open-consul/website/pages/docs/upgrading/instructions/upgrade-to-1-8-x.mdx

120 lines
3.5 KiB
Plaintext

---
layout: docs
page_title: Upgrading to 1.8.4
sidebar_title: Upgrading to 1.8.4
description: >-
Specific versions of Consul may have additional information about the upgrade
process beyond the standard flow.
---
# Upgrading to 1.8.4
## Introduction
This guide explains how to best upgrade a multi-datacenter Consul deployment that's using
a version of Consul >= 1.6.9 and < 1.8.4 while maintaining replication. If you're on a version
older than 1.6.9, please follow the link for the version you're on from [here](/docs/upgrading/instructions).
As there weren't any major breaking changes, this upgrade will be fairly simple.
In this guide, we'll 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 >= 1.6.9 and < 1.8.4.
## Assumptions
This guides makes the following assumptions:
- You have at least two datacenters configured and have ACL replication enabled. If you're
not using multiple datacenters, you can follow along and simply skip the instructions related
to replication.
## Considerations
There aren't too many major changes that might cause issues upgrading from 1.6.9, but notable changes
are called out in our [Specific Version Details](/docs/upgrading/upgrade-specific#consul-1-8-0)
page. You can find more granular details in the full [changelog](https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md#183-august-12-2020).
Looking through these changes prior to upgrading is highly recommended.
## Procedure
**1.** Check replication status in DC1 by running 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 see output that looks like this:
```json
{
"Enabled": false,
"Running": false,
"SourceDatacenter": "",
"ReplicationType": "",
"ReplicatedIndex": 0,
"ReplicatedRoleIndex": 0,
"ReplicatedTokenIndex": 0,
"LastSuccess": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z",
"LastError": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z"
}
```
-> The primary datacenter (indicated by `primary_datacenter`) will always show as having replication
disabled, so this is normal even if replication is happening.
**2.** Check replication status in DC2 by running 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 see output that looks like this:
```json
{
"Enabled": true,
"Running": true,
"SourceDatacenter": "dc1",
"ReplicationType": "tokens",
"ReplicatedIndex": 672,
"ReplicatedRoleIndex": 1,
"ReplicatedTokenIndex": 677,
"LastSuccess": "2020-09-14T17:06:07Z",
"LastError": "2020-09-14T16:53:22Z"
}
```
**3.** Upgrade the Consul agents in all DCs to version 1.8.4 by following our [General Upgrade Process](/docs/upgrading/instructions/general-process).
**4.** Confirm that replication is still working in DC2 by running 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 see output that looks like this:
```json
{
"Enabled": true,
"Running": true,
"SourceDatacenter": "dc1",
"ReplicationType": "tokens",
"ReplicatedIndex": 672,
"ReplicatedRoleIndex": 1,
"ReplicatedTokenIndex": 677,
"LastSuccess": "2020-09-14T17:15:16Z",
"LastError": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z"
}
```
## Post-Upgrade Configuration Changes
No configuration changes are required for this upgrade.