Prerequisites Needed to Run Consul-Terraform-Sync
- A Terraform Provider
- A Terraform Module
- A Consul cluster running outside of the daemon
Practitioners can add support for their network infrastructure through Terraform providers. Once network infrastructure support exists, practitioners can add network integrations in the form of Terraform modules.
The following guidance is for running CTS using the Terraform driver. The Terraform Cloud driver
Enterprise
Below are several steps towards a minimum Consul setup required for running CTS.
CTS is a daemon that runs alongside Consul, similar to other Consul ecosystem tools like Consul Template. CTS is not included with the Consul binary and needs to be installed separately.
To install a local Consul agent, refer to the .
Run an Agent
The Consul agent must be running in order to dynamically update network devices. To run the local Consul agent, you can run Consul in development mode which can be started with consul agent -dev
for simplicity. For more details on running Consul agent, refer to the .
When running a Consul agent with CTS in production, we suggest to keep a few considerations in mind. CTS uses blocking queries to monitor task dependencies, like changes to registered services. This results in multiple long running TCP connections between CTS and the agent to poll changes for each dependency. Monitoring a high number of services may quickly hit the default Consul agent connection limits.
There are 2 ways to fix this issue. The first and recommended fix is to use HTTP/2 (requires HTTPS) to communicate between Consul-Terraform-Sync and the Consul agent. When using HTTP/2 only a single connection is made and reused for all communications. See the for more. The other option is to configure limits.http_max_conns_per_client for the agent to a reasonable value proportional to the number of services monitored by Consul-Terraform-Sync.
CTS monitors Consul catalog for service changes which lead to downstream changes to your network devices. Without services, your CTS daemon will be operational but idle. You can register services with your Consul agent either by loading a service definition or by HTTP API request.
If you are running Consul in development mode, below is an example of registering a service by HTTP API request:
$ echo '{
"Name": "web",
"Address": "10.10.10.10",
The above example registers a service named “web” with your Consul agent. This represents a non-existent web service running at 10.10.10.10:8000. Your web service is now available for CTS to consume. You can have CTS monitor the web service to execute a task and update network device(s) by configuring “web” in of a task block. If the web service has any non-default values, it can also be configured in condition "services"
.
For more details on registering a service by HTTP API request, refer to the register service API docs.
Run a Cluster
The previous steps of installing and running a single Consul agent then registering a single service is sufficient to meaningfully start running CTS.
If you would like to run a Consul cluster rather than a single agent, refer to Getting Started: Create a Local Consul Datacenter. This will walk you through the steps of running multiple Consul agents and then joining them together into a cluster.
CTS integrations for the Terraform driver utilizes Terraform providers as plugins to interface with specific network infrastructure platforms. The Terraform driver of CTS inherits the expansive collection of Terraform providers to integrate with, and with release of , this extends to include providers written by the community too by using provider source.
To find providers for the infrastructure platforms you use, browse the providers section of the .
How to Create a Provider
If there is no existing Terraform provider, a new Terraform provider can be and published. The provider can then be used within a network integration task by authoring a compatible Terraform module.
The Terraform module for a task in CTS is the core component of the integration. It declares which resources and how your infrastructure is dynamically updated. The module along with how it is configured within a task determines the condition under which your infrastructure is updated.
Working with a Terraform provider, you can write an integration task for CTS by that is compatible with the Terraform driver or use a module built by partners below.
The modules listed below are available to use and are compatible with CTS.
A10 Networks
- Dynamic Load Balancing with Group Member Updates: / GitHub
Avi Networks
- Scale Up and Scale Down Pool and Pool Members (Servers): GitHub
AWS Application Load Balancer (ALB)
- Create Listener Rule and Target Group for an AWS ALB, Forward Traffic to Consul Ingress Gateway: Terraform Registry /
Checkpoint
- Dynamic Firewalling with Address Object Updates: / GitHub
Cisco ACI
- Policy Based Redirection: Terraform Registry /
- Create and Update Cisco ACI Endpoint Security Groups: Terraform Registry /
Citrix ADC
- Create, Update and Delete Service Groups in Citrix ADC: / GitHub
F5
- Dynamic Load Balancing with Pool Member Updates: Terraform Registry /
NS1
- Create, Delete and Update DNS Records and Zones: / GitHub
Palo Alto Networks
- Dynamic Address Group (DAG) Tags: Terraform Registry /
- Address Group and Dynamic Address Group (DAG) Tags: Terraform Registry /