. The leaf, roots, and intentions should be updated in the background
|
|
by the proxy.
|
|
|
|
The leaf cert, root cert, and intentions endpoints support [blocking
|
|
queries](/api/features/blocking), which should be used to get near-immediate
|
|
updates for root key rotations, new leaf certs before expiry, and intention
|
|
changes.
|
|
|
|
Although Consul follows the SPIFFE spec for certificates, some currently
|
|
supported CA providers don't allow strict adherence. For example, CA
|
|
certificates may not have the correct trust-domain SPIFFE URI SAN for the
|
|
cluster. If SPIFFE validation is performed in the proxy, be aware that it
|
|
should be possible to opt out, otherwise certain CA providers supported by
|
|
Consul will not be compatible with the use of that proxy. Currently neither
|
|
Envoy nor the built-in proxy validate the SPIFFE URI of the chain beyond the
|
|
leaf certificate.
|
|
|
|
### Connection Authorization
|
|
|
|
Authentication is based on "service identity" (TLS), and is implemented at the
|
|
transport layer. Depending upon the [protocol] of the proxied service,
|
|
authorization is performed either on a per-connection (L4) or per-request (L7)
|
|
basis.
|
|
|
|
-> **Note:** Features like (local) rate limiting or max connections are
|
|
configurations that we expect to push into proxies and have them enforce
|
|
separately to the AuthZ call based on the state they already have about request
|
|
rates etc.
|
|
|
|
#### Persistent TCP Connections and Intentions
|
|
|
|
For a proxied service configured with a [protocol] of TCP, potentially
|
|
long-lived TCP connections will be authorized only when they are established.
|
|
Since many services (e.g. databases) typically use persistent connection pools,
|
|
a change in intentions that newly denies access currently does not terminate
|
|
existing connections in violation of the updated intention. In this case it may
|
|
appear as if the intention is not being enforced.
|
|
|
|
Consul eventually may support a mechanism for tracking specific connections in
|
|
the agent and then allow the agent to tell the proxy to close those connections
|
|
when their authorization state changes, but for now that is not on the roadmap.
|
|
|
|
It is recommended therefore to do one of the following:
|
|
|
|
1. Have connections terminate after a configurable maximum lifetime of say
|
|
several hours. This balances the overhead of establishing new connections
|
|
while keeping an upper bound on how long after Intention changes existing
|
|
connections remain open.
|
|
2. Periodically re-authorize every open connection. The AuthZ call itself is
|
|
not expensive and should be a local, in-memory operation so authorizing
|
|
thousands of open connections once every minute or so is likely to be
|
|
negligible overhead, but enforces a tighter upper bound on how long it takes
|
|
to enforce Intention changes without affecting protocol efficiency of
|
|
persistent connections.
|
|
|
|
#### Certificate Serial in AuthZ
|
|
|
|
Intentions currently utilize TLS' URI Subject Alternative Name (SAN) for
|
|
enforcement. In the future, Consul will support revoking specific certificates
|
|
by serial number. The AuthZ API in the Go SDK has a field to pass the serial
|
|
number ([`consul/connect/tls.go`]). Proxies may provide this value during
|
|
authorization.
|
|
|
|
## Establishing Outbound Connections
|
|
|
|
For outbound connections, the proxy should communicate to a Connect-capable
|
|
endpoint for a service and provide a client certificate from the
|
|
[`/v1/agent/connect/ca/leaf/`] API endpoint. The certificate served by the
|
|
remote endpoint may be verified against the root certificates from the
|
|
[`/v1/agent/connect/ca/roots`] endpoint.
|
|
|
|
## Configuration Discovery
|
|
|
|
Any proxy can discover proxy configuration registered with a local service
|
|
instance using the
|
|
[`/v1/agent/service/:service_id`](/api/agent/service#get-service-configuration)
|
|
API endpoint.
|
|
|
|
This endpoint supports hash-based blocking, enabling long-polling for changes
|
|
to the registration/configuration. Any changes to the registration/config will
|
|
result in the new config being returned immediately. An example implementation
|
|
may be found in our [built-in proxy](/docs/connect/proxies/built-in) which
|
|
utilizes our Go SDK, and uses the HTTP "pull" API (via our `watch` package):
|
|
[`consul/connect/proxy/config.go`].
|
|
|
|
The [discovery chain] for each upstream service should be fetched from the
|
|
[`/v1/discovery-chain/:service_id`](/api/discovery-chain#read-compiled-discovery-chain)
|
|
API endpoint. This will return a compiled graph of configurations needed by
|
|
sidecars for a particular upstream service. If you are only implementing L4
|
|
support in your proxy, set the
|
|
[`OverrideProtocol`](/api/discovery-chain#overrideprotocol) value to "tcp" when
|
|
fetching the discovery chain so that L7 features such as HTTP routing rules are
|
|
not returned.
|
|
|
|
For each [target](/docs/internals/discovery-chain#targets) in the resulting
|
|
discovery chain, a list of healthy, Connect-capable endpoints may be fetched
|
|
from the [`/v1/health/connect/:service_id`] API endpoint per the [Service
|
|
Discovery](#service-discovery) section below.
|
|
|
|
The rest of the nodes in the chain include configurations that should be
|
|
translated into the nearest equivalent for things like HTTP routing, connection
|
|
timeouts, connection pool settings, rate limits, etc. See the full [discovery
|
|
chain] documentation and relevant [config entry](/docs/agent/config-entries)
|
|
documentation for details of supported configuration parameters.
|
|
|
|
We expect config here to evolve reasonably rapidly. While we do not intend to
|
|
make backwards incompatible API changes, there are likely to be new
|
|
configurations and features added regularly. Some proxies may not be able to
|
|
support all features or may have differing semantics with the way they support
|
|
them. We intend to find a suitable format to document the behavior differences
|
|
between proxy implementations as they mature.
|
|
|
|
### Service Discovery
|
|
|
|
Proxies can use Consul's service discovery API
|
|
[`/v1/health/connect/:service_id`] to return all available, Connect-capable
|
|
endpoints for a given service. This endpoint supports a `?cached` parameter
|
|
which makes use of [agent caching](/api/features/caching) and thus has
|
|
performance benefits. The API package provides a [`UseCache`] query option to
|
|
leverage this. In addition to performance improvements, use of the cache makes
|
|
the mesh more resilient to Consul server outages - the mesh "fails static" with
|
|
the last known set of service instances still used rather than errors on new
|
|
connections.
|
|
|
|
Proxies can decide whether to perform just-in-time queries to the API when a
|
|
new connection needs to be routed, or to use blocking queries to load the
|
|
current set of endpoints for a service and keep that list updated. The SDK and
|
|
built-in proxy currently use just-in-time resolution however many existing
|
|
proxies are likely to find it easier to integrate by pulling the set of
|
|
endpoints and maintaining it in local memory using blocking queries.
|
|
|
|
Upstreams can be defined with Prepared Query target types. These upstreams
|
|
should use Consul's [prepared query](/api/query) API. It's worth noting that
|
|
the PreparedQuery API does not support blocking, so proxies choosing to
|
|
populate endpoints in memory will need to poll the endpoint at a suitable and
|
|
ideally configurable frequency.
|
|
|
|
-> **Note:** Long-term the [`service-resolver` config
|
|
entries](/docs/connect/config-entries/service-resolver) are intended to replace
|
|
Prepared Queries in Consul entirely, but for now these are still used in some
|
|
configurations.
|
|
|
|
## Sidecar instantiation
|
|
|
|
Consul does not start or manage sidecar proxies processes. Proxies running on a
|
|
physical host or VM are designed to be started and run by process supervisor
|
|
systems such as init, systemd, supervisord, etc. Or, if deployed within a
|
|
cluster scheduler (Kubernetes, Nomad) running as a sidecar container in the
|
|
same namespace.
|
|
|
|
The proxy will use the [`CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN`](/commands#consul_http_token) and
|
|
[`CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR`](/commands#consul_http_addr) environment variables to
|
|
contact Consul to fetch certificates, provided the `CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN`
|
|
environment variable contains a Consul ACL that has the necessary permissions
|
|
to read configuration for that service. If you use our Go [`api` package] then
|
|
those environment variables will be read and the client configured for you
|
|
automatically.
|
|
|
|
The ID of the proxy service comes from the user. See [`consul connect envoy`](/commands/connect/envoy) as an example. You may start it with the
|
|
`-proxy-id` flag and pass the ID of the proxy service you registered elsewhere.
|
|
A nicer UX is available for end-users using the `-sidecar-for=<service>`
|
|
argument, which causes the command to query Consul for a proxy that is
|
|
registered as a sidecar for the specified `<service>`. If there is exactly one
|
|
such proxy, that ID will be used to start the proxy. Your controller only needs
|
|
to accept `-proxy-id` as an argument; the Consul CLI will handle resolving the
|
|
ID for the name specified in `-sidecar-for`.
|
|
|
|
[`/v1/agent/connect/ca/leaf/`]: /api/agent/connect#service-leaf-certificate
|
|
[`/v1/agent/connect/ca/roots`]: /api/agent/connect#certificate-authority-ca-roots
|
|
[`/v1/health/connect/:service_id`]: /api/health#list-nodes-for-connect-capable-service
|
|
[`api` package]: https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/tree/master/api
|
|
[`consul/connect/proxy/config.go`]: https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/blob/v1.8.3/connect/proxy/config.go#L187
|
|
[`consul/connect/tls.go`]: https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/blob/v1.8.3/connect/tls.go#L232-L237
|
|
[discovery chain]: /docs/connect/l7-traffic/discovery-chain
|
|
[`usecache`]: https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/blob/v1.8.3/api/api.go#L99-L102
|
|
[protocol]: /docs/connect/config-entries/service-defaults#protocol
|