Consul Connect
Note: This guide requires Nomad 0.10.0 or later and Consul 1.6.0 or later.
Note: Nomad's Connect integration requires Linux network namespaces. Nomad Connect will not run on Windows or macOS.
Consul Connect provides service-to-service connection authorization and encryption using mutual Transport Layer Security (TLS). Applications can use sidecar proxies in a service mesh configuration to automatically establish TLS connections for inbound and outbound connections without being aware of Connect at all.
Nomad with Consul Connect Integration
Nomad integrates with Consul to provide secure service-to-service communication between Nomad jobs and task groups. In order to support Consul Connect, Nomad adds a new networking mode for jobs that enables tasks in the same task group to share their networking stack. With a few changes to the job specification, job authors can opt into Connect integration. When Connect is enabled, Nomad will launch a proxy alongside the application in the job file. The proxy (Envoy) provides secure communication with other applications in the cluster.
Nomad job specification authors can use Nomad's Consul Connect integration to implement service segmentation in a microservice architecture running in public clouds without having to directly manage TLS certificates. This is transparent to job specification authors as security features in Connect continue to work even as the application scales up or down or gets rescheduled by Nomad.
For using the Consul Connect integration with Consul ACLs enabled, see the Secure Nomad Jobs with Consul Connect guide.
Nomad Consul Connect Example
The following section walks through an example to enable secure communication between a web dashboard and a backend counting service. The web dashboard and the counting service are managed by Nomad. Nomad additionally configures Envoy proxies to run along side these applications. The dashboard is configured to connect to the counting service via localhost on port 9001. The proxy is managed by Nomad, and handles mTLS communication to the counting service.
Prerequisites
Consul
Connect integration with Nomad requires Consul 1.6 or later. The Consul agent can be run in dev mode with the following command:
Note: Nomad's Connect integration requires Consul in your $PATH
$ consul agent -dev
To use Connect on a non-dev Consul agent, you will minimally need to enable the
GRPC port and set connect
to enabled by adding some additional information to
your Consul client configurations, depending on format.
For HCL configurations:
# ... ports { grpc = 8502} connect { enabled = true}
For JSON configurations:
{ // ... "ports": { "grpc": 8502 }, "connect": { "enabled": true }}
Nomad
Nomad must schedule onto a routable interface in order for the proxies to connect to each other. The following steps show how to start a Nomad dev agent configured for Connect.
$ sudo nomad agent -dev-connect
CNI Plugins
Nomad uses CNI plugins to configure the network namespace used to secure the Consul Connect sidecar proxy. All Nomad client nodes using network namespaces must have CNI plugins installed.
The following commands install CNI plugins:
$ curl -L -o cni-plugins.tgz "https://github.com/containernetworking/plugins/releases/download/v0.9.0/cni-plugins-linux-$( [ $(uname -m) = aarch64 ] && echo arm64 || echo amd64)"-v0.9.0.tgz$ sudo mkdir -p /opt/cni/bin$ sudo tar -C /opt/cni/bin -xzf cni-plugins.tgz
Ensure the your Linux operating system distribution has been configured to allow container traffic through the bridge network to be routed via iptables. These tunables can be set as follows:
$ echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/bridge/bridge-nf-call-arptables$ echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/bridge/bridge-nf-call-ip6tables$ echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/bridge/bridge-nf-call-iptables
To preserve these settings on startup of a client node, add a file including the
following to /etc/sysctl.d/
or remove the file your Linux distribution puts in
that directory.
net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-arptables = 1net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-ip6tables = 1net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-iptables = 1
Run the Connect-enabled Services
Once Nomad and Consul are running, submit the following Connect-enabled services
to Nomad by copying the HCL into a file named connect.nomad
and running:
nomad run connect.nomad
job "countdash" { datacenters = ["dc1"] group "api" { network { mode = "bridge" } service { name = "count-api" port = "9001" connect { sidecar_service {} } } task "web" { driver = "docker" config { image = "hashicorpnomad/counter-api:v3" } } } group "dashboard" { network { mode = "bridge" port "http" { static = 9002 to = 9002 } } service { name = "count-dashboard" port = "9002" connect { sidecar_service { proxy { upstreams { destination_name = "count-api" local_bind_port = 8080 } } } } } task "dashboard" { driver = "docker" env { COUNTING_SERVICE_URL = "http://${NOMAD_UPSTREAM_ADDR_count_api}" } config { image = "hashicorpnomad/counter-dashboard:v3" } } }}
The job contains two task groups: an API service and a web frontend.
API Service
The API service is defined as a task group with a bridge network:
group "api" { network { mode = "bridge" } # ... }
Since the API service is only accessible via Consul Connect, it does not define any ports in its network. The service stanza enables Connect:
group "api" { # ... service { name = "count-api" port = "9001" connect { sidecar_service {} } } # ... }
The port
in the service stanza is the port the API service listens on. The
Envoy proxy will automatically route traffic to that port inside the network
namespace.
Web Frontend
The web frontend is defined as a task group with a bridge network and a static forwarded port:
group "dashboard" { network { mode = "bridge" port "http" { static = 9002 to = 9002 } } # ... }
The static = 9002
parameter requests the Nomad scheduler reserve port 9002 on
a host network interface. The to = 9002
parameter forwards that host port to
port 9002 inside the network namespace.
This allows you to connect to the web frontend in a browser by visiting
http://<host_ip>:9002
as show below:
The web frontend connects to the API service via Consul Connect:
service { name = "count-dashboard" port = "9002" connect { sidecar_service { proxy { upstreams { destination_name = "count-api" local_bind_port = 8080 } } } } }
The upstreams
stanza defines the remote service to access (count-api
) and
what port to expose that service on inside the network namespace (8080
).
The web frontend is configured to communicate with the API service with an environment variable:
env { COUNTING_SERVICE_URL = "http://${NOMAD_UPSTREAM_ADDR_count_api}" }
The web frontend is configured via the $COUNTING_SERVICE_URL
, so you must
interpolate the upstream's address into that environment variable. Note that
dashes (-
) are converted to underscores (_
) in environment variables so
count-api
becomes count_api
.
Limitations
- The
consul
binary must be present in Nomad's$PATH
to run the Envoy proxy sidecar on client nodes. - Consul Connect using network namespaces is only supported on Linux.
- Prior to Consul 1.9, the Envoy sidecar proxy will drop and stop accepting connections while the Nomad agent is restarting.