Serf
Serf is a decentralized solution for service discovery and orchestration
that is lightweight, highly available, and fault tolerant.
Serf runs on Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows. An efficient and lightweight gossip
protocol is used to communicate with other nodes. Serf can detect node failures
and notify the rest of the cluster. An event system is built on top of
Serf, letting you use Serf's gossip protocol to propagate events such
as deploys, configuration changes, etc. Serf is completely masterless
with no single point of failure.
Here are some example use cases of Serf, though there are many others:
- Discovering web servers and automatically adding them to a load balancer
- Organizing many memcached or redis nodes into a cluster, perhaps with
something like twemproxy or
maybe just configuring an application with the address of all the
nodes
- Triggering web deploys using the event system built on top of Serf
- Propagating changes to configuration to relevant nodes.
- Updating DNS records to reflect cluster changes as they occur.
- Much, much more.
Quick Start
First, download a pre-built Serf binary
for your operating system, compile Serf yourself, or install
using go get -u github.com/hashicorp/serf/cmd/serf
.
Next, let's start a couple Serf agents. Agents run until they're told to quit
and handle the communication of maintenance tasks of Serf. In a real Serf
setup, each node in your system will run one or more Serf agents (it can
run multiple agents if you're running multiple cluster types. e.g. web
servers vs. memcached servers).
Start each Serf agent in a separate terminal session so that we can see
the output of each. Start the first agent:
$ serf agent -node=foo -bind=127.0.0.1:5000 -rpc-addr=127.0.0.1:7373
...
Start the second agent in another terminal session (while the first is still
running):
$ serf agent -node=bar -bind=127.0.0.1:5001 -rpc-addr=127.0.0.1:7374
...
At this point two Serf agents are running independently but are still
unaware of each other. Let's now tell the first agent to join an existing
cluster (the second agent). When starting a Serf agent, you must join an
existing cluster by specifying at least one existing member. After this,
Serf gossips and the remainder of the cluster becomes aware of the join.
Run the following commands in a third terminal session.
$ serf join 127.0.0.1:5001
...
If you're watching your terminals, you should see both Serf agents
become aware of the join. You can prove it by running serf members
to see the members of the Serf cluster:
$ serf members
foo 127.0.0.1:5000 alive
bar 127.0.0.1:5001 alive
...
At this point, you can ctrl-C or force kill either Serf agent, and they'll
update their membership lists appropriately. If you ctrl-C a Serf agent,
it will gracefully leave by notifying the cluster of its intent to leave.
If you force kill an agent, it will eventually (usually within seconds)
be detected by another member of the cluster which will notify the
cluster of the node failure.
Documentation
Full, comprehensive documentation is viewable on the Serf website:
https://www.serf.io/docs
Developing Serf
If you wish to work on Serf itself, you'll first need Go
installed (version 1.7+ is required). Make sure you have Go properly
installed,
including setting up your GOPATH.
Next, clone this repository into $GOPATH/src/github.com/hashicorp/serf
and
then just type make
. In a few moments, you'll have a working serf
executable:
$ make
...
$ bin/serf
...
NOTE: make
will also place a copy of the executable under $GOPATH/bin/
Serf is first and foremost a library with a command-line interface, serf
. The
Serf library is independent of the command line agent, serf
. The serf
binary is located under cmd/serf
and can be installed stand alone by issuing
the command go get -u github.com/hashicorp/serf/cmd/serf
. Applications using
the Serf library should only need to include github.com/hashicorp/serf
.
Tests can be run 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.