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intro Consul Cluster gettingstarted-join We've started our first agent and registered and queried a service on that agent. This showed how easy it is to use Consul but didn't show how this could be extended to a scalable, production-grade service discovery infrastructure. In this step, we'll create our first real cluster with multiple members.

Consul Cluster

We've started our first agent and registered and queried a service on that agent. This showed how easy it is to use Consul but didn't show how this could be extended to a scalable, production-grade service discovery infrastructure. In this step, we'll create our first real cluster with multiple members.

When a Consul agent is started, it begins without knowledge of any other node: it is an isolated cluster of one. To learn about other cluster members, the agent must join an existing cluster. To join an existing cluster, it only needs to know about a single existing member. After it joins, the agent will gossip with this member and quickly discover the other members in the cluster. A Consul agent can join any other agent, not just agents in server mode.

Starting the Agents

To simulate a more realistic cluster, we will start a two node cluster via Vagrant. The Vagrantfile we will be using can be found in the [demo section of the Consul repo] (https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/tree/master/demo/vagrant-cluster).

We first boot our two nodes:

$ vagrant up

Once the systems are available, we can ssh into them to begin configuration of our cluster. We start by logging in to the first node:

$ vagrant ssh n1

Each node in a cluster must have a unique name. By default, Consul uses the hostname of the machine, but we'll manually override it using the -node command-line option.

We will also specify a bind address: this is the address that Consul listens on, and it must be accessible by all other nodes in the cluster. While a bind address is not strictly necessary (Consul will by default listen on the first private IP on a system), it's always best to provide one. Production servers often have multiple interfaces, so specifying a bind address insures that you will never bind Consul to the wrong interface.

The first node will act as our sole server in this cluster, and we indicate this with the server switch.

All together, these settings yield a consul agent command like this:

vagrant@n1:~$ consul agent -server -bootstrap-expect 1 \
	-data-dir /tmp/consul -node=agent-one -bind=172.20.20.10
...

Now, in another terminal, we will connect to the second node:

$ vagrant ssh n2

This time, we set the bind address address to match the IP of the second node as specified in the Vagrantfile and the node name to be agent-two. Since this node will not be a Consul server, we don't provide a server switch.

All together, these settings yield a consul agent command like this:

vagrant@n2:~$ consul agent -data-dir /tmp/consul -node=agent-two \
	-bind=172.20.20.11
...

At this point, you have two Consul agents running: one server and one client. The two Consul agents still don't know anything about each other and are each part of their own single-node clusters. You can verify this by running consul members against each agent and noting that only one member is visible to each agent.

Joining a Cluster

Now, we'll tell the first agent to join the second agent by running the following commands in a new terminal:

$ vagrant ssh n1
...
vagrant@n1:~$ consul join 172.20.20.11
Successfully joined cluster by contacting 1 nodes.

You should see some log output in each of the agent logs. If you read carefully, you'll see that they received join information. If you run consul members against each agent, you'll see that both agents now know about each other:

vagrant@n2:~$ consul members
Node       Address            Status  Type    Build  Protocol
agent-two  172.20.20.11:8301  alive   client  0.5.0  2
agent-one  172.20.20.10:8301  alive   server  0.5.0  2

-> Remember: To join a cluster, a Consul agent only needs to learn about one existing member. After joining the cluster, the agents gossip with each other to propagate full membership information.

Auto-joining a Cluster on Start

Ideally, whenever a new node is brought up in your datacenter, it should automatically join the Consul cluster without human intervention. To accomplish this, you can use Atlas by HashiCorp and the -atlas-join flag. An example configuration is shown below:

$ consul agent -atlas-join \
  -atlas=ATLAS_USERNAME/infrastructure \
  -atlas-token="YOUR_ATLAS_TOKEN"

To get an Atlas username and token, create an account and replace the respective values in your Consul configuration with your credentials. Now, whenever a new node comes up with a Consul agent, it will automatically join your Consul cluster without any hardcoded configuration.

Alternatively, you can join a cluster at startup using the -join flag or start_join setting with hardcoded addresses of other known Consul agents.

Querying Nodes

Just like querying services, Consul has an API for querying the nodes themselves. You can do this via the DNS or HTTP API.

For the DNS API, the structure of the names is NAME.node.consul or NAME.node.DATACENTER.consul. If the datacenter is omitted, Consul will only search the local datacenter.

For example, from "agent-one", we can query for the address of the node "agent-two":

vagrant@n1:~$ dig @127.0.0.1 -p 8600 agent-two.node.consul
...

;; QUESTION SECTION:
;agent-two.node.consul.	IN	A

;; ANSWER SECTION:
agent-two.node.consul.	0 IN	A	172.20.20.11

The ability to look up nodes in addition to services is incredibly useful for system administration tasks. For example, knowing the address of the node to SSH into is as easy as making the node a part of the Consul cluster and querying it.

Leaving a Cluster

To leave the cluster, you can either gracefully quit an agent (using Ctrl-C) or force kill one of the agents. Gracefully leaving allows the node to transition into the left state; otherwise, other nodes will detect it as having failed. The difference is covered in more detail here.

Next Steps

We now have a multi-node Consul cluster up and running. Let's make our services more robust by giving them health checks!