--- layout: docs page_title: Upgrading to 1.6.9 description: >- Specific versions of Consul may have additional information about the upgrade process beyond the standard flow. --- # Upgrading to 1.6.9 ## Introduction This guide explains how to best upgrade a multi-datacenter Consul deployment that is using a version of Consul >= 1.2.4 and < 1.6.9 while maintaining replication. If you are on a version older than 1.2.4, please review our [Upgrading to 1.2.4](/docs/upgrading/instructions/upgrade-to-1-2-x) guide. Due to changes to the ACL system, an ACL token migration will need to be performed as part of this upgrade. The 1.6.x series is the last series that had support for legacy ACL tokens, so this migration _must_ happen before upgrading past the 1.6.x release series. Here is some documentation that may prove useful for reference during this upgrade process: - [ACL System in Legacy Mode](https://www.consul.io/docs/acl/acl-legacy) - You can find information about legacy configuration options and differences between modes here. - [Configuration](https://www.consul.io/docs/agent/options) - You can find more details around legacy ACL and new ACL configuration options here. Legacy ACL config options will be listed as deprecates as of 1.4.0. In this guide, we will be using an example with two datacenters (DCs) and will be referring to them as DC1 and DC2. DC1 will be the primary datacenter. ## Requirements - All Consul servers should be on a version of Consul >= 1.2.4 and < 1.6.9. ## Assumptions This guide makes the following assumptions: - You have at least two datacenters configured and have ACL replication enabled. If you are not using multiple datacenters, you can follow along and simply skip the instructions related to replication. - You have not already performed the ACL token migration. If you have, please skip all related steps. ## Considerations There are quite a number of changes between releases. Notable changes are called out in our [Specific Version Details](/docs/upgrading/upgrade-specific#consul-1-6-3) page. You can find more granular details in the full [changelog](https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md#124-november-27-2018). Looking through these changes prior to upgrading is highly recommended. Two very notable items are: - 1.6.2 introduced more strict JSON decoding. Invalid JSON that was previously ignored might result in errors now (e.g., `Connect: null` in service definitions). See [[GH#6680](https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/pull/6680)]. - 1.6.3 introduced the [http_max_conns_per_client](https://www.consul.io/docs/agent/options.html#http_max_conns_per_client) limit. This defaults to 200. Prior to this, connections per client were unbounded. [[GH#7159](https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/issues/7159)] ## Procedure **1.** Check the replication status of the primary datacenter (DC1) by issuing the following curl command from a consul server in that DC: ```shell curl -s -H "X-Consul-Token: $MASTER_TOKEN" localhost:8500/v1/acl/replication?pretty ``` You should receive output similar to this: ```json { "Enabled": false, "Running": false, "SourceDatacenter": "", "ReplicatedIndex": 0, "LastSuccess": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z", "LastError": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z" } ``` -> The primary datacenter (indicated by `acl_datacenter`) will always show as having replication disabled, so this is normal even if replication is happening. **2.** Check replication status in DC2 by issuing the following curl command from a consul server in that DC: ```shell curl -s -H "X-Consul-Token: $MASTER_TOKEN" localhost:8500/v1/acl/replication?pretty ``` You should receive output similar to this: ```json { "Enabled": true, "Running": true, "SourceDatacenter": "dc1", "ReplicatedIndex": 9, "LastSuccess": "2020-09-10T21:16:15Z", "LastError": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z" } ``` **3.** Upgrade DC2 agents to version 1.6.9 by following our [General Upgrade Process](/docs/upgrading/instructions/general-process). _**Leave all DC1 agents at 1.2.4.**_ You should start observing log messages like this after that: ```log 2020/09/08 15:51:29 [DEBUG] acl: Cannot upgrade to new ACLs, servers in acl datacenter have not upgraded - found servers: true, mode: 3 2020/09/08 15:51:32 [ERR] consul: RPC failed to server 192.168.5.2:8300 in DC "dc1": rpc error making call: rpc: can't find service ConfigEntry.ListAll ``` !> **Warning:** _It is important to upgrade your primary datacenter **last**_ (the one specified in `acl_datacenter`). If you upgrade the primary datacenter first, it will break replication between your other datacenters. If you upgrade your other datacenters first, they will be in legacy mode and replication from your primary datacenter will continue working. **4.** Check that replication is still working in DC2. From a Consul server in DC2: ```shell curl -s -H "X-Consul-Token: $MASTER_TOKEN" localhost:8500/v1/acl/replication?pretty curl -s -H "X-Consul-Token: $MASTER_TOKEN" localhost:8500/v1/acl/list?pretty ``` Take note of the `ReplicatedIndex` value. Create a new file containing the payload for creating a new token named `test-ui-token.json` with the following contents: ```json { "Name": "UI Token", "Type": "client", "Rules": "key \"\" { policy = \"write\" } node \"\" { policy = \"read\" } service \"\" { policy = \"read\" }" } ``` From a Consul server in DC1, create a new token using that file: ```shell curl -X PUT -H "X-Consul-Token: $MASTER_TOKEN" -d @test-ui-token.json localhost:8500/v1/acl/create ``` From a Consul server in DC2: ```shell curl -s -H "X-Consul-Token: $MASTER_TOKEN" localhost:8500/v1/acl/replication?pretty curl -s -H "X-Consul-Token: $MASTER_TOKEN" localhost:8500/v1/acl/list?pretty ``` `ReplicatedIndex` should have incremented and you should find the new token listed. If you try using CLI ACL commands you will receive this error: ```log Failed to retrieve the token list: Unexpected response code: 500 (The ACL system is currently in legacy mode.) ``` This is because Consul in legacy mode. ACL CLI commands will not work and you have to hit the old ACL HTTP endpoints (which is why `curl` is being used above rather than the `consul` CLI client). **5.** Upgrade DC1 agents to version 1.6.9 by following our [General Upgrade Process](/docs/upgrading/instructions/general-process). Once this is complete, you should observe a log entry like this from your server agents: ```log 2020/09/10 22:11:49 [DEBUG] acl: transitioning out of legacy ACL mode ``` **6.** Confirm that replication is still working in DC2 by issuing the following curl command from a consul server in that DC: ```shell curl -s -H "X-Consul-Token: $MASTER_TOKEN" localhost:8500/v1/acl/replication?pretty ``` You should receive output similar to this: ```json { "Enabled": true, "Running": true, "SourceDatacenter": "dc1", "ReplicationType": "tokens", "ReplicatedIndex": 259, "ReplicatedRoleIndex": 1, "ReplicatedTokenIndex": 260, "LastSuccess": "2020-09-10T22:11:51Z", "LastError": "2020-09-10T22:11:43Z" } ``` **6.** Migrate your legacy ACL tokens to the new ACL system by following the instructions in our [ACL Token Migration guide](https://www.consul.io/docs/acl/acl-migrate-tokens). ~> This step _must_ be completed before upgrading to a version higher than 1.6.x. ## Post-Upgrade Configuration Changes When moving from a pre-1.4.0 version of Consul, you will find that several of the ACL-related configuration options were renamed. Backwards compatibility is maintained in the 1.6.x release series, so you are old config options will continue working after upgrading, but you will want to update those now to avoid issues when moving to newer versions. These are the changes you will need to make: - `acl_datacenter` is now named `primary_datacenter` (review our [docs](https://www.consul.io/docs/agent/options#primary_datacenter) for more info) - `acl_default_policy`, `acl_down_policy`, `acl_ttl`, `acl_*_token` and `enable_acl_replication` options are now specified like this (review our [docs](https://www.consul.io/docs/agent/options#acl) for more info): ```hcl acl { enabled = true/false default_policy = "..." down_policy = "..." policy_ttl = "..." role_ttl = "..." enable_token_replication = true/false enable_token_persistence = true/false tokens { master = "..." agent = "..." agent_master = "..." replication = "..." default = "..." } } ``` You can make sure your config changes are valid by copying your existing configuration files, making the changes, and then verifing them by using `consul validate $CONFIG_FILE1_PATH $CONFIG_FILE2_PATH ...`. Once your config is passing the validation check, replace your old config files with the new ones and slowly roll your cluster again one server at a time – leaving the leader agent for last in each datacenter.