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Consul Agent

The Consul agent is the core process of Consul. The agent maintains membership information, registers services, runs checks, responds to queries and more. The agent must run on every node that is part of a Consul cluster.

Any Agent may run in one of two modes: client or server. A server node takes on the additional responsibility of being part of the consensus quorum. These nodes take part in Raft, and provide strong consistency and availability in the case of failure. The higher burden on the server nodes means that usually they should be run on dedicated instances, as they are more resource intensive than a client node. Client nodes make up the majority of the cluster, and they are very lightweight as they maintain very little state and interface with the server nodes for most operations.

Running an Agent

The agent is started with the consul agent command. This command blocks, running forever or until told to quit. The agent command takes a variety of configuration options but the defaults are usually good enough. When running consul agent, you should see output similar to that below:

$ consul agent -data=/tmp/consul
==> Starting Consul agent...
==> Starting Consul agent RPC...
==> Consul agent running!
       Node name: 'Armons-MacBook-Air'
      Datacenter: 'dc1'
          Server: false (bootstrap: false)
     Client Addr: 127.0.0.1 (HTTP: 8500, DNS: 8600, RPC: 8400)
    Cluster Addr: 192.168.1.43 (LAN: 8301, WAN: 8302)

==> Log data will now stream in as it occurs:

    [INFO] serf: EventMemberJoin: Armons-MacBook-Air.local 192.168.1.43
...

There are several important components that consul agent outputs:

  • Node name: This is a unique name for the agent. By default this is the hostname of the machine, but you may customize it to whatever you'd like using the -node flag.

  • Datacenter: This is the datacenter the agent is configured to run in. Consul has first-class support for multiple datacenters, but to work efficiently each node must be configured to correctly report its datacenter. The -dc flag can be used to set the datacenter. For single-DC configurations, the agent will default to "dc1".

  • Server: This shows if the agent is running in the server or client mode. Server nodes have the extra burden of participating in the consensus quorum, storing cluster state, and handling queries. Additionally, a server may be in "bootstrap" mode. The first server must be in this mode to allow additional servers to join the cluster. Multiple servers cannot be in bootstrap mode, otherwise the cluster state will be inconsistent.

  • Client Addr: This is the address used for client interfaces to the agent. This includes the ports for the HTTP, DNS, and RPC interfaces. The RPC address is used for other consul commands. Other Consul commands such as consul members connect to a running agent and use RPC to query and control the agent. By default, this binds only to localhost. If you change this address or port, you'll have to specify an -rpc-addr to commands such as consul members so they know how to talk to the agent. This is also the address other applications can use over RPC to control Consul.

  • Cluster Addr: This is the address and ports used for communication between Consul agents in a cluster. Every Consul agent in a cluster does not have to use the same port, but this address MUST be reachable by all other nodes.

Stopping an Agent

An agent can be stoped in two ways: gracefully or forcefully. To gracefully halt an agent, send the process an interrupt signal, which is usually Ctrl-C from a terminal. When gracefully exiting, the agent first notifies the cluster it intends to leave the cluster. This way, other cluster members notify the cluster that the node has left.

Alternatively, you can force kill the agent by sending it a kill signal. When force killed, the agent ends immediately. The rest of the cluster will eventually (usually within seconds) detect that the node has died and will notify the cluster that the node has failed.

It is especially important that a server node be allowed to gracefully leave, so that there will be a minimal impact on availablity as the server leaves the consensus quorum.

For client agents, the difference between a node failing and a node leaving may not be important for your use case. For example, for a web server and load balancer setup, both result in the same action: remove the web node from the load balancer pool. But for other situations, you may handle each scenario differently.