HashiCorp Consul has multiple components, bus as a whole, it is a tool for discovering and configuring services in your infrastructure. It provides several key features:
- Service Discovery
- Health Checking
- KV Store
- Multi Datacenter
HashiCorp Consul is designed to be friendly to both the DevOps community and application developers, making it perfect for modern, elastic infrastructures.
$ docker run --name consul bitnami/consul:latest
$ curl -sSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-consul/master/docker-compose.yml > docker-compose.yml
$ docker-compose up -d
- Bitnami closely tracks upstream source changes and promptly publishes new versions of this image using our automated systems.
- With Bitnami images the latest bug fixes and features are available as soon as possible.
- Bitnami containers, virtual machines and cloud images use the same components and configuration approach - making it easy to switch between formats based on your project needs.
- Bitnami images are built on CircleCI and automatically pushed to the Docker Hub.
- All our images are based on minideb a minimalist Debian based container image which gives you a small base container image and the familiarity of a leading linux distribution.
- Bitnami container images are released daily with the latest distribution packages available.
The image overview badge contains a security report with all open CVEs. Click on 'Show only CVEs with fixes' to get the list of actionable security issues.
Deploying Bitnami applications as Helm Charts is the easiest way to get started with our applications on Kubernetes. Read more about the installation in the Bitnami HashiCorp Consul Chart GitHub repository.
Bitnami containers can be used with Kubeapps for deployment and management of Helm Charts in clusters.
NOTE: Debian 8 images have been deprecated in favor of Debian 9 images. Bitnami will not longer publish new Docker images based on Debian 8.
Learn more about the Bitnami tagging policy and the difference between rolling tags and immutable tags in our documentation page.
1-ol-7
,1.4.0-ol-7-r20
(1/ol-7/Dockerfile)1-debian-9
,1.4.0-debian-9-r11
,1
,1.4.0
,1.4.0-r11
,latest
(1/debian-9/Dockerfile)
Subscribe to project updates by watching the bitnami/consul GitHub repo.
The recommended way to get the Bitnami HashiCorp Consul Docker Image is to pull the prebuilt image from the Docker Hub Registry.
$ docker pull bitnami/consul:latest
To use a specific version, you can pull a versioned tag. You can view the list of available versions in the Docker Hub Registry.
$ docker pull bitnami/consul:[TAG]
If you wish, you can also build the image yourself.
$ docker build -t bitnami/consul:latest https://github.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-consul.git
If you remove the container all your data and configurations will be lost, and the next time you run the image the database will be reinitialized. To avoid this loss of data, you should mount a volume that will persist even after the container is removed.
For persistence you should mount a volume at the /bitnami
path. The above examples define a docker volume namely consul_data
. The HashiCorp Consul application state will persist as long as this volume is not removed.
To avoid inadvertent removal of this volume you can mount host directories as data volumes. Alternatively you can make use of volume plugins to host the volume data.
$ docker run -v /path/to/consul-persistence:/bitnami bitnami/consul:latest
or using Docker Compose:
consul:
image: bitnami/consul:latest
volumes:
- /path/to/consul-persistence:/bitnami
Using Docker container networking, a different server running inside a container can easily be accessed by your application containers and vice-versa.
Containers attached to the same network can communicate with each other using the container name as the hostname.
$ docker network create consul-network --driver bridge
Use the --network <NETWORK>
argument to the docker run
command to attach the container to the consul-network
network.
$ docker run --name consul-node1 --network consul-network bitnami/consul:latest
We can launch another containers using the same flag (--network NETWORK
) in the docker run
command. If you also set a name to your container, you will be able to use it as hostname in your network.
When not specified, Docker Compose automatically sets up a new network and attaches all deployed services to that network. However, we will explicitly define a new bridge network named consul-network.
version: '2'
networks:
consul-network:
driver: bridge
services:
consul:
image: bitnami/consul:latest
networks:
- consul-network
ports:
- '8300:8300'
- '8301:8301'
- '8301:8301/udp'
- '8500:8500'
- '8600:8600'
- '8600:8600/udp'
Then, launch the containers using:
$ docker-compose up -d
This is the simplest way to run HashiCorp Consul with clustering configuration:
Copy the snippet below into your docker-compose.yml to add a HashiCorp Consul server node to your cluster configuration.
version: '2'
services:
consul-node1:
image: bitnami/consul
environment:
- CONSUL_BOOTSTRAP_EXPECT=3
- CONSUL_CLIENT_LAN_ADDRESS=0.0.0.0
- CONSUL_DISABLE_KEYRING_FILE=true
- CONSUL_RETRY_JOIN=consul-node1
ports:
- '8300:8300'
- '8301:8301'
- '8301:8301/udp'
- '8500:8500'
- '8600:8600'
- '8600:8600/udp'
volumes:
- 'consul-node1_data:/bitnami'
Note: The value of the CONSUL_BOOTSTRAP_EXPECT should reflect the total number of nodes the cluster will have.
Update the definitions for nodes you want your HashiCorp Consul node cluster with.
consul-node2:
image: bitnami/consul
environment:
- CONSUL_BOOTSTRAP_EXPECT=3
- CONSUL_CLIENT_LAN_ADDRESS=0.0.0.0
- CONSUL_DISABLE_KEYRING_FILE=true
- CONSUL_RETRY_JOIN=consul-node1
- CONSUL_UI=false
volumes:
- 'consul-node2_data:/bitnami'
consul-node3:
image: bitnami/consul
environment:
- CONSUL_BOOTSTRAP_EXPECT=3
- CONSUL_CLIENT_LAN_ADDRESS=0.0.0.0
- CONSUL_DISABLE_KEYRING_FILE=true
- CONSUL_RETRY_JOIN=consul-node1
- CONSUL_UI=false
volumes:
- 'consul-node3_data:/bitnami'
volumes:
consul-node1_data:
driver: local
consul-node2_data:
driver: local
consul-node3_data:
driver: local
The final docker-compose.yml
will look like this:
version: '2'
services:
consul-node1:
image: bitnami/consul
environment:
- CONSUL_BOOTSTRAP_EXPECT=3
- CONSUL_CLIENT_LAN_ADDRESS=0.0.0.0
- CONSUL_DISABLE_KEYRING_FILE=true
- CONSUL_RETRY_JOIN=consul-node1
ports:
- '8300:8300'
- '8301:8301'
- '8301:8301/udp'
- '8500:8500'
- '8600:8600'
- '8600:8600/udp'
volumes:
- 'consul-node1_data:/bitnami'
consul-node2:
image: bitnami/consul
environment:
- CONSUL_BOOTSTRAP_EXPECT=3
- CONSUL_CLIENT_LAN_ADDRESS=0.0.0.0
- CONSUL_DISABLE_KEYRING_FILE=true
- CONSUL_RETRY_JOIN=consul-node1
- CONSUL_UI=false
volumes:
- 'consul-node2_data:/bitnami'
consul-node3:
image: bitnami/consul
environment:
- CONSUL_BOOTSTRAP_EXPECT=3
- CONSUL_CLIENT_LAN_ADDRESS=0.0.0.0
- CONSUL_DISABLE_KEYRING_FILE=true
- CONSUL_RETRY_JOIN=consul-node1
- CONSUL_UI=false
volumes:
- 'consul-node3_data:/bitnami'
volumes:
consul-node1_data:
driver: local
consul-node2_data:
driver: local
consul-node3_data:
driver: local
When you start the HashiCorp Consul image, you can adjust the configuration of the instance by passing one or more environment variables either on the docker-compose file or on the docker run command line. The following environment values are provided to custom HashiCorp Consul:
CONSUL_SERVER_MODE
: Indicates if HashiCorp Consul is running in server or client mode. Valid values: server, client. Default: server.CONSUL_SERF_LAN_ADDRESS
: Address used for Serf LAN communications. Default: 0.0.0.0.CONSUL_CLIENT_LAN_ADDRESS
: Address in which HashiCorp Consul will bind client interfaces. Default: 0.0.0.0.CONSUL_SERF_LAN_PORT_NUMBER
: Serf LAN port. Defualt: 8301.CONSUL_HTTP_PORT_NUMBER
: HTTP API port, used also for the UI. Default: 8500.CONSUL_DNS_PORT_NUMBER
: DNS service port. Default: 8600.CONSUL_RPC_PORT_NUMBER
: Server RPC port. Default: 8300.CONSUL_RAFT_MULTIPLIER
: An integer multiplier used by HashiCorp Consul servers to scale key Raft timing parameters. Default: 1.CONSUL_LOCAL_CONFIG
: Custom user configuration that will be added as a file in the config dir.CONSUL_GOSSIP_ENCRYPTION
: Enable Gossip encryption. Default: no.CONSUL_GOSSIP_ENCRYPTION_KEY
: Gossip private simmetric key.CONSUL_DISABLE_KEYRING_FILE
: If set, the keyring will not be persisted to a file. Valid vaules: true, false. Default: false.CONSUL_UI
: Enable web user interface. Valid values: true, false. Default: true.CONSUL_BOOTSTRAP_EXPECT
: Number of expected nodes in the cluster, including itself. Default: 1.CONSUL_DOMAIN
: HashiCorp Consul domain name. Default: consul.CONSUL_DATACENTER"
: The datacenter in which the agent is running. Default: dc1.CONSUL_RETRY_JOIN
: "Address of another agent to join upon starting up. Default: 127.0.0.1
consul:
image: bitnami/consul:latest
environment:
- CONSUL_HTTP_PORT_NUMBER=8888
$ docker run -d -e CONSUL_HTTP_PORT_NUMBER=8888 --name consul bitnami/consul:latest
In order to load your own configuration files, you will have to make them available to the container. You can do it doing the following:
- Mounting a volume with your custom configuration
- Adding custom configuration via environment variable.
By default, the configuration of HashiCorp Consul is written to /opt/bitnami/consul/consul.json
file and persisted with the following content:
{
"datacenter":"dc1",
"domain":"consul",
"data_dir":"/opt/bitnami/consul/data",
"pid_file":"/opt/bitnami/consul/tmp/consul.pid",
"server":true,
"ui":true,
"bootstrap_expect":1,
"addresses": {
"http":"0.0.0.0"
},
"retry_join": ["127.0.0.1"],
"ports": {
"http":8500,
"dns":8600,
"serf_lan":8301,
"server":8300
},
"serf_lan":"0.0.0.0"
}
Configuration can be added by passing the configuration in JSON format via the environment variable CONSUL_LOCAL_CONFIG
. Then consul will write a local.json
file in the HashiCorp Consul configuration directory. HashiCorp Consul will load all files within the configuration directory in alphabetical order, so ones with starting with higher letters will prevail.
$ docker run -d -e CONSUL_LOCAL_CONFIG='{
"datacenter":"us_west",
"server":true,
"enable_debug":true
}' \
--name consul bitnami/consul:latest
Check the [Persisting your data](# Persisting your application) section to add custom volumes to the HashiCorp Consul container
Specifies the secret key to use for encryption of HashiCorp Consul network traffic. This key must be 16-bytes that are Base64-encoded. The easiest way to create an encryption key is to use consul keygen
$ docker run --name consul bitnami/consul:latest consul keygen
This command will generate a keygen, that you can add to your Dockerfile, docker-compose or pass it via command line:
$ docker run -e CONSUL_GOSSIP_ENCRYPTION_KEY=YOUR_GENERATED_KEY --name consul bitnami/consul:latest
consul:
image: bitnami/consul:latest
volumes:
- '/local/path/to/your/confDir:/opt/bitnami/consul/conf'
The container has a HashiCorp Consul configuration directory set up at /consul/config and the agent will load any configuration files placed here by binding a volume or by composing a new image and adding files. Alternatively, configuration can be added by passing the configuration JSON via environment variable CONSUL_LOCAL_CONFIG. If this is bind mounted then ownership will be changed to the consul user when the container starts.
The Bitnami consul Docker image sends the container logs to the stdout
. To view the logs:
$ docker logs consul
or using Docker Compose:
$ docker-compose logs consul
You can configure the containers logging driver using the --log-driver
option if you wish to consume the container logs differently. In the default configuration docker uses the json-file
driver.
Bitnami provides up-to-date versions of consul, including security patches, soon after they are made upstream. We recommend that you follow these steps to upgrade your container.
$ docker pull bitnami/consul:latest
or if you're using Docker Compose, update the value of the image property to
bitnami/consul:latest
.
Stop the currently running container using the command
$ docker stop consul
or using Docker Compose:
$ docker-compose stop consul
Next, take a snapshot of the persistent volume /path/to/consul-persistence
using:
$ rsync -a /path/to/consul-persistence /path/to/consul-persistence.bkp.$(date +%Y%m%d-%H.%M.%S)
You can use this snapshot to restore the database state should the upgrade fail.
$ docker rm -v consul
or using Docker Compose:
$ docker-compose rm -v consul
Re-create your container from the new image, restoring your backup if necessary.
$ docker run --name consul bitnami/consul:latest
or using Docker Compose:
$ docker-compose up consul
We'd love for you to contribute to this container. You can request new features by creating an issue, or submit a pull request with your contribution.
If you encountered a problem running this container, you can file an issue. For us to provide better support, be sure to include the following information in your issue:
- Host OS and version
- Docker version (
docker version
) - Output of
docker info
- Version of this container (
echo $BITNAMI_IMAGE_VERSION
inside the container) - The command you used to run the container, and any relevant output you saw (masking any sensitive information)
Copyright 2018 Bitnami
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.