Consul is a distributed, highly available, and data center aware solution to connect and configure applications across dynamic, distributed infrastructure.
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ronald b64674623e
Copyright headers for missing files/folders (#16708)
2 years ago
..
.gitignore
README.md Load test, upgrade packer version, fix k6s installation (#13382) 2 years ago
consul.tf Copyright headers for missing files/folders (#16708) 2 years ago
main.tf Copyright headers for missing files/folders (#16708) 2 years ago
outputs.tf Copyright headers for missing files/folders (#16708) 2 years ago
providers.tf Copyright headers for missing files/folders (#16708) 2 years ago
test-servers.tf Copyright headers for missing files/folders (#16708) 2 years ago
user-data-client.sh Copyright headers for missing files/folders (#16708) 2 years ago
user-data-server.sh Copyright headers for missing files/folders (#16708) 2 years ago
variables.tf Copyright headers for missing files/folders (#16708) 2 years ago

README.md

Terraform Consul Load Testing

How to use

  1. Build an image with the desired Consul version and a load test image in the Packer folder here.
  2. Create your own vars.tfvars file in this directory.
  3. Place the appropriate AMI IDs in the consul_ami_id and test_server_ami variables. If no AMI ID is specified it will default to pulling from latest.
  4. Set either consul_version or consul_download_url. If neither is set it will default to utilizing Consul 1.9.0
  5. AWS Variables are set off of environment variables. Make sure to export necessary variables shown here.
  6. Run terraform init once to setup the working directory.
  7. Run terraform plan -var-file=vars.tfvars, and then terraform apply -var-file=vars.tfvars when ready.
  8. Upon completion k6 should run and push metrics to the desired Datadog dashboard.

An example of a vars.tfvars :

vpc_name             = "consul-test-vpc"
vpc_cidr             = "11.0.0.0/16"
vpc_allwed_ssh_cidr  = "0.0.0.0/0"
public_subnet_cidrs  = ["11.0.1.0/24", "11.0.3.0/24"]
private_subnet_cidrs = ["11.0.2.0/24"]
vpc_az               = ["us-east-2a", "us-east-2b"]
test_instance_type   = "t2.micro"
test_server_ami      = "ami-0ad7711e837ebe166"
cluster_name         = "ctest"
test_public_ip       = "true"
instance_type        = "t2.micro"
ami_owners           = ["******"]
consul_ami_id        = "ami-016d80ff5472346f0"

Note that vpc_allwed_ssh_cidr must be set to allowed the test server to be accessible from the machine running the load test, e.g., "0.0.0.0/0" (It is disabled by default).

Customization

All customization for infrastructure that is available can be found by looking through the variables.tf file.

How to SSH

After terraform apply is run Terraform should create a keys/ directory which will give access to all instances created. For example, ssh -i "keys/[cluster-name]-spicy-banana.pem" ubuntu@[IPADDRESS]