mirror of https://github.com/status-im/consul.git
207 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
207 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: Configuration Entry Definitions
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sidebar_title: Configuration Entries
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description: >-
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Consul allows storing configuration entries centrally to be used as defaults
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for configuring other aspects of Consul.
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---
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# Configuration Entries
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Configuration entries can be created to provide cluster-wide defaults for
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various aspects of Consul.
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Outside of Kubernetes, configuration entries can be specified in HCL or JSON using either
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`snake_case` or `CamelCase` for key names. On Kubernetes, configuration
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entries can be managed by custom resources in YAML.
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Outside of Kubernetes, every configuration entry specified in HCL or JSON has at least two fields:
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`Kind` and `Name`. Those two fields are used to uniquely identify a
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configuration entry. Configuration entries specified as HCL or JSON objects
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use either `snake_case` or `CamelCase` for key names.
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Example:
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```hcl
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Kind = "<supported kind>"
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Name = "<name of entry>"
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```
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On Kubernetes, `Kind` is set as the custom resource `kind` and `Name` is set
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as `metadata.name`:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
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kind: <supported kind>
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metadata:
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name: <name of entry>
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```
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The supported `Kind`/`kind` names for configuration entries are:
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- [`ingress-gateway`](/docs/agent/config-entries/ingress-gateway) - defines the
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configuration for an ingress gateway
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- Kubernetes kind: [`IngressGateway`](/docs/agent/config-entries/ingress-gateway)
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- [`proxy-defaults`](/docs/agent/config-entries/proxy-defaults) - controls
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proxy configuration
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- Kubernetes kind: [`ProxyDefaults`](/docs/agent/config-entries/proxy-defaults)
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- [`service-defaults`](/docs/agent/config-entries/service-defaults) - configures
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defaults for all the instances of a given service
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- Kubernetes kind: [`ServiceDefaults`](/docs/agent/config-entries/service-defaults)
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- [`service-intentions`](/docs/agent/config-entries/service-intentions) - defines
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the [intentions](/docs/connect/intentions) for a destination service
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- Kubernetes kind: [`ServiceIntentions`](/docs/agent/config-entries/service-intentions)
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- [`service-resolver`](/docs/agent/config-entries/service-resolver) - matches
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service instances with a specific Connect upstream discovery requests
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- Kubernetes kind: [`ServiceResolver`](/docs/agent/config-entries/service-resolver)
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- [`service-router`](/docs/agent/config-entries/service-router) - defines
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where to send layer 7 traffic based on the HTTP route
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- Kubernetes kind: [`ServiceRouter`](/docs/agent/config-entries/service-router)
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- [`service-splitter`](/docs/agent/config-entries/service-splitter) - defines
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how to divide requests for a single HTTP route based on percentages
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- Kubernetes kind: [`ServiceSplitter`](/docs/agent/config-entries/service-splitter)
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- [`terminating-gateway`](/docs/agent/config-entries/terminating-gateway) - defines the
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services associated with terminating gateway
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- Kubernetes kind: [`TerminatingGateway`](/docs/agent/config-entries/terminating-gateway)
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## Managing Configuration Entries In Kubernetes
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See [Kubernetes Custom Resource Definitions](/docs/k8s/crds).
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## Managing Configuration Entries Outside Of Kubernetes
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Configuration entries outside of Kubernetes should be managed with the Consul
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[CLI](/commands/config) or [API](/api/config). Additionally, as a
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convenience for initial cluster bootstrapping, configuration entries can be
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specified in all of the Consul servers's
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[configuration files](/docs/agent/options#config_entries_bootstrap)
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### Managing Configuration Entries with the CLI
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#### Creating or Updating a Configuration Entry
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The [`consul config write`](/commands/config/write) command is used to
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create and update configuration entries. This command will load either a JSON or
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HCL file holding the configuration entry definition and then will push this
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configuration to Consul.
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Example HCL Configuration File - `proxy-defaults.hcl`:
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```hcl
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Kind = "proxy-defaults"
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Name = "global"
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Config {
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local_connect_timeout_ms = 1000
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handshake_timeout_ms = 10000
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}
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```
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Then to apply this configuration, run:
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```shell-session
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$ consul config write proxy-defaults.hcl
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```
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If you need to make changes to a configuration entry, simple edit that file and
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then rerun the command. This command will not output anything unless there is an
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error in applying the configuration entry. The `write` command also supports a
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`-cas` option to enable performing a compare-and-swap operation to prevent
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overwriting other unknown modifications.
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#### Reading a Configuration Entry
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The [`consul config read`](/commands/config/read) command is used to
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read the current value of a configuration entry. The configuration entry will be
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displayed in JSON form which is how its transmitted between the CLI client and
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Consul's HTTP API.
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Example:
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```shell-session
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$ consul config read -kind service-defaults -name web
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{
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"Kind": "service-defaults",
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"Name": "web",
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"Protocol": "http"
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}
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```
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#### Listing Configuration Entries
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The [`consul config list`](/commands/config/list) command is used to
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list out all the configuration entries for a given kind.
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Example:
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```shell-session
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$ consul config list -kind service-defaults
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web
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api
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db
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```
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#### Deleting Configuration Entries
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The [`consul config delete`](/commands/config/delete) command is used
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to delete an entry by specifying both its `kind` and `name`.
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Example:
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```shell-session
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$ consul config delete -kind service-defaults -name web
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```
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This command will not output anything when the deletion is successful.
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#### Configuration Entry Management with Namespaces <EnterpriseAlert inline />
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Configuration entry operations support passing a namespace in
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order to isolate the entry to affect only operations within that namespace. This was
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added in Consul 1.7.0.
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Example:
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```shell-session
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$ consul config write service-defaults.hcl -namespace foo
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```
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```shell-session
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$ consul config list -kind service-defaults -namespace foo
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web
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api
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```
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### Bootstrapping From A Configuration File
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Configuration entries can be bootstrapped by adding them [inline to each Consul
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server's configuration file](/docs/agent/options#config_entries). When a
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server gains leadership, it will attempt to initialize the configuration entries.
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If a configuration entry does not already exist outside of the servers
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configuration, then it will create it. If a configuration entry does exist, that
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matches both `kind` and `name`, then the server will do nothing.
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## Using Configuration Entries For Service Defaults
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Outside of Kubernetes, when the agent is
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[configured](/docs/agent/options#enable_central_service_config) to enable
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central service configurations, it will look for service configuration defaults
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that match a registering service instance. If it finds any, the agent will merge
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those defaults with the service instance configuration. This allows for things
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like service protocol or proxy configuration to be defined globally and
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inherited by any affected service registrations.
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