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docs Service Definition docs-agent-services One of the main goals of service discovery is to provide a catalog of available services. To that end, the agent provides a simple service definition format to declare the availability of a service and to potentially associate it with a health check. A health check is considered to be application level if it associated with a service. A service is defined in a configuration file or added at runtime over the HTTP interface.

Services

One of the main goals of service discovery is to provide a catalog of available services. To that end, the agent provides a simple service definition format to declare the availability of a service and to potentially associate it with a health check. A health check is considered to be application level if it associated with a service. A service is defined in a configuration file or added at runtime over the HTTP interface.

Service Definition

A service definition that is a script looks like:

{
  "service": {
    "name": "redis",
    "tags": ["master"],
    "address": "127.0.0.1",
    "port": 8000,
    "checks": [
      {
        "script": "/usr/local/bin/check_redis.py",
        "interval": "10s"
      }
    ]
  }
}

A service definition must include a name and may optionally provide an id, tags, address, port, and check. The id is set to the name if not provided. It is required that all services have a unique ID per node, so if names might conflict then unique IDs should be provided.

The tags property is a list of values that are opaque to Consul but can be used to distinguish between "master" or "slave" nodes, different versions, or any other service level labels.

The address field can be used to specify a service-specific IP address. By default, the IP address of the agent is used, and this does not need to be provided. The port field can be used as well to make a service-oriented architecture simpler to configure; this way, the address and port of a service can be discovered.

A service can have an associated health check. This is a powerful feature as it allows a web balancer to gracefully remove failing nodes, a database to replace a failed slave, etc. The health check is strongly integrated in the DNS interface as well. If a service is failing its health check or a node has any failing system-level check, the DNS interface will omit that node from any service query.

The check must be of the script, HTTP, or TTL type. If it is a script type, script and interval must be provided. If it is a HTTP type, http and interval must be provided. If it is a TTL type, then only ttl must be provided. The check name is automatically generated as service:<service-id>. If there are multiple service checks registered, the ID will be generated as service:<service-id>:<num> where <num> is an incrementing number starting from 1.

Note: there is more information about checks here.

To configure a service, either provide it as a -config-file option to the agent or place it inside the -config-dir of the agent. The file must end in the ".json" extension to be loaded by Consul. Check definitions can also be updated by sending a SIGHUP to the agent. Alternatively, the service can be registered dynamically using the HTTP API.

Multiple Service Definitions

Multiple services definitions can be provided at once using the services (plural) key in your configuration file.

{
  "services": [
    {
      "id": "red0",
      "name": "redis",
      "tags": [
        "master"
      ],
      "address": "127.0.0.1",
      "port": 6000,
      "checks": [
        {
          "script": "/bin/check_redis -p 6000",
          "interval": "5s",
          "ttl": "20s"
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "id": "red1",
      "name": "redis",
      "tags": [
        "delayed",
        "slave"
      ],
      "address": "127.0.0.1",
      "port": 7000,
      "checks": [
        {
          "script": "/bin/check_redis -p 7000",
          "interval": "30s",
          "ttl": "60s"
        }
      ]
    },
    ...
  ]
}