--- layout: docs page_title: Installing Consul on AWS ECS using Terraform description: >- Install Consul Service Mesh on AWS ECS with Terraform (Elastic Container Service). --- # Installation with Terraform This topic describes how to use HashiCorp’s Terraform modules to launch your application in AWS ECS as part of Consul service mesh. If you do not use Terraform, refer to the [Manual Installation](/docs/ecs/manual-installation) page to install Consul on ECS without Terraform. This topic does not include instructions for creating all AWS resources necessary to install Consul, such as a VPC or the ECS cluster. Refer to the guides in the [Getting Started](/docs/ecs#getting-started) section for complete, runnable examples. ## Overview The following procedure describes the general workflow: 1. Create Terraform configuration files for the necessary components: * [ECS task definition](#create-the-task-definition): Use the HashiCorp Terraform modules to create the ECS task definition. * [ECS service](#ecs-service): Use the `aws_ecs_service` resource to create an ECS service that schedules service mesh tasks to run on ECS. 2. [Run Terraform](#running-terraform) to deploy the resources in AWS If you want to operate Consul with ACLs enabled (recommended), follow the instructions in the [Secure Configuration](/docs/ecs/terraform/secure-configuration) documentation. ACLs provide network security for production-grade deployments. ## Requirements * You should have some familiarity with using Terraform. Refer to the [Terraform documentation](https://www.terraform.io/docs) to learn about infrastructure as code and how to get started with Terraform. * You should also be familiar with AWS ECS before following these instructions. See [What is Amazon Elastic Container Service](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/Welcome.html) for details. * If you intend to [use the `gateway-task` module to deploy mesh gateways](#configure-the-gateway-task-module), all Consul server and client agents in all datacenters must have TLS and gossip encryption enabled (refer to [Encryption](/docs/security/encryption) for instructions). ## Create the task definition To run an application in ECS with Consul service mesh, you must create an ECS task definition. The task defintion includes your application container(s) and additional sidecar containers, such as the Consul agent container and the Envoy sidecar proxy container. Create a Terraform configuration file and include the `mesh-task` module. The module automatically adds the necessary sidecar containers. If you intend to peer the service mesh to multiple Consul datacenters or partitions, you can also include the `gateway-task` module. The `gateway-task` enables connectivity between datacenters across service meshes. ### Configure the mesh task module Create a Terraform configuration file (e.g., `mesh-task.tf`) and specify the `mesh-task` module in the `source` field. The [`mesh-task` module](https://registry.terraform.io/modules/hashicorp/consul-ecs/aws/latest/submodules/mesh-task) will automatically include the necessary sidecar containers. In the following example, the a Terraform configuration file called `mesh-task.tf` creates a task definition with an application container called `example-client-app`: ```hcl module "my_task" { source = "hashicorp/consul-ecs/aws//modules/mesh-task" version = "" family = "my_task" container_definitions = [ { name = "example-client-app" image = "docker.io/org/my_task:v0.0.1" essential = true portMappings = [ { containerPort = 9090 hostPort = 9090 protocol = "tcp" } ] cpu = 0 mountPoints = [] volumesFrom = [] } ] port = 9090 retry_join = ["
"] consul_datacenter = "" } ``` The following fields are required. Refer to the [module reference documentation](https://registry.terraform.io/modules/hashicorp/consul-ecs/aws/latest/submodules/mesh-task?tab=inputs) for a complete reference. | Input Variable | Type | Description | | ----------------------- | -------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `source` | string | Must be set to the source location of the `mesh-task` module, `hashicorp/consul-ecs/aws//modules/mesh-task`. | | `version` | string | Must be set to the version of the `mesh-task` module. | | `family` | string | The [ECS task definition family](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task_definition_parameters.html#family). The family is also used as the Consul service name by default. | | `container_definitions` | list | This is the list of [container definitions](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task_definition_parameters.html#container_definitions) for the task definition. This is where you include your application containers. | | `essential` | boolean | Must be `true` to ensure the health of your application container affects the health status of the task. | | `port` | integer | The port that your application listens on, if any. If your application does not listen on a port, set `outbound_only = true`. | | `retry_join` | list | This is the [`retry_join`](/docs/agent/options#_retry_join) option for the Consul agent, which specifies the locations of your Consul servers. | ### Configure an ECS service for the mesh task module [ECS services](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs_services.html) are one of the most common ways to start tasks using a task definition. To define an ECS service, reference the `mesh-task` module's `task_definition_arn` output value in your `aws_ecs_service` resource. The following example shows how to include the service in the `mesh-task.tf` file. ```hcl module "my_task" { source = "hashicorp/consul-ecs/aws//modules/mesh-task" ... } resource "aws_ecs_service" "my_task" { name = "my_task_service" task_definition = module.my_task.task_definition_arn launch_type = "FARGATE" propagate_tags = "TASK_DEFINITION" ... } ``` This is a partial configuration to highlight some important fields. See the [`aws_ecs_service`](https://registry.terraform.io/providers/hashicorp/aws/latest/docs/resources/ecs_service) documentation for a complete reference. | Input Variable | Type | Description | | ----------------- | ------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `name` | string | The name of the ECS service. This is required by AWS but is not used by Consul service mesh. | | `task_definition` | string | The task definition used to start tasks. Set this to the task definition ARN returned by the `mesh-task` module. | | `launch_type` | string | The launch type. Consul on ECS supports the `FARGATE` and `EC2` launch types. | | `propagate_tags` | string | This must be set to `TASK_DEFINITION` so that tags added by `mesh-task` to the task definition are copied to tasks. | After including the ECS service in your Terraform configuration, run `terraform apply` from your project directory to create the ECS service resource. The ECS service will soon start your application in a task. The task will automatically register itself into the Consul service catalog during startup. -> **NOTE:** If your tasks run in a public subnet, they must have `assign_public_ip = true` in their [`network_configuration`](https://registry.terraform.io/providers/hashicorp/aws/latest/docs/resources/ecs_service#network_configuration) block so that ECS can pull the Docker images. ### Configure the gateway task module Add the `gateway-task` to your Terraform configuration if you want to deploy a mesh gateway. Mesh gateways enable service to service communication across the WAN, as well as federate service mesh traffic across Consul admin partitions and Consul datacenters over the WAN. Refer to the following documentation to learn more about mesh gateways: * [WAN Federation via Mesh Gateways](/docs/connect/gateways/mesh-gateway/wan-federation-via-mesh-gateways) * [Service-to-service Traffic Across Datacenters](/docs/connect/gateways/mesh-gateway/service-to-service-traffic-datacenters). You must add and configure a `gateway-task` for each Consul datacenter in your network. You must also enable TLS and gossip encryption on all server and client agents in all data centers per the [Requirements](#requirements). Mesh gateways operate by sniffing and extracting the server name indication (SNI) header from the service mesh session and routing the connection to the appropriate destination based on the server name requested. The module creates an ECS service and a task definition that includes the following containers: * Consul client * Envoy gateway proxy * Mesh init You will need to provide inputs for the artifacts created by the `gateway-task` module. The following example defines a mesh gateway task called `my-gateway` in a file called `mesh-gateway.tf`: ```hcl module "my_mesh_gateway" { source = "hashicorp/consul-ecs/aws//modules/gateway-task" version = "" kind = "mesh-gateway" family = "my-gateway" ecs_cluster_arn = "" subnets = [""] retry_join = ["
"] consul_server_ca_cert_arn = "" gossip_key_secret_arn = "" } ``` The following fields are required. Refer to the [module reference documentation](https://registry.terraform.io/modules/hashicorp/consul-ecs/aws/latest/submodules/gateway-task?tab=inputs) for a complete reference. | Input variable | Type | Description | | --- | --- | --- | | `source` | string | Specifies the source location of the `gateway-task` module. Must be set to `hashicorp/consul-ecs/aws//modules/gateway-task`. | | `version` | string | Specifies the version of the `gateway-task` module. | | `kind` | string | Declares the kind of gateway to create. Must be set to `mesh-gateway` to create a mesh-gateway. | | `family` | string | Specifies the [ECS task definition family](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task_definition_parameters.html#family). The family is also used as the Consul service name by default. | | `ecs_cluster_arn` | string | Specifies the ARN of the ECS cluster where the mesh gateway task should be launched. | | `subnets` | list of strings | Specifies the subnet IDs where the task will be launched. | | `retry_join` | list of strings | Defines a set of arguments to pass to the Consul agent [`-retry-join`](/docs/agent/config/cli-flags#_retry_join) flag. The arguments specify locations of the Consul servers in the local datacenter that Consul client agents can connect to. | | `consul_server_ca_cert_arn` | string | Specifies the ARN of the Secrets Manager containing the Consul server CA certificate | | `gossip_key_secret_arn` | string | Specifies the ARN of the Secrets Manager containing the Consul's gossip encryption key. | Refer to the [gateway task configuration examples](#gateway-task-configuration-examples) for additional example configurations. #### ECS service The ECS service is created as part of the `gateway-task` module configuration. The service can run one or more instances of the gateway. The following table describes the inputs for configuring the ECS service in your Terraform configuration file. All inputs are required. Refer to the [example gateway task configuration](#example-gateway-task-configuration) for a fully-configured task definition. | Input variable | Type | Description | | --- | --- | --- | | `ecs_cluster_arn` | string | Specifies the ECS cluster where tasks should be launched. | | `launch_type` | string | Specifies the ECS service launch type. Can be either `fargate` or `ec2`. | | `desired_count` | integer | Specifies the number instances for the service to create. Defaults to `0`. | | `subnets` | string | Specifies the subnet IDs where the tasks will launch. | | `security_group_ids` | string | Specifies the security group IDs to assign to the task ENI. | | `assign_public_ip` | Boolean | Set to `true` to create a task accessible at a public IP address. Default is `false`.
If set to `true` and `wan_address` is not configured, the WAN address will be set to the public IP of the task. | | `load_balancer_target_group_arn` | string | Specifies the ARN of an existing load balancer target group. The load balancer target group allows ingress to the gateway task.
No additional load balancer configuration is necessary. Only NLBs and ALBs are supported. The container name and port will be automatically set based on other fields. | #### Mesh init The `mesh-init` container is a short-lived container that sets up the initial configurations for Consul and Envoy (refer to [Task Startup](/docs/ecs/architecture#task-startup) for additional information). The `gateway-task` module automatically configures the `mesh-init` container based on the inputs specified in the [task definition](#task-definition) and [ECS service](#ecs-service) configuration. #### Gateway task configuration examples The following examples illustrate how to configure the `gateway-task` for different use cases. ##### Ingress Mesh gateways need to be reachable over the WAN to route traffic between datacenters. Configure the following options in the `gateway-task` to enable ingress through the mesh gateway. | Option | Type | Description | | --- | --- | --- | | `lb_enabled` | Boolean | Set to `true` to automatically deploy and configure a network load balancer for ingress to the mesh gateway. | | `lb_vpc_id` | string | Specifies the VPC in which to launch the load balancer. | | `lb_subnets` | list of strings | Specifies one or more public subnets to associate with the load balancer. | ```hcl module "my_mesh_gateway" { ... lb_enabled = true lb_vpc_id = "" lb_subnets = [""] } ``` Alternatively, you can manually configure ingress to the mesh gateway and provide the `wan_address` and `wan_port` inputs to the `gateway-task` module. The `wan_port` field is optional. Port `8443` is used by default. ```hcl module "my_mesh_gateway" { ... wan_address = "" wan_port = } ``` Mesh gateways route L4 TCP connections and do not terminate mTLS sessions. If you manually configure [AWS Elastic Load Balancing](https://aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/) for ingress to a mesh gateway, you must use an AWS [Network Load Balancer](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/network/introduction.html) or a [Classic Load Balancer](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/introduction.html). #### ACLs Configure the following options in the `gateway-task` when ACLs are enabled. | Option | Type | Description | | --- | --- | --- | | `acl` | Boolean | Set to `true` if ACLs are enabled. | | `consul_http_addr` | string | Specifies the HTTP `address:port` of the Consul server. Required for the mesh gateway task to log into Consul via the IAM Auth Method to obtain its client and service tokens. | | `consul_https_ca_cert_arn` | string | Specifies ARN of the Secrets Manager secret that contains the certificate for the Consul HTTPS API. | ```hcl module "my_mesh_gateway" { ... acls = true consul_http_addr = "" consul_https_ca_cert_arn = "" } ``` #### WAN federation Configure the following options in the `gateway-task` to enable [WAN federation via mesh gateways](/docs/connect/gateways/mesh-gateway/wan-federation-via-mesh-gateways). | Option | Type | Description | | --- | --- | --- | | `consul_datacenter` | string | Specifies the name of the local Consul datacenter. | | `consul_primary_datacenter` | string | Specifies the name of the primary Consul datacenter. | | `enable_mesh_gateway_wan_federation` | Boolean | Set to `true` to enable WAN federation. | | `enable_acl_token_replication` | Boolean | Set to `true` to enable ACL token replication and allow the creation of local tokens secondary datacenters. | The following example shows how to configure the `gateway-task` module. ```hcl module "my_mesh_gateway" { ... consul_datacenter = "" consul_primary_datacenter = "" enable_mesh_gateway_wan_federation = true enable_acl_token_replication = true } ``` When federating Consul datacenters over the WAN with ACLs enabled, [ACL Token replication](/docs/security/acl/acl-federated-datacenters) must be enabled on all server and client agents in all datacenters. ## Run Terraform You will need to run Terraform to create the task definition. Save the Terraform configuration for the task definition to a file, such as `mesh-task.tf`. You should place this file in a directory alongside other Terraform configuration files for your project. The `mesh-task` module requires the AWS Terraform provider. The following example shows how to include and configure the AWS provider in a file called `provider.tf`. Refer to the [AWS Terraform provider](https://registry.terraform.io/providers/hashicorp/aws/latest/docs) documentation for complete configuration details. ```hcl terraform { required_providers { aws = { source = "hashicorp/aws" version = "" } } } provider "aws" { region = "" ... } ``` Additional AWS resources for your project can be included in additional Terraform configuration files in the same directory. The following example shows a basic project directory: ```shell-session $ ls mesh-task.tf provider.tf ... ``` Terraform should be run in your project directory as follows. * Run `terraform init` first to download dependencies, such as Terraform providers * Run `terraform apply` to have Terraform create AWS resources, such as the task definition from the `mesh-task` module. Terraform automatically reads all files in the current directory that have a `.tf` file extension. Refer to the [Terraform documentation](https://www.terraform.io/docs) for more information and Terraform best practices. ## Configure routes Now that your tasks are registered in the mesh, you're able to use the service mesh to route between them. In order to make calls through the service mesh, you must configure the sidecar proxy to listen on a different port for each upstream service your application needs to call. You then must modify your application to make requests to the sidecar proxy on that port. For example, if your application `web` makes calls to another application called `backend`, then you would first configure the `mesh-task` module's upstream(s): ```hcl module "web" { family = "web" upstreams = [ { destinationName = "backend" localBindPort = 8080 } ] } ``` | Input Variable | Type | Description | | ----------------- | ------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `destinationName` | string | The name of the upstream service, as it is registered in the Consul service catalog. | | `localBindPort` | integer | Requests to this port will be forwarded by the proxy to the upstream service. This must be an unused port, but does not need to match the upstream service port. | If you have multiple upstream services they each need to be listed here. Next, configure your application to make requests to `localhost:8080` when it wants to call the `backend` service. For example, if your service allows configuring the URL for `backend` via the `BACKEND_URL` environment variable, you would set: ```hcl module "web" { family = "web" upstreams = [ { destinationName = "backend" localBindPort = 8080 } ] container_definitions = [ { name = "web" environment = [ { name = "BACKEND_URL" value = "http://localhost:8080" } ] ... } ] ... } ``` ## Configure the bind address To ensure that your application only receives traffic through the service mesh, you must change the address that your application is listening on to only the loopback address. The loopback address is also called `localhost`, `lo`, and `127.0.0.1`. Binding to the loopback address allows the sidecar proxy running in the same task to only make requests within the service mesh. If your application is listening on all interfaces, e.g., `0.0.0.0`, then other applications can call it directly, bypassing its sidecar proxy. Changing the listening address is specific to the language and framework you're using in your application. Regardless of which language/framework you're using, it is a good practice to make the address configurable via environment variable. The following examples demonstrate how to bind the loopback address in golang and Django (Python): ```go s := &http.Server{ Addr: "127.0.0.1:8080", ... } log.Fatal(s.ListenAndServe()) ``` ```bash python manage.py runserver "127.0.0.1:8080" ``` ## Next steps - Follow the [Secure Configuration](/docs/ecs/terraform/secure-configuration) to get production-ready. - Now that your applications are running in the service mesh, read about other [Service Mesh features](/docs/connect). - View the [Architecture](/docs/ecs/architecture) documentation to understand what's going on under the hood.