Book Image

Simplifying Service Management with Consul

By : Robert E. Jackson
Book Image

Simplifying Service Management with Consul

By: Robert E. Jackson

Overview of this book

Within the elastic and dynamic nature of cloud computing, efficient and accurate service discovery provides the cornerstone for all communications. HashiCorp Consul facilitates this service discovery efficiently and securely, independent of the operating environment. This book will help you build a solid understanding of both the concepts and applications of HashiCorp Consul. You'll begin by finding out what you can do with Consul, focusing on the conceptual views of configuration samples along with Terraform code to expedite lab environment and hands-on experimentation, which will enable you to apply Consul effectively in your everyday lives. As you advance, you'll learn how to set up your own Consul cluster and agents in a single datacenter or location and understand how Consul utilizes RAFT and GOSSIP protocols for communication. You'll also explore the practical applications of primary Consul use cases, including communication flows and configuration and code examples. With that knowledge, you'll extend Consul across datacenters to discuss the applicability of multiple regions, multiple clouds, and hybrid cloud environments. By the end of this Consul book, you will have the tools needed to create and operate your own Consul cluster and be able to facilitate your service discovery and communication.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
1
Section 1: Consul Use Cases and Architecture
6
Section 2: Use Cases Deep Dive

Summary

Well, I truly hope you enjoyed that chapter. We've seen how Consul is able to, in many real-world scenarios, scale to incredibly large numbers of nodes. We've seen how read replicas and, more importantly, the use of Autopilot enables us to scale our server clusters to support networks with tens of thousands of nodes. I believe I've even heard recently of a company running Consul in production with over 100,000 nodes! Centralizing the operation for all services on a system that large can be challenging for sure, so enabling namespaces not only helps scale the application usage within Consul but also the dependency on humans to operate the system as it grows. Finally, we've looked at federating our Consul clusters in a couple of ways to help span our service availability across data centers. As I've said since the beginning, Consul enables communication across components and services. Now those communication paths are no longer bound by scale or geography...