Consul
Custom Resource Definitions (CRDs) for Consul on Kubernetes
This topic describes how to manage Consul configuration entries via Kubernetes Custom Resources. Configuration entries provide cluster-wide defaults for the service mesh.
Requirements
- consul-helm 0.28.0 or later
- consul-k8s 0.22.0 or later
- consul 1.8.4 or later; some configuration entries require a newer version of Consul
Supported Configuration Entries
You can specify the following values in the kind field. Click on a configuration entry to view its documentation:
Mesh(requires Consul 1.10.0+)ExportedServicesEnterpriseProxyDefaultsServiceDefaultsServiceSplitterServiceRouterServiceResolverServiceIntentions(requires Consul 1.9.0+)IngressGatewayTerminatingGateway
Installation
Verify that the minimum version of the helm chart (0.28.0) is installed:
$ helm search repo hashicorp/consul
NAME CHART VERSION APP VERSION DESCRIPTION
hashicorp/consul 0.28.0 1.9.1 Official HashiCorp Consul Chart
Update your helm repository cache if necessary:
$ helm repo update
Hang tight while we grab the latest from your chart repositories...
...Successfully got an update from the "hashicorp" chart repository
Update Complete. ⎈Happy Helming!⎈
Next, you must configure consul-helm via your values.yaml to install the custom resource definitions
and enable the controller that acts on them:
values.yaml
global:
name: consul
controller:
enabled: true
connectInject:
enabled: true
Note that:
controller.enabled: trueinstalls the CRDs and enables the controller.- Configuration entries are used to configure Consul service mesh so it's also
expected that
connectInjectwill be enabled.
See Install with Helm Chart for further installation instructions.
Upgrading An Existing Cluster to CRDs
If you have an existing Consul cluster running on Kubernetes you may need to perform extra steps to migrate to CRDs. See Upgrade An Existing Cluster to CRDs for full instructions.
Usage
Once installed, you can use kubectl to create and manage Consul's configuration entries.
Create
You can create configuration entries via kubectl apply.
$ cat <<EOF | kubectl apply --filename -
apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
kind: ServiceDefaults
metadata:
name: foo
spec:
protocol: "http"
EOF
servicedefaults.consul.hashicorp.com/foo created
See Configuration Entries for detailed schema documentation.
Get
You can use kubectl get [kind] [name] to get the status of the configuration entry:
$ kubectl get servicedefaults foo
NAME SYNCED
foo True
The SYNCED status shows whether the configuration entry was successfully created
in Consul.
Describe
You can use kubectl describe [kind] [name] to investigate the status of the
configuration entry. If SYNCED is false, the status will contain the reason
why.
$ kubectl describe servicedefaults foo
Status:
Conditions:
Last Transition Time: 2020-10-09T21:15:50Z
Status: True
Type: Synced
Edit
You can use kubectl edit [kind] [name] to edit the configuration entry:
$ kubectl edit servicedefaults foo
# change protocol: http => protocol: tcp
servicedefaults.consul.hashicorp.com/foo edited
You can then use kubectl get to ensure the change was synced to Consul:
$ kubectl get servicedefaults foo
NAME SYNCED
foo True
Delete
You can use kubectl delete [kind] [name] to delete the configuration entry:
$ kubectl delete servicedefaults foo
servicedefaults.consul.hashicorp.com "foo" deleted
You can then use kubectl get to ensure the configuration entry was deleted:
$ kubectl get servicedefaults foo
Error from server (NotFound): servicedefaults.consul.hashicorp.com "foo" not found
Delete Hanging
If running kubectl delete hangs without exiting, there may be
a dependent configuration entry registered with Consul that prevents the target configuration entry from being
deleted. For example, if you set the protocol of your service to http via ServiceDefaults and then
create a ServiceSplitter, you won't be able to delete the ServiceDefaults.
This is because by deleting the ServiceDefaults config, you are setting the
protocol back to the default which is tcp. Since ServiceSplitter requires
that the service has an http protocol, Consul will not allow the ServiceDefaults
to be deleted since that would put Consul into a broken state.
In order to delete the ServiceDefaults config, you would need to first delete
the ServiceSplitter.
Kubernetes Namespaces
Consul OSS
Consul Open Source (Consul OSS) ignores Kubernetes namespaces and registers all services into the same
global Consul registry based on their names. For example, service web in Kubernetes namespace
web-ns and service admin in Kubernetes namespace admin-ns will be registered into
Consul as web and admin with the Kubernetes source namespace ignored.
When creating custom resources to configure these services, the namespace of the
custom resource is also ignored. For example, you can create a ServiceDefaults
custom resource for service web in the Kubernetes namespace admin-ns even though
the web service is actually running in the web-ns namespace (although this is not recommended):
apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
kind: ServiceDefaults
metadata:
name: web
namespace: admin-ns
spec:
protocol: http
---
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: web
namespace: web-ns
spec: ...
NOTE: If two custom resources of the same kind and the same name are attempted to be created in different Kubernetes namespaces, the last one created will not be synced.
ServiceIntentions Special Case
ServiceIntentions are different from the other custom resources because the
name of the resource doesn't matter. For other resources, the name of the resource
determines which service it configures. For example, this resource configures
the service web:
apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
kind: ServiceDefaults
metadata:
name: web
spec:
protocol: http
For ServiceIntentions, because we need to support the ability to create
wildcard intentions (e.g. foo => * (allow) meaning that foo can talk to any service),
and because * is not a valid Kubernetes resource name, we instead use the field spec.destination.name
to configure the destination service for the intention:
# foo => * (allow)
apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
kind: ServiceIntentions
metadata:
name: name-does-not-matter
spec:
destination:
name: '*'
sources:
- name: foo
action: allow
---
# foo => web (allow)
apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
kind: ServiceIntentions
metadata:
name: name-does-not-matter
spec:
destination:
name: web
sources:
- name: foo
action: allow
NOTE: If two ServiceIntentions resources set the same spec.destination.name, the
last one created will not be synced.
Consul Enterprise Enterprise
Consul Enterprise supports multiple configurations for how Kubernetes namespaces are mapped to Consul namespaces. The Consul namespace that the custom resource is registered into depends on the configuration being used but in general, you should create your custom resources in the same Kubernetes namespace as the service they're configuring and everything will work as expected.
The details on each configuration are:
Mirroring - The Kubernetes namespace will be "mirrored" into Consul, i.e. service
webin Kubernetes namespaceweb-nswill be registered as servicewebin the Consul namespaceweb-ns. In the same vein, aServiceDefaultscustom resource with namewebin Kubernetes namespaceweb-nswill configure that same service.This is configured via
connectInject.consulNamespaces:global: name: consul enableConsulNamespaces: true image: hashicorp/consul-enterprise:<tag>-ent connectInject: consulNamespaces: mirroringK8S: trueMirroring with prefix - The Kubernetes namespace will be "mirrored" into Consul with a prefix added to the Consul namespace, i.e. if the prefix is
k8s-then servicewebin Kubernetes namespaceweb-nswill be registered as servicewebin the Consul namespacek8s-web-ns. In the same vein, aServiceDefaultscustom resource with namewebin Kubernetes namespaceweb-nswill configure that same service.This is configured via
connectInject.consulNamespaces:global: name: consul enableConsulNamespaces: true image: hashicorp/consul-enterprise:<tag>-ent connectInject: consulNamespaces: mirroringK8S: true mirroringK8SPrefix: k8s-Single destination namespace - The Kubernetes namespace is ignored and all services will be registered into the same Consul namespace, i.e. if the destination Consul namespace is
my-nsthen servicewebin Kubernetes namespaceweb-nswill be registered as servicewebin Consul namespacemy-ns.In this configuration, the Kubernetes namespace of the custom resource is ignored. For example, a
ServiceDefaultscustom resource with the namewebin Kubernetes namespaceadmin-nswill configure the service with namewebeven though that service is running in Kubernetes namespaceweb-nsbecause theServiceDefaultsresource ends up registered into the same Consul namespacemy-ns.This is configured via
connectInject.consulNamespaces:global: name: consul enableConsulNamespaces: true image: hashicorp/consul-enterprise:<tag>-ent connectInject: consulNamespaces: consulDestinationNamespace: 'my-ns'NOTE: In this configuration, if two custom resources of the same kind and the same name are attempted to be created in two Kubernetes namespaces, the last one created will not be synced.
ServiceIntentions Special Case (Enterprise)
ServiceIntentions are different from the other custom resources because the
name of the resource doesn't matter. For other resources, the name of the resource
determines which service it configures. For example, this resource configures
the service web:
apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
kind: ServiceDefaults
metadata:
name: web
spec:
protocol: http
For ServiceIntentions, because we need to support the ability to create
wildcard intentions (e.g. foo => * (allow) meaning that foo can talk to any service),
and because * is not a valid Kubernetes resource name, we instead use the field spec.destination.name
to configure the destination service for the intention:
# foo => * (allow)
apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
kind: ServiceIntentions
metadata:
name: name-does-not-matter
spec:
destination:
name: '*'
sources:
- name: foo
action: allow
---
# foo => web (allow)
apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
kind: ServiceIntentions
metadata:
name: name-does-not-matter
spec:
destination:
name: web
sources:
- name: foo
action: allow
In addition, we support the field spec.destination.namespace to configure
the destination service's Consul namespace. If spec.destination.namespace
is empty, then the Consul namespace used will be the same as the other
config entries as outlined above.