mirror of https://github.com/status-im/consul.git
74 lines
4.2 KiB
Plaintext
74 lines
4.2 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: Service Mesh on Consul
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description: >-
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Consul’s service mesh makes application and microservice networking secure and observable with identity-based authentication, mutual TLS (mTLS) encryption, and explicit service-to-service authorization enforced by sidecar proxies. Learn how Consul’s service mesh works and get started on VMs or Kubernetes.
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---
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# Consul Service Mesh
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Consul Service Mesh provides service-to-service connection authorization and
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encryption using mutual Transport Layer Security (TLS). Consul Connect is used interchangeably
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with the name Consul Service Mesh and is what this document will use to refer to for Service Mesh functionality within Consul.
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Applications can use [sidecar proxies](/docs/connect/proxies) in a service mesh configuration to
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establish TLS connections for inbound and outbound connections without being aware of Connect at all.
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Applications may also [natively integrate with Connect](/docs/connect/native) for optimal performance and security.
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Connect can help you secure your services and provide data about service-to-service communications.
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Review the video below to learn more about Consul Connect from HashiCorp's co-founder Armon.
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<iframe
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src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/8T8t4-hQY74"
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frameborder="0"
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allowfullscreen="true"
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width="560"
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height="315"
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></iframe>
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## Application Security
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Connect enables secure deployment best-practices with automatic
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service-to-service encryption, and identity-based authorization.
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Connect uses the registered service identity (rather than IP addresses) to
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enforce access control with [intentions](/docs/connect/intentions). This
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makes it easier to reason about access control and enables services to be
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rescheduled by orchestrators including Kubernetes and Nomad. Intention
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enforcement is network agnostic, so Connect works with physical networks, cloud
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networks, software-defined networks, cross-cloud, and more.
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## Observability
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One of the key benefits of Consul Connect is the uniform and consistent view it can
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provide of all the services on your network, irrespective of their different
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programming languages and frameworks. When you configure Consul Connect to use
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sidecar proxies, those proxies "see" all service-to-service traffic and can
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collect data about it. Consul Connect can configure Envoy proxies to collect
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layer 7 metrics and export them to tools like Prometheus. Correctly instrumented
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applications can also send open tracing data through Envoy.
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## Getting Started With Consul Service Mesh
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There are several ways to try Connect in different environments.
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- The [Getting Started with Consul Service Mesh collection](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/consul/service-mesh?utm_source=docs)
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walks you through installing Consul as service mesh for Kubernetes using the Helm
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chart, deploying services in the service mesh, and using intentions to secure service
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communications.
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- The [Getting Started With Consul Service Mesh for Kubernetes](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/consul/service-mesh-deploy?in=consul/gs-consul-service-mesh?utm_source=docs) guide walks you through installing Consul on Kubernetes to set up a service mesh for establishing communication between Kubernetes services.
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- The [Secure Service-to-Service Communication tutorial](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/consul/service-mesh-with-envoy-proxy?utm_source=docs)
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is a simple walk through of connecting two services on your local machine
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using Consul Connect's built-in proxy and configuring your first intention. The guide also includes an introduction to
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using Envoy as the Connect sidecar proxy.
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- The [Kubernetes tutorial](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/consul/kubernetes-minikube?utm_source=docs)
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walks you through configuring Consul Connect in Kubernetes using the Helm
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chart, and using intentions. You can run the guide on Minikube or an existing
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Kubernetes cluster.
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- The [observability tutorial](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/consul/kubernetes-layer7-observability?in=consul/kubernetes)
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shows how to deploy a basic metrics collection and visualization pipeline on
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a Minikube or Kubernetes cluster using the official Helm charts for Consul,
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Prometheus, and Grafana.
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