138 lines
5.5 KiB
Markdown
138 lines
5.5 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "Anti-Entropy"
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sidebar_current: "docs-internals-anti-entropy"
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description: >
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This section details the process and use of anti-entropy in Consul.
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---
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# Anti-Entropy
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Consul uses an advanced method of maintaining service and health information.
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This page details how services and checks are registered, how the catalog is
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populated, and how health status information is updated as it changes.
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~> **Advanced Topic!** This page covers technical details of
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the internals of Consul. You don't need to know these details to effectively
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operate and use Consul. These details are documented here for those who wish
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to learn about them without having to go spelunking through the source code.
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### Components
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It is important to first understand the moving pieces involved in services and
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health checks: the [agent](#agent) and the [catalog](#catalog). These are
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described conceptually below to make anti-entropy easier to understand.
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<a name="agent"></a>
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#### Agent
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Each Consul agent maintains its own set of service and check registrations as
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well as health information. The agents are responsible for executing their own
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health checks and updating their local state.
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Services and checks within the context of an agent have a rich set of
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configuration options available. This is because the agent is responsible for
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generating information about its services and their health through the use of
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[health checks](/docs/agent/checks.html).
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<a name="catalog"></a>
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#### Catalog
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Consul's service discovery is backed by a service catalog. This catalog is
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formed by aggregating information submitted by the agents. The catalog maintains
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the high-level view of the cluster, including which services are available,
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which nodes run those services, health information, and more. The catalog is
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used to expose this information via the various interfaces Consul provides,
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including DNS and HTTP.
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Services and checks within the context of the catalog have a much more limited
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set of fields when compared with the agent. This is because the catalog is only
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responsible for recording and returning information *about* services, nodes, and
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health.
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The catalog is maintained only by server nodes. This is because the catalog is
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replicated via the [Raft log](/docs/internals/consensus.html) to provide a
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consolidated and consistent view of the cluster.
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<a name="anti-entropy"></a>
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### Anti-Entropy
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Entropy is the tendency of systems to become increasingly disordered. Consul's
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anti-entropy mechanisms are designed to counter this tendency, to keep the
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state of the cluster ordered even through failures of its components.
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Consul has a clear separation between the global service catalog and the agent
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local state as discussed above. The anti-entropy mechanism reconciles these two
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views of the world: anti-entropy is a syncronization of the local agent state and
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the catalog. For example, when a user registers a new service or check with the
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agent, the agent in turn notifies the catalog that this new check exists.
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Similarly, when a check is deleted from the agent, it is consequently removed from
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the catalog as well.
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Anti-entropy is also used to update availability information. As agents run
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their health checks, their status may change in which case their new status
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is synced to the catalog. Using this information, the catalog can respond
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intelligently to queries about its nodes and services based on their
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availability.
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During this synchronization, the catalog is also checked for correctness. If
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any services or checks exist in the catalog that the agent is not aware of, they
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will be automatically removed to make the catalog reflect the proper set of
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services and health information for that agent. Consul treats the state of the
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agent as authoritative; if there are any differences between the agent
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and catalog view, the agent local view will always be used.
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### Periodic Synchronization
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In addition to running when changes to the agent occur, anti-entropy is also a
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long-running process which periodically wakes up to sync service and check
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status to the catalog. This ensures that the catalog closely matches the agent's
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true state. This also allows Consul to re-populate the service catalog even in
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the case of complete data loss.
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To avoid saturation, the amount of time between periodic anti-entropy runs will
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vary based on cluster size. The table below defines the relationship between
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cluster size and sync interval:
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<table class="table table-bordered table-striped">
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<tr>
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<th>Cluster Size</th>
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<th>Periodic Sync Interval</th>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>1 - 128</td>
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<td>1 minute</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>129 - 256</td>
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<td>2 minutes</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>257 - 512</td>
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<td>3 minutes</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>513 - 1024</td>
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<td>4 minutes</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>...</td>
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<td>...</td>
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</tr>
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</table>
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The intervals above are approximate. Each Consul agent will choose a randomly
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staggered start time within the interval window to avoid a thundering herd.
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### Best-effort sync
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Anti-entropy can fail in a number of cases, including misconfiguration of the
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agent or its operating environment, I/O problems (full disk, filesystem
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permission, etc.), networking problems (agent cannot communicate with server),
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among others. Because of this, the agent attempts to sync in best-effort
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fashion.
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If an error is encountered during an anti-entropy run, the error is logged and
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the agent continues to run. The anti-entropy mechanism is run periodically to
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automatically recover from these types of transient failures.
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