mirror of https://github.com/status-im/consul.git
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443 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
---
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name: Secure Service-to-Service Communication
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content_length: 12
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id: connect-services
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products_used:
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- Consul
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description: This guide demonstrates Consul Connect using internal proxies as sidecars.
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level: Implementation
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---
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Consul Connect secures service-to-service communication with authorization and
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encryption. Applications can use sidecar proxies in a service mesh
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configuration to automatically establish TLS connections for inbound and
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outbound connections without being aware of Connect at all. In addition to
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securing your services, Connect can also intercept [data about service-to-service
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communications][consul-l7] and surface it to monitoring tools.
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In this guide, you will register two services and their [sidecar] proxies in
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the Consul catalog. You will then start the services and sidecar proxies.
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Finally, you will demonstrate that the service-to-service communication is going
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through the proxies by stopping traffic with an "[intention]".
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[![Flow diagram showing end user traffic being sent to the Dashboard Service at
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port 9002. The dashboard service makes requests for the counting service to the
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local Connect Proxy at port 5000. This traffic then traverses the Connect mesh
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over dynamic ports. The traffic exits the Connect mesh from the counting service's
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local proxy. The proxy sends this traffic to the counting service itself at port
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9003.][img-flow]][img-flow]
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While this guide uses elements that are not suitable for production
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environments—Consul dev agents, internal proxies, and mock services—it will
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teach you the common process for deploying your own services using Consul
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Connect. At the end of this guide, we also present additional information
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about adapting this process to more production-like environments.
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## Prerequisites
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To complete this guide, you will need a local [dev agent], which enables
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Connect by default.
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This guide uses the following example service applications. Download and unzip
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the executables to follow along.
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- [Counting Service]
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- [Dashboard Service]
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### Verify your Consul agent health
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To ensure that Consul is running and accessible from the command line, use the
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`consul members` command to verify your agent status.
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```shell-session
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$ consul members
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Node Address Status Type Build Protocol DC Segment
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hostname.local 127.0.0.1:8301 alive server 1.6.1 2 dc1 <all>
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```
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If you receive an error message, verify that you have a local Consul dev agent
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running and try again.
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## Register the services and sidecar proxies
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Services have to be registered with Consul. Consul shares this information
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around the cluster so that operators or other services can determine the
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location of a service. Connect also uses service registrations to determine
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where to send proxied traffic to.
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There are several ways to register services in Consul:
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- directly from a Consul-aware application
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- from an orchestrator, like [Nomad][services-nomad] or [Kubernetes][services-k8s]
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- [using configuration files][services-config] that are loaded at node startup
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- [using the API][services-api] to register them with a JSON or HCL
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specification
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- [using the CLI][services-cli] to simplify this submission process
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For this guide, we will use the [`consul service register`][services-cli] CLI
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command to load them into the catalog.
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### Create the counting service definition
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First, define the Counting service and its sidecar proxy in a file named
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`counting.hcl`. The definition should include the name of the service, the port
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the service listens on, and a [connect] block with the [sidecar_service] block.
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This block is empty so Consul will use default parameters. The definition also
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includes an optional service health check.
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```hcl
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service {
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name = "counting"
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id = "counting-1"
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port = 9003
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connect {
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sidecar_service {}
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}
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check {
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id = "counting-check"
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http = "http://localhost:9003/health"
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method = "GET"
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interval = "1s"
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timeout = "1s"
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}
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}
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```
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Services and sidecar proxies can be defined in either HCL or JSON. There is a
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[JSON version][counting-1.json] version of the service definition in the
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[demo-consul-101 project].
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### Create the dashboard service definition
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Create the Dashboard service and proxy definition in the same way. First,
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create a file named `dashboard.hcl`.
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```hcl
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service {
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name = "dashboard"
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port = 9002
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connect {
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sidecar_service {
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proxy {
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upstreams = [
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{
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destination_name = "counting"
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local_bind_port = 5000
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}
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]
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}
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}
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}
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check {
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id = "dashboard-check"
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http = "http://localhost:9002/health"
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method = "GET"
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interval = "1s"
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timeout = "1s"
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}
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}
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```
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There is a [JSON version][dashboard.json] of the service definition in the
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[demo-consul-101 project].
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Notice that the dashboard definition also includes an upstream block. Upstreams
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are ports on the local host that will be proxied to the destination service.
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The upstream block's local_bind_port value is the port your service will
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communicate with to reach the service you depend on. The destination name is
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the Consul service name that the local_bind_port will proxy to.
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In our scenario, the dashboard service depends on the counting service. With
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this configuration, when dashboard service connects to localhost:5000 it is
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proxied across the service mesh to the counting service.
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### Register the services and proxies
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Finally, you can submit the service definitions to your Consul agent. If you
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are using the JSON definitions, ensure that the filenames end in ".json"
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instead of ".hcl".
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```shell-session
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$ consul services register counting.hcl
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Registered service: counting
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```
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```shell-session
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$ consul services register dashboard.hcl
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Registered service: dashboard
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```
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-> **Challenge:** After completing the guide, try doing it again using one of
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the other service registration mechanisms mentioned earlier in the guide to
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register the services.
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### Verify the services are registered
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Now that you have registered your services and sidecar proxies, run `consul catalog services` to verify that they are present.
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```shell-session
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$ consul catalog services
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consul
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counting
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counting-sidecar-proxy
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dashboard
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dashboard-sidecar-proxy
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```
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### Create a Connect intention
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Intentions define access control for services via Connect and are used to
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control which services may establish connections. The default intention
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behavior is defined by the [default ACL policy].
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In this guide, this step is not necessary since the default ACL policy of the
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dev agent is "allow all", so Connect connections are automatically allowed as
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well. However, we will create explicit intentions as a part of deploying
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Connect-enabled services.
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-> **Best Practice:** Creating an explicit intention helps protect your
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service against changes to the implied permissions. For example, a change in
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`default_policy` or the introduction of a global deny-all intention would
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impact services without explicit intentions defined.
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```shell-session
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$ consul intention create dashboard counting
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Created: dashboard => counting (allow)
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```
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## Start the services and sidecar proxies
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Now that you have created all the necessary configuration to describe your
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service's connections, it's time to start your services and their sidecar
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proxies. We are using the `&` operator to run the services as background tasks.
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However, because they write to the console, it's best to run them in their own
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shell session.
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Run these commands to start the applications:
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```shell-session
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$ PORT=9002 COUNTING_SERVICE_URL="http://localhost:5000" ./dashboard-service &
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$ PORT=9003 ./counting-service &
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```
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Next, start the sidecar proxies that will run as [sidecar] processes along with
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the service applications.
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We are using the Consul Connect's built-in proxy for this guide. In a
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production deployment, we recommend using Envoy instead.
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```shell-session
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$ consul connect proxy -sidecar-for counting > counting-proxy.log &
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$ consul connect proxy -sidecar-for dashboard > dashboard-proxy.log &
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```
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### Check the dashboard interface
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Open a browser and navigate to `http://localhost:9002`.
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You should see a screen similar to the following. There is a connection
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indicator in the top right that will turn green and say "Connected" when the
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dashboard service is in communication with the counting service.
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[![Image of Dashboard UI. There is white text on a magenta background, with the
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page title "Dashboard" at the top left. There is a green indicator in the top
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right with the word connected in white. There is a large number 19 to show
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sample counting output. The node name that the counting service is running on,
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host01, is in very small monospaced type underneath the large
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numbers.][img-screenshot1]][img-screenshot1]
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If your application is not connected, check that the Counting service is
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running and healthy by viewing it in the Consul UI at `http://localhost:8500`.
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## Test the sidecar proxy connections
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To test that traffic is flowing through the sidecar proxies, you will control
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traffic with an intention.
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First, deny the Dashboard service access to the Counting service.
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```shell-session
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$ consul intention create -deny -replace dashboard counting
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Created: dashboard => counting (deny)
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```
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Refresh your browser, the connection indicator in the Dashboard ui will now say
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"Disconnected"
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[![Image of Dashboard UI. There is white text on a magenta background, with the
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page title "Dashboard" at the top left. There is a red indicator in the top
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right with the words "Counting Service is Unreachable" in white. There is a
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large number -1 to show sample counting output. The word "Unreachable"
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surrounded by square brackets is in monospaced type underneath the large
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numbers.][img-screenshot2]][img-screenshot2]
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You can restore communication between the services by replacing the `deny`
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intention with an `allow`.
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```shell-session
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$ consul intention create -allow -replace dashboard counting
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```
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Back in the browser, verify that the dashboard reconnects to the counting
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service.
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## Clean up
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Once you are done with this guide, you can begin cleaning up by closing the
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terminal in which your counting-service, dashboard-service, and proxies are
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running. This should automatically stop these processes.
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Delete the intention from Consul.
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```shell-session
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$ consul intention delete dashboard counting
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Intention deleted.
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```
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Deregister the services.
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```shell-session
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$ consul services deregister counting.hcl
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Deregistered service: counting
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$ consul services deregister dashboard.hcl
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Deregistered service: dashboard
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```
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## Extend these concepts
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When you want to apply this learning to a proof-of-concept or production
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environment, there are some additional considerations.
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### Enable Connect and gRPC
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When Consul is started with the `-dev` flag, it will automatically enable
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Consul Connect and provide a default port for gRPC communication. These have to
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be configured explicitly for regular Consul agents.
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```hcl
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# ...
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ports {
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"grpc" = 8502
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}
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connect {
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enabled = true
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}
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```
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For JSON configurations:
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```json
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{
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// ...
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"ports": {
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"grpc": 8502
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},
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"connect": {
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"enabled": true
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}
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}
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```
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### Download Envoy
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In this guide we used the built-in Connect proxy. For production deployments
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and to enable L7 features, you should use Envoy.
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You can obtain container-based builds of Envoy directly from the [Envoy
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Website], or you can obtain a packages of Envoy binary builds from a
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third-party project, [getenvoy.io].
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Consul will need to be able to find the "envoy" binary on the path. You can
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extract the binary from the official Envoy Docker containers.
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To do this, create a container named "envoy-extract" based on the
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"envoyproxy/envoy" container.
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```shell-session
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$ docker create --name "envoy-extract" "envoyproxy/envoy"
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docker create --name "envoy-extract" "envoyproxy/envoy"
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Unable to find image 'envoyproxy/envoy:latest' locally
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latest: Pulling from envoyproxy/envoy
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16c48d79e9cc: Pull complete
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3c654ad3ed7d: Pull complete
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6276f4f9c29d: Pull complete
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a4bd43ad48ce: Pull complete
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ef9506777d3e: Pull complete
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2e7ad8d4ceb7: Pull complete
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d9e379d45dad: Pull complete
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b283a3f5aebc: Pull complete
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095fe71f6465: Pull complete
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Digest: sha256:a7769160c9c1a55bb8d07a3b71ce5d64f72b1f665f10d81aa1581bc3cf850d09
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Status: Downloaded newer image for envoyproxy/envoy:latest
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8d7bb45ea75f4344c6e050e5e1d3423937c4a1a51700ce34c3cf62a5ce3960dd
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```
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Use the `docker cp` command to copy the envoy file out of the container into
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the current directory.
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```shell-session
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$ docker cp "envoy-extract:/usr/local/bin/envoy" "envoy"
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```
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Now that you have the binary, you can remove the "envoy-extract" container.
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```shell-session
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$ docker rm "envoy-extract"
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envoy-extract
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```
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Once you have the binary extracted and in your path, Consul will automatically
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use it when you run the `consul connect envoy` command. The following examples
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demonstrate how to start the service sidecar proxies with Envoy.
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```shell-session
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$ consul connect envoy -sidecar-for counting > counting-proxy.log &
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$ consul connect envoy -sidecar-for dashboard > dashboard-proxy.log &
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```
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## Summary
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Now that you have completed this guide, you have familiarized yourself with a
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basic Connect-enabled service deployment. You created and registered Consul
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service definitions that describe how two services communicate with each other.
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After starting the application and sidecar proxies, you used Consul Connect
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intentions to control traffic flow between services. Finally, you learned about
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additional requirements required to take the concepts to a proof-of-concept
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environment.
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[connect]: https://www.consul.io/docs/connect
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[consul-l7]: https://learn.hashicorp.com/consul/developer-mesh/l7-observability-k8s
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[counting service]: https://github.com/hashicorp/demo-consul-101/releases/download/0.0.2/counting-service_linux_amd64.zip
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[counting-1.json]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/hashicorp/demo-consul-101/master/demo-config-localhost/counting-1.json
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[dashboard service]: https://github.com/hashicorp/demo-consul-101/releases/download/0.0.2/dashboard-service_linux_amd64.zip
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[dashboard.json]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/hashicorp/demo-consul-101/master/demo-config-localhost/dashboard.json
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[default acl policy]: https://www.consul.io/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy
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[demo-consul-101 project]: https://github.com/hashicorp/demo-consul-101
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[dev agent]: https://learn.hashicorp.com/consul/getting-started/agent
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[docker guide]: https://learn.hashicorp.com/consul/day-0/containers-guide
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[envoy website]: https://www.envoyproxy.io/docs/envoy/latest/install/building#pre-built-binaries
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[getenvoy.io]: https://www.getenvoy.io/
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[img-flow]: /static/img/consul/connect-getting-started/consul_connect_demo_service_flow.png
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[img-screenshot1]: /static/img/consul/connect-getting-started/screenshot1.png
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[img-screenshot2]: /static/img/consul/connect-getting-started/screenshot2.png
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[intention]: https://www.consul.io/docs/connect/intentions.html
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[services-api]: https://www.consul.io/api/agent/service.html#register-service
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[services-cli]: https://www.consul.io/docs/commands/services.html
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[services-config]: https://www.consul.io/docs/agent/services.html#service-definition
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[services-nomad]: https://www.nomadproject.io/docs/job-specification/service.html
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[sidecar]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/architecture/patterns/sidecar
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[sidecar_service]: https://www.consul.io/docs/connect/registration/sidecar-service.html
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[services-k8s]: https://www.consul.io/docs/platform/k8s/connect.html#installation-and-configuration
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