open-vault/website/source/docs/internals/high-availability.html.md

2.2 KiB

layout page_title sidebar_current description
docs High Availability docs-internals-ha Learn about the high availability design of Vault.

High Availability

Vault is primarily used in production environments to manage secrets. As a result, any downtime of the Vault service can affect downstream clients. Vault is designed to support a highly available deploy to ensure a machine or process failure is minimally disruptive.

~> Advanced Topic! This page covers technical details of Vault. You don't need to understand these details to effectively use Vault. The details are documented here for those who wish to learn about them without having to go spelunking through the source code. However, if you're an operator of Vault, we recommend learning about the architecture due to the importance of Vault in an environment.

Design Overview

The primary design goal in making Vault highly available (HA) was to minimize downtime and not horizontal scalability. Vault is typically bound by the IO limits of the storage backend rather than the compute requirements. This simplifies the HA approach and allows more complex coordination to be avoided.

Certain storage backends, such as Consul, provide additional coordination functions that enable Vault to run in an HA configuration. When supported by the backend, Vault will automatically run in HA mode without additional configuration.

When running in HA mode, Vault servers have two additional states they can be in: standby and active. For multiple Vault servers sharing a storage backend, only a single instance will be active at any time while all other instances are hot standbys.

The active server operates in a standard fashion and processes all requests. The standby servers do not process requests, and instead redirect to the active Vault. Meanwhile, if the active server is sealed, fails, or loses network connectivity then one of the standbys will take over and become the active instance.

It is important to note that only unsealed servers act as a standby. If a server is still in the sealed state, then it cannot act as a standby as it would be unable to serve any requests should the active server fail.