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docs | Connect - Native Application Integration - Go | docs-connect-native-go | We provide a library that makes it drop-in simple to integrate Connect with most Go applications. For most Go applications, Connect can be natively integrated in just a single line of code excluding imports and struct initialization. |
Connect-Native Integration with Go
We provide a library that makes it drop-in simple to integrate Connect with most Go applications. This page shows examples of integrating this library for accepting or establishing Connect-based connections. For most Go applications, Connect can be natively integrated in just a single line of code excluding imports and struct initialization.
In addition to this, please read and understand the overview of Connect-Native integrations. In particular, after integrating applications with Connect, they must declare that they accept Connect-based connections via their service definitions.
Accepting Connections
Any server that supports TLS (HTTP, gRPC, net/rpc, etc.) can begin accepting Connect-based connections in just a few lines of code. For most existing applications, converting the server to accept Connect-based connections will require only a one-line change excluding imports and structure initialization.
The
Go library exposes a *tls.Config
that automatically communicates with
Consul to load certificates and authorize inbound connections during the
TLS handshake. This also automatically starts goroutines to update any
changing certs.
Example, followed by more details:
import(
"net/http"
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/api"
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/connect"
)
func main() {
// Create a Consul API client
client, _ := api.NewClient(api.DefaultConfig())
// Create an instance representing this service. "my-service" is the
// name of _this_ service. The service should be cleaned up via Close.
svc, _ := connect.NewService("my-service", client)
defer svc.Close()
// Creating an HTTP server that serves via Connect
server := &http.Server{
Addr: ":8080",
TLSConfig: svc.ServerTLSConfig(),
// ... other standard fields
}
// Serve!
server.ListenAndServerTLS("", "")
}
The first step is to create a Consul API client. This is almost always the default configuration with an ACL token set, since you want to communicate to the local agent. The default configuration will also read the ACL token from environment variables if set. The Go library will use this client to request certificates, authorize connections, and more.
Next, connect.NewService
is called to create a service structure representing
the currently running service. This structure maintains all the state
for accepting and establishing connections. An application should generally
create one service and reuse that one service for all servers and clients.
Finally, a standard *http.Server
is created. The magic line is the TLSConfig
value. This is set to a TLS configuration returned by the service structure.
This TLS configuration is configured to automatically load certificates
in the background, cache them, and authorize inbound connections. The service
structure automatically handles maintaining blocking queries to update certificates
in the background if they change.
Since the service returns a standard *tls.Config
, any server that supports
TLS can be configured. This includes gRPC, net/rpc, basic TCP, and more.
Another example is shown below with just a plain TLS listener:
import(
"crypto/tls"
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/api"
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/connect"
)
func main() {
// Create a Consul API client
client, _ := api.NewClient(api.DefaultConfig())
// Create an instance representing this service. "my-service" is the
// name of _this_ service. The service should be cleaned up via Close.
svc, _ := connect.NewService("my-service", client)
defer svc.Close()
// Creating an HTTP server that serves via Connect
listener, _ := tls.Listen("tcp", ":8080", svc.ServeTLSConfig())
defer listener.Close()
// Accept
go acceptLoop(listener)
}
HTTP Clients
For Go applications that need to Connect to HTTP-based upstream dependencies,
the Go library can construct an *http.Client
that automatically establishes
Connect-based connections as long as Consul-based service discovery is used.
Example, followed by more details:
import(
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/api"
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/connect"
)
func main() {
// Create a Consul API client
client, _ := api.NewClient(api.DefaultConfig())
// Create an instance representing this service. "my-service" is the
// name of _this_ service. The service should be cleaned up via Close.
svc, _ := connect.NewService("my-service", client)
defer svc.Close()
// Get an HTTP client
httpClient := svc.HTTPClient()
// Perform a request, then use the standard response
resp, _ := httpClient.Get("https://userinfo.service.consul/user/mitchellh")
}
The first step is to create a Consul API client and service. These are the same steps as accepting connections and are explained in detail in the section above. If your application is both a client and server, both the API client and service structure can be shared and reused.
Next, we call svc.HTTPClient()
to return a specially configured
*http.Client
. This client will automatically established Connect-based
connections using Consul service discovery.
Finally, we perform an HTTP GET
request to a hypothetical userinfo service.
The HTTP client configuration automatically sends the correct client
certificate, verifies the server certificate, and manages background
goroutines for updating our certificates as necessary.
-> Important: The HTTP client requires the hostname is a Consul
DNS name. Static IP addresses and external DNS cannot be used with the
HTTP client. For these values, please use svc.Dial
directly.
If the application already uses a manually constructed *http.Client
,
the svc.HTTPDialTLS
function can be used to configure the
http.Transport.DialTLS
field to achieve equivalent behavior.
Raw TLS Connection
For a raw net.Conn
TLS connection, the svc.Dial
function can be used.
This will establish a connection to the desired service via Connect and
return the net.Conn
. This connection can then be used as desired.
Example:
import(
"context"
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/api"
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/connect"
)
func main() {
// Create a Consul API client
client, _ := api.NewClient(api.DefaultConfig())
// Create an instance representing this service. "my-service" is the
// name of _this_ service. The service should be cleaned up via Close.
svc, _ := connect.NewService("my-service", client)
defer svc.Close()
// Connect to the "userinfo" Consul service.
conn, _ := svc.Dial(context.Background(), &connect.ConsulResolver{
Client: client,
Name: "userinfo",
})
}
```
This uses a familiar `Dial`-like function to establish raw `net.Conn` values.
The second parameter to dial is an implementation of the `connect.Resolver`
interface. The example above uses the `*connect.ConsulResolver` implementation
to perform Consul-based service discovery. This also automatically determines
the correct certificate metadata we expect the remote service to serve.
## Static Addresses, Custom Resolvers
In the raw TLS connection example, you see the use of a `connect.Resolver`
implementation. This interface can be implemented to perform address
resolution. This must return the address and also the URI SAN expected
in the TLS certificate served by the remote service.
The Go library provides two built-in resolvers:
* `*connect.StaticResolver` can be used for static addresses where no
service discovery is required. The expected cert URI SAN must be
manually specified.
* `*connect.ConsulResolver` which resolves services and prepared queries
via the Consul API. This also automatically determines the expected
cert URI SAN.