mirror of https://github.com/status-im/consul.git
187 lines
6.6 KiB
Plaintext
187 lines
6.6 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: Installation - AWS ECS
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description: >-
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Install Consul Service Mesh on AWS ECS (Elastic Container Service).
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---
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# Installation
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Installing Consul on ECS is a multi-part process:
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1. [**Task Module:**](#task-module) Define the [`mesh-task` Terraform module](https://registry.terraform.io/modules/hashicorp/consul-ecs/aws/latest/submodules/mesh-task)
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to create a task definition with the necessary sidecar containers for your application to join the service mesh.
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1. [**Routing:**](#routing) With your tasks as part of the mesh, you must specify their upstream
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services and change the URLs the tasks are using so that they're making requests through the service mesh.
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1. [**Bind Address:**](#bind-address) Now that all communication is flowing through the service mesh,
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you should change the address your application is listening on to `127.0.0.1`
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so that it only receives requests through the sidecar proxy.
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-> **NOTE:** This page assumes you're familiar with ECS. See [What is Amazon Elastic Container Service](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/Welcome.html) for more details.
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## Task Module
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In order to add the necessary sidecar containers for your task to join the mesh,
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you must use the [`mesh-task` module](https://registry.terraform.io/modules/hashicorp/consul-ecs/aws/latest/submodules/mesh-task):
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```hcl
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module "my_task" {
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source = "hashicorp/consul-ecs/aws//modules/mesh-task"
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version = "<latest version>"
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family = "my_task"
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container_definitions = [
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{
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name = "example-client-app"
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image = "docker.io/org/my_task:v0.0.1"
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essential = true
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portMappings = [
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{
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containerPort = 9090
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hostPort = 9090
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protocol = "tcp"
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}
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]
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cpu = 0
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mountPoints = []
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volumesFrom = []
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}
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]
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port = "9090"
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retry_join = ["<address of the Consul server>"]
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}
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```
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All possible inputs are documented on the [module reference documentation](https://registry.terraform.io/modules/hashicorp/consul-ecs/aws/latest/submodules/mesh-task?tab=inputs),
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however there are some important inputs worth highlighting:
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- `family` is used as the [task definition family](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task_definition_parameters.html#family)
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but it's also used as the name of the service that gets registered in Consul.
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- `container_definitions` accepts an array of [container definitions](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task_definition_parameters.html#container_definitions).
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This is where you include application containers.
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- `port` is the port that your application listens on. This should be set to a
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string, not an integer, i.e. `port = "9090"`, not `port = 9090`.
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- `retry_join` is passed to the [`-retry-join`](/docs/agent/options#_retry_join) option for the Consul agent. This tells
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the agent the location of your Consul servers so that it can join the Consul cluster.
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-> **NOTE:** If your tasks run in a public subnet, they must have `assign_public_ip = true`
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in their [`network_configuration`](https://registry.terraform.io/providers/hashicorp/aws/latest/docs/resources/ecs_service#network_configuration) block so that ECS can pull the Docker images.
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## ECS Service
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To define an ECS Service, reference the mesh-task module's `task_definition_arn` output value
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in your `aws_ecs_service` resource:
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```hcl
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resource "aws_ecs_service" "my_task" {
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...
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task_definition = module.my_task.task_definition_arn
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}
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```
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After running `terraform apply`, you should see your tasks registered in
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the Consul UI.
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## Routing
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Now that your tasks are registered in the mesh, you're able to use the service
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mesh to route between them.
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In order to make calls through the service mesh, you must configure the sidecar
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proxy to listen on a different port for each upstream service your application
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needs to call. You then must modify your application to make requests to the sidecar
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proxy on that port.
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For example, if your application `web` makes calls to another application called `backend`, then you would first configure the `mesh-task` module's upstream(s):
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`backend`.
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```hcl
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module "web" {
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family = "web"
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upstreams = [
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{
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destination_name = "backend"
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local_bind_port = 8080
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}
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]
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}
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```
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- Set the `destination_name` to the name of the upstream service (in this case `backend`)
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- Set `local_bind_port` to an unused port. This is the port that the sidecar proxy
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will listen on. Any requests to this port will be forwarded over to the `destination_name`.
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This does not have to be the port that `backend` is listening on because the service mesh
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will handle routing the request to the right port.
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If you have multiple upstream services they each need to be listed here.
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Next, configure your application to make requests to `localhost:8080` when
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it wants to call the `backend` service.
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For example, if your service allows configuring the URL for `backend` via the
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`BACKEND_URL` environment variable, you would set:
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```hcl
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module "web" {
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family = "web"
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upstreams = [
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{
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destination_name = "backend"
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local_bind_port = 8080
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}
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]
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container_definitions = [
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{
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name = "web"
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environment = [
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{
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name = "BACKEND_URL"
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value = "http://localhost:8080"
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}
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]
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...
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}
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]
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...
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}
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```
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## Bind Address
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To ensure that your application only receives traffic through the service mesh,
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you must change the address that your application is listening on to only the loopback address
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(also known as `localhost`, `lo`, and `127.0.0.1`)
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so that only the sidecar proxy running in the same task can make requests to it.
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If your application is listening on all interfaces, e.g. `0.0.0.0`, then other
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applications can call it directly, bypassing its sidecar proxy.
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Changing the listening address is specific to the language and framework you're
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using in your application. Regardless of which language/framework you're using,
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it's a good practice to make the address configurable via environment variable.
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For example in Go, you would use:
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```go
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s := &http.Server{
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Addr: "127.0.0.1:8080",
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...
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}
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log.Fatal(s.ListenAndServe())
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```
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In Django you'd use:
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```bash
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python manage.py runserver "127.0.0.1:8080"
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```
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## Next Steps
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- Configure a secure [Production Installation](/docs/ecs/get-started/production-installation).
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- Now that your applications are running in the service mesh, read about
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other [Service Mesh features](/docs/connect).
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- View the [Architecture](/docs/ecs#architecture) documentation to understand
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what's going on under the hood.
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