mirror of https://github.com/hashicorp/consul
147 lines
6.8 KiB
Markdown
147 lines
6.8 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: intro
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page_title: Run the Agent
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description: >
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The Consul agent can run in either server or client mode. Each datacenter must
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have at least one server, though a cluster of 3 or 5 servers is recommended. A
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single server deployment is highly discouraged in production as data loss is
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inevitable in a failure scenario.
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---
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# Run the Consul Agent
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After Consul is installed, the agent must be run. The agent can run either
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in server or client mode. Each datacenter must have at least one server,
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though a cluster of 3 or 5 servers is recommended. A single server deployment
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is _**highly**_ discouraged as data loss is inevitable in a failure scenario.
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All other agents run in client mode. A client is a very lightweight
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process that registers services, runs health checks, and forwards queries to
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servers. The agent must be running on every node that is part of the cluster.
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For more detail on bootstrapping a datacenter, see
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[this guide](/docs/guides/bootstrapping).
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## Starting the Agent
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For simplicity, we'll start the Consul agent in development mode for now. This
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mode is useful for bringing up a single-node Consul environment quickly and
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easily. It is **not** intended to be used in production as it does not persist
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any state.
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```text
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-$ consul agent -dev
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==> Starting Consul agent...
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==> Starting Consul agent RPC...
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==> Consul agent running!
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Version: 'v0.7.0'
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Node name: 'Armons-MacBook-Air'
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Datacenter: 'dc1'
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Server: true (bootstrap: false)
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Client Addr: 127.0.0.1 (HTTP: 8500, HTTPS: -1, DNS: 8600, RPC: 8400)
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Cluster Addr: 127.0.0.1 (LAN: 8301, WAN: 8302)
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Gossip encrypt: false, RPC-TLS: false, TLS-Incoming: false
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==> Log data will now stream in as it occurs:
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2016/09/15 10:21:10 [INFO] raft: Initial configuration (index=1): [{Suffrage:Voter ID:127.0.0.1:8300 Address:127.0.0.1:8300}]
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2016/09/15 10:21:10 [INFO] raft: Node at 127.0.0.1:8300 [Follower] entering Follower state (Leader: "")
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2016/09/15 10:21:10 [INFO] serf: EventMemberJoin: Armons-MacBook-Air 127.0.0.1
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2016/09/15 10:21:10 [INFO] serf: EventMemberJoin: Armons-MacBook-Air.dc1 127.0.0.1
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2016/09/15 10:21:10 [INFO] consul: Adding LAN server Armons-MacBook-Air (Addr: tcp/127.0.0.1:8300) (DC: dc1)
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2016/09/15 10:21:10 [INFO] consul: Adding WAN server Armons-MacBook-Air.dc1 (Addr: tcp/127.0.0.1:8300) (DC: dc1)
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2016/09/15 10:21:13 [DEBUG] http: Request GET /v1/agent/services (180.708µs) from=127.0.0.1:52369
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2016/09/15 10:21:13 [DEBUG] http: Request GET /v1/agent/services (15.548µs) from=127.0.0.1:52369
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2016/09/15 10:21:17 [WARN] raft: Heartbeat timeout from "" reached, starting election
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2016/09/15 10:21:17 [INFO] raft: Node at 127.0.0.1:8300 [Candidate] entering Candidate state in term 2
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2016/09/15 10:21:17 [DEBUG] raft: Votes needed: 1
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2016/09/15 10:21:17 [DEBUG] raft: Vote granted from 127.0.0.1:8300 in term 2. Tally: 1
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2016/09/15 10:21:17 [INFO] raft: Election won. Tally: 1
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2016/09/15 10:21:17 [INFO] raft: Node at 127.0.0.1:8300 [Leader] entering Leader state
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2016/09/15 10:21:17 [INFO] consul: cluster leadership acquired
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2016/09/15 10:21:17 [DEBUG] consul: reset tombstone GC to index 3
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2016/09/15 10:21:17 [INFO] consul: New leader elected: Armons-MacBook-Air
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2016/09/15 10:21:17 [INFO] consul: member 'Armons-MacBook-Air' joined, marking health alive
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2016/09/15 10:21:17 [INFO] agent: Synced service 'consul'
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```
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As you can see, the Consul agent has started and has output some log
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data. From the log data, you can see that our agent is running in server mode
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and has claimed leadership of the cluster. Additionally, the local member has
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been marked as a healthy member of the cluster.
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~> **Note for OS X Users:** Consul uses your hostname as the
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default node name. If your hostname contains periods, DNS queries to
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that node will not work with Consul. To avoid this, explicitly set
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the name of your node with the `-node` flag.
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## Cluster Members
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If you run [`consul members`](/commands/members) in another terminal, you
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can see the members of the Consul cluster. We'll cover joining clusters in the next
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section, but for now, you should only see one member (yourself):
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```shell-session
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$ consul members
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Node Address Status Type Build Protocol DC
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Armons-MacBook-Air 172.20.20.11:8301 alive server 0.6.1dev 2 dc1
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```
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The output shows our own node, the address it is running on, its
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health state, its role in the cluster, and some version information.
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Additional metadata can be viewed by providing the `-detailed` flag.
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The output of the [`members`](/commands/members) command is based on
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the [gossip protocol](/docs/internals/gossip) and is eventually consistent.
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That is, at any point in time, the view of the world as seen by your local
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agent may not exactly match the state on the servers. For a strongly consistent
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view of the world, use the [HTTP API](/api) as it forwards the
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request to the Consul servers:
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```shell-session
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$ curl localhost:8500/v1/catalog/nodes
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[{"Node":"Armons-MacBook-Air","Address":"127.0.0.1","TaggedAddresses":{"lan":"127.0.0.1","wan":"127.0.0.1"},"CreateIndex":4,"ModifyIndex":110}]
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```
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In addition to the HTTP API, the [DNS interface](/docs/agent/dns) can
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be used to query the node. Note that you have to make sure to point your DNS
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lookups to the Consul agent's DNS server which runs on port 8600 by default.
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The format of the DNS entries (such as "Armons-MacBook-Air.node.consul") will
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be covered in more detail later.
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```shell-session
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$ dig @127.0.0.1 -p 8600 Armons-MacBook-Air.node.consul
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...
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;; QUESTION SECTION:
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;Armons-MacBook-Air.node.consul. IN A
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;; ANSWER SECTION:
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Armons-MacBook-Air.node.consul. 0 IN A 127.0.0.1
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```
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## Stopping the Agent ((#stopping))
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You can use `Ctrl-C` (the interrupt signal) to gracefully halt the agent.
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After interrupting the agent, you should see it leave the cluster
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and shut down.
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By gracefully leaving, Consul notifies other cluster members that the
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node _left_. If you had forcibly killed the agent process, other members
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of the cluster would have detected that the node _failed_. When a member leaves,
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its services and checks are removed from the catalog. When a member fails,
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its health is simply marked as critical, but it is not removed from the catalog.
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Consul will automatically try to reconnect to _failed_ nodes, allowing it
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to recover from certain network conditions, while _left_ nodes are no longer contacted.
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Additionally, if an agent is operating as a server, a graceful leave is important
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to avoid causing a potential availability outage affecting the
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[consensus protocol](/docs/internals/consensus). See the
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[guides section](/docs/guides) for details on how to safely add
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and remove servers.
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## Next Steps
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Your simple Consul cluster is up and running. Let's give it some
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[services](/intro/getting-started/services)!
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