Consul
Configure Terminating Gateways for Consul on Kubernetes
1.9.0+: This feature is available in Consul versions 1.9.0 and higher
This topic requires familiarity with Terminating Gateways.
Adding a terminating gateway is a multi-step process:
- Update the Helm chart with terminating gateway config options
- Deploy the Helm chart
- Access the Consul agent
- Register external services with Consul
Update the helm chart with terminating gateway config options
Minimum required Helm options:
config.yaml
global:
name: consul
connectInject:
enabled: true
controller:
enabled: true
terminatingGateways:
enabled: true
Deploying the Helm chart
Ensure you have the latest consul-helm chart and install Consul via helm using the following guide while being sure to provide the yaml configuration as previously discussed.
Accessing the Consul agent
You can access the Consul server directly from your host via kubectl port-forward
. This is helpful for interacting with your Consul UI locally as well as to validate connectivity of the application.
$ kubectl port-forward consul-server-0 8500 &
If TLS is enabled use port 8501:
$ kubectl port-forward consul-server-0 8501 &
Be sure the latest consul binary is installed locally on your host. https://releases.hashicorp.com/consul/
$ export CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR=http://localhost:8500
If TLS is enabled set:
$ export CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR=https://localhost:8501
$ export CONSUL_HTTP_SSL_VERIFY=false
If ACLs are enabled also set:
$ export CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN=$(kubectl get secret consul-bootstrap-acl-token --template='{{.data.token | base64decode }}')
Register external services with Consul
Registering the external services with Consul is a multi-step process:
- Register external services with Consul
- Update the terminating gateway ACL token if ACLs are enabled
- Create a
TerminatingGateway
resource to configure the terminating gateway - Create a
ServiceIntentions
resource to allow access from services in the mesh to external service - Define upstream annotations for any services that need to talk to the external services
Register external services with Consul
Note: Normal Consul services are registered with the Consul client on the node that they're running on. Since this is an external service, there is no Consul node to register it onto. Instead, we will make up a node name and register the service to that node.
Create a sample external service and register it with Consul.
external.json
{
"Node": "example_com",
"Address": "example.com",
"NodeMeta": {
"external-node": "true",
"external-probe": "true"
},
"Service": {
"Address": "example.com",
"ID": "example-https",
"Service": "example-https",
"Port": 443
}
}
"Node": "example_com"
is our made up node name."Address": "example.com"
is the address of our node. Services registered to that node will use this address if their own address isn't specified. If you're registering multiple external services, ensure you use different node names with different addresses or set theService.Address
key."Service": { "Address": "example.com" ... }
is the address of our service. In this example this doesn't need to be set since the address of the node is the same, but if there were two services registered to that same node then this should be set.
Register the external service with Consul:
$ curl --request PUT --data @external.json --insecure $CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR/v1/catalog/register
true
If ACLs and TLS are enabled :
$ curl --request PUT --header "X-Consul-Token: $CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN" --data @external.json --insecure $CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR/v1/catalog/register
true
Update terminating gateway ACL role if ACLs are enabled
If ACLs are enabled, update the terminating gateway acl role to have service: write
permissions on all of the services
being represented by the gateway:
- Create a new policy that includes these permissions
- Update the existing role to include the new policy
write-policy.hcl
service "example-https" {
policy = "write"
}
$ consul acl policy create -name "example-https-write-policy" -rules @write-policy.hcl
ID: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Name: example-https-write-policy
Description:
Datacenters:
Rules:
service "example-https" {
policy = "write"
}
Now fetch the ID of the terminating gateway token
consul acl role list | grep -B 6 -- "- RELEASE_NAME-terminating-gateway-policy" | grep ID
ID: <role id>
Update the terminating gateway acl token with the new policy
$ consul acl role update -id <role id> -policy-name example-https-write-policy
AccessorID: <role id>
SecretID: <secret id>
Description: RELEASE_NAME-terminating-gateway-acl-role
Local: true
Create Time: 2021-01-08 21:18:47.957450486 +0000 UTC
Policies:
63bf1d9b-a87d-8672-ddcb-d25e2d88adb8 - RELEASE_NAME-terminating-gateway-policy
f63d1ae6-ffe7-44bd-bf7a-704a86939a63 - example-https-write-policy
Create the configuration entry for the terminating gateway
Once the roles have been updated, create the TerminatingGateway resource to configure the terminating gateway:
terminating-gateway.yaml
apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
kind: TerminatingGateway
metadata:
name: terminating-gateway
spec:
services:
- name: example-https
caFile: /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
If TLS is enabled, you must include the caFile
parameter that points to the system trust store of the terminating gateway container. By default, the trust store is located in the /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
directory.
Configure the caFile
parameter to point to the /etc/ssl/cert.pem
directory if TLS is enabled and you are using one of the following components:
- Consul Helm chart 0.43 or older
- Or an Envoy image with an alpine base image
Apply the TerminatingGateway
resource with kubectl apply
:
$ kubectl apply --filename terminating-gateway.yaml
If using ACLs and TLS, create a ServiceIntentions
resource to allow access from services in the mesh to the external service
service-intentions.yaml
apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
kind: ServiceIntentions
metadata:
name: example-https
spec:
destination:
name: example-https
sources:
- name: static-client
action: allow
Apply the ServiceIntentions
resource with kubectl apply
:
$ kubectl apply --filename service-intentions.yaml
Define the external services as upstreams for services in the mesh
Finally define and deploy the external services as upstreams for the internal mesh services that wish to talk to them. An example deployment is provided which will serve as a static client for the terminating gateway service.
static-client.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: static-client
spec:
selector:
app: static-client
ports:
- port: 80
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
name: static-client
---
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: static-client
spec:
replicas: 1
selector:
matchLabels:
app: static-client
template:
metadata:
name: static-client
labels:
app: static-client
annotations:
'consul.hashicorp.com/connect-inject': 'true'
'consul.hashicorp.com/connect-service-upstreams': 'example-https:1234'
spec:
containers:
- name: static-client
image: curlimages/curl:latest
command: ['/bin/sh', '-c', '--']
args: ['while true; do sleep 30; done;']
serviceAccountName: static-client
Run the service via kubectl apply
:
$ kubectl apply --filename static-client.yaml
Wait for the service to be ready:
$ kubectl rollout status deploy static-client --watch
deployment "static-client" successfully rolled out
You can verify connectivity of the static-client and terminating gateway via a curl command:
$ kubectl exec deploy/static-client -- curl -vvvs --header "Host: example-https.com" http://localhost:1234/