Consul
Consul is a tool for managing and coordinating infrastructure. To do that
it provides several key features:
-
Service Discovery - Services can register themselves and to easily
discover other services via a DNS or HTTP interface.
-
Health Checking - Health Checking enables Consul to quickly alert
operators about any issues in a cluster. The integration with service
discovery prevents routing traffic to unhealthy hosts and enables service
level circuit breakers.
-
Key/Value Store - A flexible key/value store enables storing dynamic configuration
feature flagging, coordination, leader election and more. The simple HTTP
API makes it easy to use anywhere.
-
Multi-Datacenter - Consul is built to be datacenter aware, and can support
any number of regions without complex configuration.
Consul runs on Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows. It is recommended to run the
Consul servers on Linux however.
Quick Start
First, download a pre-built Consul binary
for your operating system or compile Consul yourself.
An extensive quick quick start is viewable on the Consul website:
http://www.consul.io/intro/getting-started/install.html
Documentation
Full, comprehensive documentation is viewable on the Consul website:
http://www.consul.io/docs
Developing Consul
If you wish to work on Consul itself, you'll first need Go
installed (version 1.2+ is required). Make sure you have Go properly installed,
including setting up your GOPATH.
Next, clone this repository into $GOPATH/src/github.com/hashicorp/consul
and
then just type make
. In a few moments, you'll have a working consul
executable:
$ make
...
$ bin/consul
...
note: make
will also place a copy of the binary in the first part of your $GOPATH
You can run tests by typing make test
.
If you make any changes to the code, run make format
in order to automatically
format the code according to Go standards.