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In this guide you will use Consul to configure F5 BIG-IP nodes and server pools.
You will set up a basic F5 BIG-IP AS3 declaration that generates the load
balancer backend-server-pool configuration based on the available service
instances registered in Consul service discovery.
## Prerequisites
To complete this guide, you will need previous experience with F5 BIG-IP and
Consul. You can either manually deploy the necessary infrastructure, or use the
terraform demo code.
### Watch the Video - Optional
Consul's intetgration with F5 was demonstrated in a webinar. If you would prefer
to lear about the integration but aren't ready to try it out, you can [watch the
webinar recording
instead](https://www.hashicorp.com/resources/zero-touch-application-delivery-with-f5-big-ip-terraform-and-consul).
### Manually deploy your infrastructure
You should configure the following infrastructure.
- A single Consul datacenter with server and client nodes, and the configuration
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directory for Consul agents at `/etc/consul.d/`.
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- A running instance of the F5 BIG-IP platform. If you don’ t already have one
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you can use a [hosted AWS
instance](https://aws.amazon.com/marketplace/pp/B079C44MFH) for this guide.
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- The AS3 package version 3.7.0
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[installed](https://clouddocs.f5.com/products/extensions/f5-appsvcs-extension/latest/userguide/installation.html)
on your F5 BIG-IP platform.
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- Standard web server running on a node, listening on HTTP port 80. We will use
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NGINX in this guide.
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### Deploy a demo using Terraform - Optional
You can set up the prerequisites on your own, or use the terraform
configuration in [this
repository](https://github.com/hashicorp/f5-terraform-consul-sd-webinar) to set
up a testing environment.
Once your environment is set up, you'll be able to visit the F5 GUI at
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`<F5_IP>:8443/tmui/login.jsp` where `<F5_IP>` is the address provided in your
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Terraform output. Login with the username `admin` and the password from your
Terraform output.
### Verify your environment
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Check your environment to ensure you have a healthy Consul datacenter by
checking your datacenter members. You can do this by running the `consul members` command on the machine where Consul is running, or by accessing the
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Consul web UI at the IP address of your consul instances, on port 8500.
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```shell-session
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$ consul memberss
Node Address Status Type Build Protocol DC Segment
consul 10.0.0.100:8301 alive server 1.5.3 2 dc1 <all>
nginx 10.0.0.109:8301 alive client 1.5.3 2 dc1 <default>
```
In this sample environment we have one Consul server node, and one web server
node with a Consul client.
## Register a Web Service
To register the web service on one of your client nodes with Consul, create a
service definition in Consul's config directory `/etc/consul.d/` named
`nginx-service.json`. Paste in the following configuration, which includes a tcp
check for the web server so that Consul can monitor its health.
```json
{
"service": {
"name": "nginx",
"port": 80,
"checks": [
{
"id": "nginx",
"name": "nginx TCP Check",
"tcp": "localhost:80",
"interval": "5s",
"timeout": "1s"
}
]
}
}
```
Reload the client to read the new service definition.
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```shell-session
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$ consul reload
```
In a broswer window, visit the services page of the Consul web UI at
`<your-consul-ip>:8500/ui/dc1/services/nginx`.
![Consul UI with NGINX registered](/static/img/consul-f5-nginx.png 'Consul web
UI with a healthy NGINX service')
You should notice your instance of the nginx service listed and healthy.
## Apply an AS3 Declaration
Next you will configure BIG-IP to use Consul Service discovery with an AS3
declaration. You will use cURL to apply the declaration to the BIG-IP Instance.
First construct an authorization header to authenticate our API call with
BIG-IP. You will need to use a username and password for your instance. Below is
an example for username “admin”, and password “password”.
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```shell-session
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$ echo -n 'admin:password' | base64
YWRtaW46YWRtaW4=
```
Now use cURL to send the authorized declaration to the BIG-IP Instance. Use the
value you created above for your BIG-IP instance in the authorization header.
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Remember t o replace `<your-BIG-IP-mgmt-ip>` with the real IP address.
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```shell-session
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$ curl -X POST \
https://<your-BIG-IP-mgmt-ip>/mgmt/shared/appsvcs/declare \
-H 'authorization: Basic <your-authorization-header>' \
-d '{
"class": "ADC",
"schemaVersion": "3.7.0",
"id": "Consul_SD",
"controls": {
"class": "Controls",
"trace": true,
"logLevel": "debug"
},
"Consul_SD": {
"class": "Tenant",
"Nginx": {
"class": "Application",
"template": "http",
"serviceMain": {
"class": "Service_HTTP",
"virtualPort": 8080,
"virtualAddresses": [
"<your-BIG-IP-virtual-ip>"
],
"pool": "web_pool"
},
"web_pool": {
"class": "Pool",
"monitors": [
"http"
],
"members": [
{
"servicePort": 80,
"addressDiscovery": "consul",
"updateInterval": 5,
"uri": "http://<your-consul-ip>:8500/v1/catalog/service/nginx"
}
]
}
}
}
}
'
```
You should get a similar output to the following after you’ ve applied your
declaration.
```json
{
"results": [
{
"message": "success",
"lineCount": 26,
"code": 200,
"host": "localhost",
"tenant": "Consul_SD",
"runTime": 3939
}
],
"declaration": {
"class": "ADC",
"schemaVersion": "3.7.0",
"id": "Consul_SD",
"controls": {
"class": "Controls",
"trace": true,
"logLevel": "debug",
"archiveTimestamp": "2019-09-06T03:12:06.641Z"
},
"Consul_SD": {
"class": "Tenant",
"Nginx": {
"class": "Application",
"template": "http",
"serviceMain": {
"class": "Service_HTTP",
"virtualPort": 8080,
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"virtualAddresses": ["10.0.0.200"],
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"pool": "web_pool"
},
"web_pool": {
"class": "Pool",
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"monitors": ["http"],
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"members": [
{
"servicePort": 80,
"addressDiscovery": "consul",
"updateInterval": 5,
"uri": "http://10.0.0.100:8500/v1/catalog/service/nginx"
}
]
}
}
},
"updateMode": "selective"
}
}
```
The above declaration does the following:
- Creates a partition (tenant) named `Consul_SD`.
- Defines a virtual server named `serviceMain` in `Consul_SD` partition with:
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- A pool named web_pool monitored by the http health monitor.
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- NGINX Pool members autodiscovered via Consul's [catalog HTTP API
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endpoint](/api-docs/catalog#list-nodes-for-service).
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For the `virtualAddresses` make sure to substitute your BIG-IP Virtual
Server.
- A URI specific to your Consul environment for the scheme, host, and port of
your consul address discovery. This could be a single server, load balanced
endpoint, or co-located agent, depending on your requirements. Make sure to
replace the `uri` in your configuration with the IP of your Consul client.
You can find more information on Consul SD declarations in [F5’ s Consul service
discovery
documentation](https://clouddocs.f5.com/products/extensions/f5-appsvcs-extension/latest/declarations/discovery.html#service-discovery-using-hashicorp-consul)
You can read more about composing AS3 declarations in the [F5 documentation](https://clouddocs.f5.com/products/extensions/f5-appsvcs-extension/latest/userguide/composing-a-declaration.html). The Terraform provider for BIG-IP [also supports AS3 resources](https://www.terraform.io/docs/providers/bigip/r/bigip_as3.html).
## Verify BIG-IP Consul Communication
Use the `consul monitor` command on the consul agent specified in the AS3 URI to
verify that you are receiving catalog requests from the BIG-IP instance.
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```shell-session
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$ consul monitor -log-level=debug
2019/09/06 03:16:50 [DEBUG] http: Request GET /v1/catalog/service/nginx (103.796µs) from=10.0.0.200:29487
2019/09/06 03:16:55 [DEBUG] http: Request GET /v1/catalog/service/nginx (104.95µs) from=10.0.0.200:42079
2019/09/06 03:17:00 [DEBUG] http: Request GET /v1/catalog/service/nginx (98.652µs) from=10.0.0.200:45536
2019/09/06 03:17:05 [DEBUG] http: Request GET /v1/catalog/service/nginx (101.242µs) from=10.0.0.200:45940
```
Check that the interval matches the value you supplied in your AS3 declaration.
## Verify the BIG-IP Dynamic Pool
Check the network map of the BIG-IP instance to make sure that the NGINX
instances registered in Consul are also in your BIG-IP dynamic pool.
To check the network map, open a browser window and navigate to
`https://<your-big-IP-mgmt-ip>/tmui/tmui/locallb/network_map/app/?xui=false#!/?p=Consul_SD`.
Remember to replace the IP address.
![NGINX instances in BIG-IP](/static/img/consul-f5-partition.png 'NGINX
instances listed in the BIG-IP web graphical user interface')
You can read more about the network map in the [F5
documentation](https://support.f5.com/csp/article/K20448153#accessing%20map).
## Test the BIG-IP Virtual Server
Now that you have a healthy virtual service, you can use it to access your web
server.
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```shell-session
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$ curl <your-BIG-IP-virtual-ip>:8080
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Welcome to nginx!</title>
<style>
body {
width: 35em;
margin: 0 auto;
font-family: Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Welcome to nginx!</h1>
<p>If you see this page, the nginx web server is successfully installed and
working. Further configuration is required.</p>
<p>For online documentation and support please refer to
<a href="http://nginx.org/">nginx.org</a>.<br/>
Commercial support is available at
<a href="http://nginx.com/">nginx.com</a>.</p>
<p><em>Thank you for using nginx.</em></p>
</body>
</html>
```
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## Summary
The F5 BIG-IP AS3 service discovery integration with Consul queries Consul's
catalog on a regular, configurable basis to get updates about changes for a
given service, and adjusts the node pools dynamically without operator
intervention.
In this guide you configured an F5 BIG-IP instance to natively integrate with
Consul for service discovery. You were able to monitor dynamic node registration
for a web server pool member, and test it with a virtual server.
As a follow up, you can add or reemove web server nodes reegistered with Consul
and validate that the network map on the F5 BIG-IP updates automatically.