community.general.consul – Add, modify & delete services within a consul cluster.
Note
This plugin is part of the community.general collection (version 3.8.3).
You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible
package.
It is not included in ansible-core
.
To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list
.
To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install community.general
.
To use it in a playbook, specify: community.general.consul
.
Synopsis
Registers services and checks for an agent with a consul cluster. A service is some process running on the agent node that should be advertised by consul’s discovery mechanism. It may optionally supply a check definition, a periodic service test to notify the consul cluster of service’s health.
Checks may also be registered per node e.g. disk usage, or cpu usage and notify the health of the entire node to the cluster. Service level checks do not require a check name or id as these are derived by Consul from the Service name and id respectively by appending ‘service:’ Node level checks require a check_name and optionally a check_id.
Currently, there is no complete way to retrieve the script, interval or ttl metadata for a registered check. Without this metadata it is not possible to tell if the data supplied with ansible represents a change to a check. As a result this does not attempt to determine changes and will always report a changed occurred. An API method is planned to supply this metadata so at that stage change management will be added.
See http://consul.io for more details.
Requirements
The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.
python-consul
requests
Parameters
Parameter |
Comments |
---|---|
an ID for the service check. If state=absent, defaults to check_name. Ignored if part of a service definition. |
|
a name for the service check. Required if standalone, ignored if part of service definition. |
|
host of the consul agent defaults to localhost Default: “localhost” |
|
checks can be registered with an HTTP endpoint. This means that consul will check that the http endpoint returns a successful HTTP status. interval must also be provided with this option. |
|
the interval at which the service check will be run. This is a number with a s or m suffix to signify the units of seconds or minutes e.g |
|
Notes to attach to check when registering it. |
|
the port on which the consul agent is running Default: 8500 |
|
the protocol scheme on which the consul agent is running Default: “http” |
|
the script/command that will be run periodically to check the health of the service. Scripts require interval and vice versa. |
|
the address to advertise that the service will be listening on. This value will be passed as the address parameter to Consul’s |
|
the ID for the service, must be unique per node. If state=absent, defaults to the service name if supplied. |
|
Unique name for the service on a node, must be unique per node, required if registering a service. May be omitted if registering a node level check |
|
the port on which the service is listening. Can optionally be supplied for registration of a service, i.e. if service_name or service_id is set |
|
register or deregister the consul service, defaults to present Choices:
|
|
tags that will be attached to the service registration. |
|
Checks can be registered with a TCP port. This means that consul will check if the connection attempt to that port is successful (that is, the port is currently accepting connections). The format is |
|
A custom HTTP check timeout. The consul default is 10 seconds. Similar to the interval this is a number with a |
|
the token key identifying an ACL rule set. May be required to register services. |
|
checks can be registered with a ttl instead of a script and interval this means that the service will check in with the agent before the ttl expires. If it doesn’t the check will be considered failed. Required if registering a check and the script an interval are missing Similar to the interval this is a number with a s or m suffix to signify the units of seconds or minutes e.g |
|
whether to verify the TLS certificate of the consul agent Choices:
|
Examples
- name: Register nginx service with the local consul agent
community.general.consul:
service_name: nginx
service_port: 80
- name: Register nginx service with curl check
community.general.consul:
service_name: nginx
service_port: 80
script: curl http://localhost
interval: 60s
- name: register nginx with a tcp check
community.general.consul:
service_name: nginx
service_port: 80
interval: 60s
tcp: localhost:80
- name: Register nginx with an http check
community.general.consul:
service_name: nginx
service_port: 80
interval: 60s
http: http://localhost:80/status
- name: Register external service nginx available at 10.1.5.23
community.general.consul:
service_name: nginx
service_port: 80
service_address: 10.1.5.23
- name: Register nginx with some service tags
community.general.consul:
service_name: nginx
service_port: 80
tags:
- prod
- webservers
- name: Remove nginx service
community.general.consul:
service_name: nginx
state: absent
- name: Register celery worker service
community.general.consul:
service_name: celery-worker
tags:
- prod
- worker
- name: Create a node level check to test disk usage
community.general.consul:
check_name: Disk usage
check_id: disk_usage
script: /opt/disk_usage.py
interval: 5m
- name: Register an http check against a service that's already registered
community.general.consul:
check_name: nginx-check2
check_id: nginx-check2
service_id: nginx
interval: 60s
http: http://localhost:80/morestatus
Authors
Steve Gargan (@sgargan)