mirror of https://github.com/hashicorp/consul
109 lines
4.6 KiB
Markdown
109 lines
4.6 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: Configuring TLS on an Existing Cluster
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sidebar_title: Configuring TLS on an Existing Cluster
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description: Configuring TLS on an existing Consul cluster running in Kubernetes
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---
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# Configuring TLS on an Existing Cluster
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As of Consul Helm version `0.16.0`, the chart supports TLS for communication
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within the cluster. If you already have a Consul cluster deployed on Kubernetes,
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you may want to configure TLS in a way that minimizes downtime to your applications.
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Consul already supports rolling out TLS on an existing cluster without downtime.
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However, depending on your Kubernetes use case, your upgrade procedure may be different.
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## Gradual TLS Rollout without Consul Connect
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If you're **not using Consul Connect**, follow this process.
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1. Run a Helm upgrade with the following config:
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```yaml
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global:
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tls:
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enabled: true
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# This configuration sets `verify_outgoing`, `verify_server_hostname`,
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# and `verify_incoming` to `false` on servers and clients,
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# which allows TLS-disabled nodes to join the cluster.
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verify: false
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server:
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updatePartition: <number_of_server_replicas>
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```
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This upgrade will trigger a rolling update of the clients, as well as any
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other `consul-k8s` components, such as sync catalog or client snapshot deployments.
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1. Perform a rolling upgrade of the servers, as described in
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[Upgrade Consul Servers](/docs/platform/k8s/upgrading#upgrading-consul-servers).
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1. Repeat steps 1 and 2, turning on TLS verification by setting `global.tls.verify`
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to `true`.
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## Gradual TLS Rollout with Consul Connect
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Because the sidecar Envoy proxies need to talk to the Consul client agent regularly
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for service discovery, we can't enable TLS on the clients without also re-injecting a
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TLS-enabled proxy into the application pods. To perform TLS rollout with minimal
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downtime, we recommend instead to add a new Kubernetes node pool and migrate your
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applications to it.
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1. Add a new identical node pool.
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1. Cordon all nodes in the **old** pool by running `kubectl cordon`
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to ensure Kubernetes doesn't schedule any new workloads on those nodes
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and instead schedules onto the new nodes, which shortly will be TLS-enabled.
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1. Create the following Helm config file for the upgrade:
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```yaml
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global:
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tls:
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enabled: true
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# This configuration sets `verify_outgoing`, `verify_server_hostname`,
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# and `verify_incoming` to `false` on servers and clients,
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# which allows TLS-disabled nodes to join the cluster.
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verify: false
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server:
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updatePartition: <number_of_server_replicas>
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client:
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updateStrategy: |
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type: OnDelete
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```
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In this configuration, we're setting `server.updatePartition` to the number of
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server replicas as described in [Upgrade Consul Servers](/docs/platform/k8s/upgrading#upgrading-consul-servers)
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and `client.updateStrategy` to `OnDelete` to manually trigger an upgrade of the clients.
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1. Run `helm upgrade` with the above config file. The upgrade will trigger an update of all
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components except clients and servers, such as the Consul Connect webhook deployment
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or the sync catalog deployment. Note that the sync catalog and the client
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snapshot deployments will not be in the `ready` state until the clients on their
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nodes are upgraded. It is OK to proceed to the next step without them being ready
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because Kubernetes will keep the old deployment pod around, and so there will be no
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downtime.
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1. Gradually perform an upgrade of the clients by deleting client pods on the **new** node
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pool.
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1. At this point, all components (e.g., Consul Connect webhook and sync catalog) should be running
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on the new node pool.
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1. Redeploy all your Connect-enabled applications.
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One way to trigger a redeploy is to run `kubectl drain` on the nodes in the old pool.
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Now that the Connect webhook is TLS-aware, it will add TLS configuration to
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the sidecar proxy. Also, Kubernetes should schedule these applications on the new node pool.
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1. Perform a rolling upgrade of the servers described in
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[Upgrade Consul Servers](/docs/platform/k8s/upgrading#upgrading-consul-servers).
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1. If everything is healthy, delete the old node pool.
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1. Finally, set `global.tls.verify` to `true` in your Helm config file, remove the
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`client.updateStrategy` property, and perform a rolling upgrade of the servers.
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-> **Note:** It is possible to do this upgrade without fully duplicating the node pool.
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You could drain a subset of the Kubernetes nodes within your existing node pool and treat it
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as your "new node pool." Then follow the above instructions. Repeat this process for the rest
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of the nodes in the node pool.
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