--- layout: docs page_title: Service Mesh Debugging description: >- Use the `consul connect proxy` command to connect to services or masquerade as other services for development and debugging purposes. Example code demonstrates connecting to services that are part of the service mesh as listeners only. --- # Service Mesh Debugging It is often necessary to connect to a service for development or debugging. If a service only exposes a Connect listener, then we need a way to establish a mutual TLS connection to the service. The [`consul connect proxy` command](/commands/connect/proxy) can be used for this task on any machine with access to a Consul agent (local or remote). Restricting access to services only via Connect ensures that the only way to connect to a service is through valid authorization of the [intentions](/docs/connect/intentions). This can extend to developers and operators, too. ## Connecting to Connect-only Services As an example, let's assume that we have a PostgreSQL database running that we want to connect to via `psql`, but the only non-loopback listener is via Connect. Let's also assume that we have an ACL token to identify as `operator-mitchellh`. We can start a local proxy: ```shell-session $ consul connect proxy \ -service operator-mitchellh \ -upstream postgresql:8181 ``` This works because the source `-service` does not need to be registered in the local Consul catalog. However, to retrieve a valid identifying certificate, the ACL token must have `service:write` permissions. This can be used as a sort of "debug service" to represent people, too. In the example above, the proxy is identifying as `operator-mitchellh`. With the proxy running, we can now use `psql` like normal: ```shell-session $ psql --host=127.0.0.1 --port=8181 --username=mitchellh mydb > ``` This `psql` session is now happening through our local proxy via an authorized mutual TLS connection to the PostgreSQL service in our Consul catalog. ### Masquerading as a Service You can also easily masquerade as any source service by setting the `-service` value to any service. Note that the proper ACL permissions are required to perform this task. For example, if you have an ACL token that allows `service:write` for `web` and you want to connect to the `postgresql` service as "web", you can start a proxy like so: ```shell-session $ consul connect proxy \ -service web \ -upstream postgresql:8181 ```