--- layout: "docs" page_title: "Service Definition" sidebar_current: "docs-agent-services" description: |- One of the main goals of service discovery is to provide a catalog of available services. To that end, the agent provides a simple service definition format to declare the availability of a service, and to potentially associate it with a health check. A health check is considered to be application level if it associated with a service. A service is defined in a configuration file, or added at runtime over the HTTP interface. --- # Services One of the main goals of service discovery is to provide a catalog of available services. To that end, the agent provides a simple service definition format to declare the availability of a service, and to potentially associate it with a health check. A health check is considered to be application level if it associated with a service. A service is defined in a configuration file, or added at runtime over the HTTP interface. ## Service Definition A service definition that is a script looks like: ```javascript { "service": { "name": "redis", "tags": ["master"], "address": "127.0.0.1", "port": 8000, "check": { "script": "/usr/local/bin/check_redis.py", "interval": "10s" } } } ``` A service definition must include a `name`, and may optionally provide an `id`, `tags`, `address`, `port`, and `check`. The `id` is set to the `name` if not provided. It is required that all services have a unique ID per node, so if names might conflict then unique ID's should be provided. The `tags` is a list of opaque value to Consul, but can be used to distinguish between "master" or "slave" nodes, different versions, or any other service level labels. The `address` can be used to specify a service specific IP address. By default, the IP address of the agent is used, and this does not need to be provided. The `port` can be used as well to make a service oriented architecture simpler to configure. This way the address and port of a service can be discovered. Lastly, a service can have an associated health check. This is a powerful feature as it allows a web balancer to gracefully remove failing nodes, or a database to replace a failed slave, etc. The health check is strongly integrated in the DNS interface as well. If a service is failing its health check or a node has any failing system-level check, the DNS interface will omit that node from any service query. There is more information about [checks here](/docs/agent/checks.html). The check must be of the script or TTL type. If it is a script type, `script` and `interval` must be provided. If it is a TTL type, then only `ttl` must be provided. The check name is automatically generated as "service:". To configure a service, either provide it as a `-config-file` option to the agent, or place it inside the `-config-dir` of the agent. The file must end in the ".json" extension to be loaded by Consul. Check definitions can also be updated by sending a `SIGHUP` to the agent. Alternatively, the service can be registered dynamically using the [HTTP API](/docs/agent/http.html). ## Multiple Service Definitions Multiple services definitions can be provided at once using the `services` (plural) key in your configuration file. ```javascript { "services": [ { "id": "red0", "name": "redis", "tags": [ "master" ], "address": "127.0.0.1", "port": 6000, "check": { "script": "/bin/check_redis -p 6000", "interval": "5s", "ttl": "20s" } }, { "id": "red1", "name": "redis", "tags": [ "delayed", "slave" ], "address": "127.0.0.1", "port": 7000, "check": { "script": "/bin/check_redis -p 7000", "interval": "30s", "ttl": "60s" } }, ... ] } ```