open-consul/website/source/intro/vs/serf.html.markdown
2014-04-11 12:03:23 -07:00

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intro Consul vs. Serf vs-other-serf

Consul vs. Serf

Serf is a service discovery and orchestration tool and is the only tool discussed so far that is built on an eventually consistent gossip model, with no centralized servers. It provides a number of features, including group membership, failure detection, event broadcasts and a query mechanism. However, Serf does not provide any high-level features such as service discovery, health checking or key/value storage.

Consul is a complete system providing all of those features. In fact, the internal gossip protocol used within Consul, is powered by the Serf library. Consul leverages the membership and failure detection features, and builds upon them.

The health checking provided by Serf is very low level, and only indicates if the agent is alive. Consul extends this to provide a rich health checking system, that handles liveness, in addition to arbitrary host and service-level checks. Health checks are integrated with a central catalog that operators can easily query to gain insight into the cluster.

The membership provided by Serf is at a node level, while Consul focuses on the service level abstraction, with a single node to multiple service model. This can be simulated in Serf using tags, but it is much more limited, and does not provide useful query interfaces. Consul also makes use of a strongly consistent Catalog, while Serf is only eventually consistent.

In addition to the service level abstraction and improved health checking, Consul provides a key/value store and support for multiple datacenters. Serf can run across the WAN but with degraded performance. Consul makes use of multiple gossip pools, so that the performance of Serf over a LAN can be retained while still using it over a WAN for linking together multiple datacenters.

Consul is opinionated in its usage, while Serf is a more flexible and general purpose tool. Consul uses a CP architecture, favoring consistency over availability. Serf is a AP system, and sacrifices consistency for availability. This means Consul cannot operate if the central servers cannot form a quorum, while Serf will continue to function under almost all circumstances.