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docs Consul Enterprise Multi-Datacenter Connect docs-enterprise-connect-multi-datacenter Consul Enterprise supports cross datacenter connections using Consul Connect.

Consul Connect Multi-Datacenter

Consul Enterprise enables service-to-service connections across multiple Consul datacenters. This includes replication of intentions and federation of Certificate Authority trust.

Sidecar proxy's upstream configuration may specify an alternative datacenter or a prepared query that can address services in multiple datacenters (such as the geo failover pattern).

Intentions verify connections between services by source and destination name seamlessly across datacenters. Support for constraining Intentions by source or destination datacenter is planned for the near future.

It is assumed that workloads can communicate between datacenters via existing network routes and VPN tunnels, potentially using Consul's translate_wan_addrs to ensure remote workloads discover an externally routable IP.

Replication

Intention replication happens automatically but requires the primary_datacenter configuration to be set to specify a datacenter that is authorative for intentions. In production setups with ACLs enabled, the replication token must also be set in secondary datacenter server's configuration.

Certificate Authority Federation

The primary datacenter also acts as the root Certificate Authority (CA) for Connect. The primary datacenter generates a trust-domain UUID and obtains a root certificate from the configured CA provider which defaults to the built-in one.

Secondary datacenters fetch the root CA public key and trust-domain ID from the primary and generate their own key and Certificate Signing Request (CSR) for an intermediate CA certificate. This CSR is signed by the root in the primary datacenter and the certificate is returned. The secondary datacenter can now use this intermediate to sign new Connect certificates in the secondary datacenter without WAN communication. CA keys are never replicated between datacenters.

The secondary maintains watches on the root CA certificate in the primary. If the CA root changes for any reason such as rotation or migration to a new CA, the secondary automatically generates new keys and has them signed by the primary datacenter's new root before initiating an automatic rotation of all issued certificates in use throughout the secondary datacenter. This makes CA root key rotation fully automatic and with zero downtime across multiple data centers.