Join Kubernetes Clusters to external Consul Servers
If you have a Consul cluster already running, you can configure your Consul on Kubernetes installation to join this existing cluster.
The below values.yaml
file shows how to configure the Helm chart to install
Consul so that it joins an existing Consul server cluster.
The global.enabled
value first disables all chart components by default
so that each component is opt-in.
Next, configure externalServers
to point it to Consul servers.
The externalServers.hosts
value must be provided and should be set to a DNS, an IP,
or an exec=
string with a command returning Consul IPs. Please see this documentation
on how the exec=
string works.
Other values in the externalServers
section are optional. Please refer to
Helm Chart configuration for more details.
values.yaml
global: enabled: false externalServers: hosts: [<consul server DNS, IP or exec= string>]
With the introduction of Consul Dataplane, Consul installation on Kubernetes is simplified by removing the Consul Client agents.
This requires the Helm installation and rest of the consul-k8s components installed on Kubernetes to talk to Consul Servers directly on various ports.
Before starting the installation, ensure that the Consul Servers are configured to have the gRPC port enabled 8502/tcp
using the ports.grpc = 8502
configuration option.
Configuring TLS
Note: Consul on Kubernetes currently does not support external servers that require mutual authentication
for the HTTPS clients of the Consul servers, that is when servers have either
tls.defaults.verify_incoming
or tls.https.verify_incoming
set to true
.
As noted in the Security Model,
that setting isn't strictly necessary to support Consul's threat model as it is recommended that
all requests contain a valid ACL token.
If the Consul server has TLS enabled, you need to provide the CA certificate so that Consul on Kubernetes can communicate with the server. Save the certificate in a Kubernetes secret and then provide it in your Helm values, as demonstrated in the following example:
values.yaml
global: tls: enabled: true caCert: secretName: <CA certificate secret name> secretKey: <CA Certificate secret key>externalServers: enabled: true hosts: [<consul server DNS, IP or exec= string>]
If your HTTPS port is different from Consul's default 8501
, you must also set
externalServers.httpsPort
. If the Consul servers are not running TLS enabled, use this config to set the HTTP port the servers are configured with (default 8500
).
Configuring ACLs
If you are running external servers with ACLs enabled, there are a couple of ways to configure the Helm chart to help initialize ACL tokens for Consul clients and consul-k8s components for you.
Manually Bootstrapping ACLs
If you would like to call the ACL bootstrapping API yourself or if your cluster has already been bootstrapped with ACLs, you can provide the bootstrap token to the Helm chart. The Helm chart will then use this token to configure ACLs for Consul clients and any consul-k8s components you are enabling.
First, create a Kubernetes secret containing your bootstrap token:
kubectl create secret generic bootstrap-token --from-literal='token=<your bootstrap token>'
Then provide that secret to the Helm chart:
values.yaml
global: acls: manageSystemACLs: true bootstrapToken: secretName: bootstrap-token secretKey: token
The bootstrap token requires the following minimal permissions:
acl:write
operator:write
if enabling Consul namespacesagent:read
if using WAN federation over mesh gateways
Next, configure external servers. The Helm chart will use this configuration to talk to the Consul server's API
to create policies, tokens, and an auth method. If you are enabling Consul service mesh,
k8sAuthMethodHost
should be set to the address of your Kubernetes API server
so that the Consul servers can validate a Kubernetes service account token when using the Kubernetes auth method
with consul login
.
Note: If externalServers.k8sAuthMethodHost
is set and you are also using WAN federation
(global.federation.enabled
is set to true
), ensure that global.federation.k8sAuthMethodHost
is set to the same
value as externalServers.k8sAuthMethodHost
.
values.yaml
externalServers: enabled: true hosts: [<consul server DNS, IP or exec= string>] k8sAuthMethodHost: 'https://kubernetes.example.com:443'
Your resulting Helm configuration will end up looking similar to this:
values.yaml
global: enabled: false acls: manageSystemACLs: true bootstrapToken: secretName: bootstrap-token secretKey: tokenexternalServers: enabled: true hosts: [<consul server DNS, IP or exec= string>] k8sAuthMethodHost: 'https://kubernetes.example.com:443'
Bootstrapping ACLs via the Helm chart
If you would like the Helm chart to call the bootstrapping API and set the server tokens for you, then the steps are similar. The only difference is that you don't need to set the bootstrap token. The Helm chart will save the bootstrap token as a Kubernetes secret.
values.yaml
global: enabled: false acls: manageSystemACLs: trueexternalServers: enabled: true hosts: [<consul server DNS, IP or exec= string>] k8sAuthMethodHost: 'https://kubernetes.example.com:443'