This project provides a convenient way to populate values from Consul
into the file system using the consul-template
daemon.
The daemon consul-template
queries a Consul or Vault
cluster and updates any number of specified templates on the file system. As an
added bonus, it can optionally run arbitrary commands when the update process
completes. Please see the examples folder for some scenarios where
this functionality might prove useful.
The documentation in this README corresponds to the master branch of Consul Template. It may contain unreleased features or different APIs than the most recently released version.
Please see the Git tag that corresponds to your version of Consul Template for the proper documentation.
-
Download a pre-compiled, released version from the Consul Template releases page.
-
Extract the binary using
unzip
ortar
. -
Move the binary into
$PATH
.
To compile from source, please see the instructions in the contributing section.
This short example assumes Consul is installed locally.
- Start a Consul cluster in dev mode:
$ consul agent -dev
- Author a template
in.tpl
to query the kv store:
{{ key "foo" }}
- Start Consul Template:
$ consul-template -template "in.tpl:out.txt" -once
- Write data to the key in Consul:
$ consul kv put foo bar
-
Observe Consul Template has written the file
out.txt
:$ cat out.txt
For more examples and use cases, please see the examples folder in this repository.
For the full list of options:
$ consul-template -h
The CLI interface supports all options in the configuration file and visa-versa. Here are a few examples of common integrations on the command line.
Render the template on disk at /tmp/template.ctmpl
to /tmp/result
:
$ consul-template \
-template "/tmp/template.ctmpl:/tmp/result"
Render multiple templates in the same process. The optional third argument to the template is a command that will execute each time the template changes.
$ consul-template \
-template "/tmp/nginx.ctmpl:/var/nginx/nginx.conf:service nginx restart" \
-template "/tmp/redis.ctmpl:/var/redis/redis.conf:service redis restart" \
-template "/tmp/haproxy.ctmpl:/var/haproxy/haproxy.conf"
Render a template using a custom Consul and Vault address:
$ consul-template \
-consul-addr "10.4.4.6:8500" \
-vault-addr "https://10.5.32.5:8200"
Render all templates and then spawn and monitor a child process as a supervisor:
$ consul-template \
-template "/tmp/in.ctmpl:/tmp/result" \
-exec "/sbin/my-server"
For more information on supervising, please see the Consul Template Exec Mode documentation.
Configuration files are written in the HashiCorp Configuration Language. By proxy, this means the configuration is also JSON compatible.
# This denotes the start of the configuration section for Consul. All values
# contained in this section pertain to Consul.
consul {
# This block specifies the basic authentication information to pass with the
# request. For more information on authentication, please see the Consul
# documentation.
auth {
enabled = true
username = "test"
password = "test"
}
# This is the address of the Consul agent. By default, this is
# 127.0.0.1:8500, which is the default bind and port for a local Consul
# agent. It is not recommended that you communicate directly with a Consul
# server, and instead communicate with the local Consul agent. There are many
# reasons for this, most importantly the Consul agent is able to multiplex
# connections to the Consul server and reduce the number of open HTTP
# connections. Additionally, it provides a "well-known" IP address for which
# clients can connect.
address = "127.0.0.1:8500"
# This is the ACL token to use when connecting to Consul. If you did not
# enable ACLs on your Consul cluster, you do not need to set this option.
#
# This option is also available via the environment variable CONSUL_TOKEN.
token = "abcd1234"
# This controls the retry behavior when an error is returned fro Consul.
# Consul Template is highly fault tolerant, meaning it does not exit in the
# face of failure. Instead, it uses exponential back-off and retry functions
# to wait for the cluster to become available, as is customary in distributed
# systems.
retry {
# This enabled retries. Retries are enabled by default, so this is
# redundant.
enabled = true
# This specifies the number of attempts to make before giving up. Each
# attempt adds the exponential backoff sleep time. Setting this to a
# negative number will implement an unlimited number of retries.
attempts = 5
# This is the base amount of time to sleep between retry attempts. Each
# retry sleeps for an exponent of 2 longer than this base. For 5 retries,
# the sleep times would be: 250ms, 500ms, 1s, 2s, then 4s.
backoff = "250ms"
}
# This block configures the SSL options for connecting to the Consul server.
ssl {
# This enables SSL. Specifying any option for SSL will also enable it.
enabled = true
# This enables SSL peer verification. The default value is "true", which
# will check the global CA chain to make sure the given certificates are
# valid. If you are using a self-signed certificate that you have not added
# to the CA chain, you may want to disable SSL verification. However, please
# understand this is a potential security vulnerability.
verify = false
# This is the path to the certificate to use to authenticate. If just a
# certificate is provided, it is assumed to contain both the certificate and
# the key to convert to an X509 certificate. If both the certificate and
# key are specified, Consul Template will automatically combine them into an
# X509 certificate for you.
cert = "/path/to/client/cert"
key = "/path/to/client/key"
# This is the path to the certificate authority to use as a CA. This is
# useful for self-signed certificates or for organizations using their own
# internal certificate authority.
ca_cert = "/path/to/ca"
# This is the path to a directory of PEM-encoded CA cert files. If both
# `ca_cert` and `ca_path` is specified, `ca_cert` is preferred.
ca_path = "path/to/certs/"
# This sets the SNI server name to use for validation.
server_name = "my-server.com"
}
}
# This is the signal to listen for to trigger a reload event. The default
# value is shown below. Setting this value to the empty string will cause CT
# to not listen for any reload signals.
reload_signal = "SIGHUP"
# This is the signal to listen for to trigger a core dump event. The default
# value is shown below. Setting this value to the empty string will cause CT
# to not listen for any core dump signals.
dump_signal = "SIGQUIT"
# This is the signal to listen for to trigger a graceful stop. The default
# value is shown below. Setting this value to the empty string will cause CT
# to not listen for any graceful stop signals.
kill_signal = "SIGINT"
# This is customization around the environment in which template commands are
# executed. See the "exec" block for more information on the specific
# configuration options.
env {
# ...
}
# This is the maximum interval to allow "stale" data. By default, only the
# Consul leader will respond to queries; any requests to a follower will
# forward to the leader. In large clusters with many requests, this is not as
# scalable, so this option allows any follower to respond to a query, so long
# as the last-replicated data is within these bounds. Higher values result in
# less cluster load, but are more likely to have outdated data.
max_stale = "10m"
# This is the log level. If you find a bug in Consul Template, please enable
# debug logs so we can help identify the issue. This is also available as a
# command line flag.
log_level = "warn"
# This is the path to store a PID file which will contain the process ID of the
# Consul Template process. This is useful if you plan to send custom signals
# to the process.
pid_file = "/path/to/pid"
# This is the quiescence timers; it defines the minimum and maximum amount of
# time to wait for the cluster to reach a consistent state before rendering a
# template. This is useful to enable in systems that have a lot of flapping,
# because it will reduce the the number of times a template is rendered.
wait {
min = "5s"
max = "10s"
}
# This denotes the start of the configuration section for Vault. All values
# contained in this section pertain to Vault.
vault {
# This is the address of the Vault leader. The protocol (http(s)) portion
# of the address is required.
address = "https:#vault.service.consul:8200"
# This is the token to use when communicating with the Vault server.
# Like other tools that integrate with Vault, Consul Template makes the
# assumption that you provide it with a Vault token; it does not have the
# incorporated logic to generate tokens via Vault's auth methods.
#
# This value can also be specified via the environment variable VAULT_TOKEN.
token = "abcd1234"
# This tells Consul Template that the provided token is actually a wrapped
# token that should be unwrapped using Vault's cubbyhole response wrapping
# before being used. Please see Vault's cubbyhole response wrapping
# documentation for more information.
unwrap_token = true
# This option tells Consul Template to automatically renew the Vault token
# given. If you are unfamiliar with Vault's architecture, Vault requires
# tokens be renewed at some regular interval or they will be revoked. Consul
# Template will automatically renew the token at half the lease duration of
# the token. The default value is true, but this option can be disabled if
# you want to renew the Vault token using an out-of-band process.
#
# Note that secrets specified in a template (using {{secret}} for example)
# are always renewed, even if this option is set to false. This option only
# applies to the top-level Vault token itself.
renew_token = true
# This section details the retry options for connecting to Vault. Please see
# the retry options in the Consul section for more information (they are the
# same).
retry {
# ...
}
# This section details the SSL options for connecting to the Vault server.
# Please see the SSL options in the Consul section for more information (they
# are the same).
ssl {
# ...
}
}
# This block defines the configuration for connecting to a syslog server for
# logging.
syslog {
# This enables syslog logging. Specifying any other option also enables
# syslog logging.
enabled = true
# This is the name of the syslog facility to log to.
facility = "LOCAL5"
}
# This block defines the configuration for de-duplication mode. Please see the
# de-duplication mode documentation later in the README for more information
# on how de-duplication mode operates.
deduplicate {
# This enables de-duplication mode. Specifying any other options also enables
# de-duplication mode.
enabled = true
# This is the prefix to the path in Consul's KV store where de-duplication
# templates will be pre-rendered and stored.
prefix = "consul-template/dedup/"
}
# This block defines the configuration for exec mode. Please see the exec mode
# documentation at the bottom of this README for more information on how exec
# mode operates and the caveats of this mode.
exec {
# This is the command to exec as a child process. There can be only one
# command per Consul Template process.
command = "/usr/bin/app"
# This is a random splay to wait before killing the command. The default
# value is 0 (no wait), but large clusters should consider setting a splay
# value to prevent all child processes from reloading at the same time when
# data changes occur. When this value is set to non-zero, Consul Template
# will wait a random period of time up to the splay value before reloading
# or killing the child process. This can be used to prevent the thundering
# herd problem on applications that do not gracefully reload.
splay = "5s"
env {
# This specifies if the child process should not inherit the parent
# process's environment. By default, the child will have full access to the
# environment variables of the parent. Setting this to true will send only
# the values specified in `custom_env` to the child process.
pristine = false
# This specifies additional custom environment variables in the form shown
# below to inject into the child's runtime environment. If a custom
# environment variable shares its name with a system environment variable,
# the custom environment variable takes precedence. Even if pristine,
# whitelist, or blacklist is specified, all values in this option
# are given to the child process.
custom = ["PATH=$PATH:/etc/myapp/bin"]
# This specifies a list of environment variables to exclusively include in
# the list of environment variables exposed to the child process. If
# specified, only those environment variables matching the given patterns
# are exposed to the child process. These strings are matched using Go's
# glob function, so wildcards are permitted.
whitelist = ["CONSUL_*"]
# This specifies a list of environment variables to exclusively prohibit in
# the list of environment variables exposed to the child process. If
# specified, any environment variables matching the given patterns will not
# be exposed to the child process, even if they are whitelisted. The values
# in this option take precedence over the values in the whitelist.
# These strings are matched using Go's glob function, so wildcards are
# permitted.
blacklist = ["VAULT_*"]
}
# This defines the signal that will be sent to the child process when a
# change occurs in a watched template. The signal will only be sent after the
# process is started, and the process will only be started after all
# dependent templates have been rendered at least once. The default value is
# nil, which tells Consul Template to stop the child process and spawn a new
# one instead of sending it a signal. This is useful for legacy applications
# or applications that cannot properly reload their configuration without a
# full reload.
reload_signal = ""
# This defines the signal sent to the child process when Consul Template is
# gracefully shutting down. The application should begin a graceful cleanup.
# If the application does not terminate before the `kill_timeout`, it will
# be terminated (effectively "kill -9"). The default value is "SIGTERM".
kill_signal = "SIGINT"
# This defines the amount of time to wait for the child process to gracefully
# terminate when Consul Template exits. After this specified time, the child
# process will be force-killed (effectively "kill -9"). The default value is
# "30s".
kill_timeout = "2s"
}
# This block defines the configuration for a template. Unlike other blocks,
# this block may be specified multiple times to configure multiple templates.
# It is also possible to configure templates via the CLI directly.
template {
# This is the source file on disk to use as the input template. This is often
# called the "Consul Template template". This option is required if not using
# the `contents` option.
source = "/path/on/disk/to/template.ctmpl"
# This is the destination path on disk where the source template will render.
# If the parent directories do not exist, Consul Template will attempt to
# create them.
destination = "/path/on/disk/where/template/will/render.txt"
# This option allows embedding the contents of a template in the configuration
# file rather then supplying the `source` path to the template file. This is
# useful for short templates. This option is mutually exclusive with the
# `source` option.
contents = "{{ keyOrDefault \"service/redis/maxconns@east-aws\" \"5\" }}"
# This is the optional command to run when the template is rendered. The
# command will only run if the resulting template changes. The command must
# return within 30s (configurable), and it must have a successful exit code.
# Consul Template is not a replacement for a process monitor or init system.
command = "restart service foo"
# This is the maximum amount of time to wait for the optional command to
# return. Default is 30s.
command_timeout = "60s"
# This is the permission to render the file. If this option is left
# unspecified, Consul Template will attempt to match the permissions of the
# file that already exists at the destination path. If no file exists at that
# path, the permissions are 0644.
perms = 0600
# This option backs up the previously rendered template at the destination
# path before writing a new one. It keeps exactly one backup. This option is
# useful for preventing accidental changes to the data without having a
# rollback strategy.
backup = true
# These are the delimiters to use in the template. The default is "{{" and
# "}}", but for some templates, it may be easier to use a different delimiter
# that does not conflict with the output file itself.
left_delimiter = "{{"
right_delimiter = "}}"
# This is the `minimum(:maximum)` to wait before rendering a new template to
# disk and triggering a command, separated by a colon (`:`). If the optional
# maximum value is omitted, it is assumed to be 4x the required minimum value.
# This is a numeric time with a unit suffix ("5s"). There is no default value.
# The wait value for a template takes precedence over any globally-configured
# wait.
wait {
min = "2s"
max = "10s"
}
}
Note that not all fields are required. If you are not retrieving secrets from Vault, you do not need to specify a Vault configuration section. Similarly, if you are not logging to syslog, you do not need to specify a syslog configuration.
For additional security, tokens may also be read from the environment using the
CONSUL_TOKEN
or VAULT_TOKEN
environment variables respectively. It is highly
recommended that you do not put your tokens in plain-text in a configuration
file.
Instruct Consul Template to use a configuration file with the -config
flag:
$ consul-template -config "/my/config.hcl"
This argument may be specified multiple times to load multiple configuration files. The right-most configuration takes the highest precedence. If the path to a directory is provided (as opposed to the path to a file), all of the files in the given directory will be merged in lexical order, recursively. Please note that symbolic links are not followed.
Commands specified on the CLI take precedence over a config file!
Consul Template parses files authored in the Go Template format. If you are not familiar with the syntax, please read Go's documentation and examples. In addition to the Go-provided template functions, Consul Template provides the following functions:
API functions interact with remote API calls, communicating with external services like Consul and Vault.
Query Consul for all datacenters in its catalog.
{{ datacenters }}
For example:
{{ range datacenters }}
{{ . }}{{ end }}
renders
dc1
dc2
Read and output the contents of a local file on disk. If the file cannot be read, an error will occur. When the file changes, Consul Template will pick up the change and re-render the template.
{{ file "<PATH>" }}
For example:
{{ file "/path/to/my/file" }}
renders
file contents
This does not process nested templates. See
executeTemplate
for a way to render nested templates.
Query Consul for the value at the given key path. If the key does not
exist, Consul Template will block rendering until the key is present. To avoid
blocking, use keyOrDefault
or keyExists
.
{{ key "<PATH>@<DATACENTER>" }}
The <DATACENTER>
attribute is optional; if omitted, the local datacenter is
used.
For example:
{{ key "service/redis/maxconns" }}
renders
15
Query Consul for the value at the given key path. If the key exists,
this will return true, false otherwise. Unlike key
, this function will not
block if the key does not exist. This is useful for controlling flow.
{{ keyExists "<PATH>@<DATACENTER>" }}
The <DATACENTER>
attribute is optional; if omitted, the local datacenter is
used.
For example:
{{ if keyExists "app/beta_active" }}
# ...
{{ else }}
# ...
{{ end }}
Query Consul for the value at the given key path. If the key does not
exist, the default value will be used instead. Unlike key
, this function will
not block if the key does not exist.
{{ keyOrDefault "<PATH>@<DATACENTER>" "<DEFAULT>" }}
The <DATACENTER>
attribute is optional; if omitted, the local datacenter is
used.
For example:
{{ keyOrDefault "service/redis/maxconns" "5" }}
renders
5
Note that Consul Template uses a multi-phase
execution. During the first phase of evaluation, Consul
Template will have no data from Consul and thus will always fall back to the
default value. Subsequent reads from Consul will pull in the real value from
Consul (if the key exists) on the next template pass. This is important because
it means that Consul Template will never "block" the rendering of a template due
to a missing key from a keyOrDefault
. Even if the key exists, if Consul has
not yet returned data for the key, the default value will be used instead.
Query Consul for all top-level kv pairs at the given key path.
{{ ls "<PATH>@<DATACENTER>" }}
The <DATACENTER>
attribute is optional; if omitted, the local datacenter is
used.
For example:
{{ range ls "service/redis" }}
{{ .Key }}:{{ .Value }}{{ end }}
renders
maxconns:15
minconns:5
Query Consul for a node in the catalog.
{{node "<NAME>@<DATACENTER>"}}
The <NAME>
attribute is optional; if omitted, the local agent node is used.
The <DATACENTER>
attribute is optional; if omitted, the local datacenter is
used.
For example:
{{ with node }}
{{ .Address }}{{ end }}
renders
10.5.2.6
To query a different node:
{{ with node "node1@dc2" }}
{{ .Address }}{{ end }}
renders
10.4.2.6
To access map data such as TaggedAddresses
or Meta
, use
Go's text/template map indexing.
Query Consul for all nodes in the catalog.
{{ nodes "@<DATACENTER>~<NEAR>" }}
The <DATACENTER>
attribute is optional; if omitted, the local datacenter is
used.
The <NEAR>
attribute is optional; if omitted, results are specified in lexical
order. If provided a node name, results are ordered by shortest round-trip time
to the provided node. If provided _agent
, results are ordered by shortest
round-trip time to the local agent.
For example:
{{ range nodes }}
{{ .Address }}{{ end }}
renders
10.4.2.13
10.46.2.5
To query a different data center and order by shortest trip time to ourselves:
{{ range nodes "@dc2~_agent" }}
{{ .Address }}{{ end }}
To access map data such as TaggedAddresses
or Meta
, use
Go's text/template map indexing.
Query Vault for the secret at the given path.
{{ secret "<PATH>" "<DATA>" }}
The <DATA>
attribute is optional; if omitted, the request will be a vault read
(HTTP GET) request. If provided, the request will be a vault write
(HTTP
PUT/POST) request.
For example:
{{ with secret "secret/passwords" }}
{{ .Data.wifi }}{{ end }}
renders
FORWARDSoneword
An example using write to generate PKI certificates:
{{ with secret "pki/issue/my-domain-dot-com" "common_name=foo.example.com" }}
{{ .Data.certificate }}{{ end }}
The parameters must be key=value
pairs, and each pair must be its own argument
to the function:
Please always consider the security implications of having the contents of a secret in plain-text on disk. If an attacker is able to get access to the file, they will have access to plain-text secrets.
Please note that Vault does not support blocking queries. As a result, Consul Template will not immediately reload in the event a secret is changed as it does with Consul's key-value store. Consul Template will fetch a new secret at half the lease duration of the original secret. For example, most items in Vault's generic secret backend have a default 30 day lease. This means Consul Template will renew the secret every 15 days. As such, it is recommended that a smaller lease duration be used when generating the initial secret to force Consul Template to renew more often.
Query Vault for the list of secrets at the given path. Not all endpoints support listing.
{{ secrets "<PATH>" }}
For example:
{{ range secrets "secret/" }}
{{ . }}{{ end }}
renders
bar
foo
zip
To iterate and list over every secret in the generic secret backend in Vault:
{{ range secrets "secret/" }}
{{ with secret (printf "secret/%s" .) }}{{ range $k, $v := .Data }}
{{ $k }}: {{ $v }}
{{ end }}{{ end }}{{ end }}
You should probably never do this.
Please also note that Vault does not support
blocking queries. To understand the implications, please read the note at the
end of the secret
function.
Query Consul for services based on their health.
{{ service "<TAG>.<NAME>@<DATACENTER>~<NEAR>|<FILTER>" }}
The <TAG>
attribute is optional; if omitted, all nodes will be queried.
The <DATACENTER>
attribute is optional; if omitted, the local datacenter is
used.
The <NEAR>
attribute is optional; if omitted, results are specified in lexical
order. If provided a node name, results are ordered by shortest round-trip time
to the provided node. If provided _agent
, results are ordered by shortest
round-trip time to the local agent.
The <FILTER>
attribute is optional; if omitted, only health services are
returned. Providing a filter allows for client-side filtering of services.
For example:
The example above is querying Consul for healthy "web" services, in the "east-aws" data center. The tag and data center attributes are optional. To query all nodes of the "web" service (regardless of tag) for the current data center:
{{ range service "web" }}
server {{ .Name }}{{ .Address }}:{{ .Port }}{{ end }}
renders the IP addresses of all healthy nodes with a logical service named "web":
server web01 10.5.2.45:2492
server web02 10.2.6.61:2904
To access map data such as NodeTaggedAddresses
or NodeMeta
, use
Go's text/template map indexing.
By default only healthy services are returned. To list all services, pass the "any" filter:
{{ service "web|any" }}
This will return all services registered to the agent, regardless of their status.
To filter services by a specific set of healths, specify a comma-separated list of health statuses:
{{ service "web|passing,warning" }}
This will returns services which are deemed "passing" or "warning" according to their node and service-level checks defined in Consul. Please note that the comma implies an "or", not an "and".
Note: There is an architectural difference between the following:
{{ service "web" }}
{{ service "web|passing" }}
The former will return all services which Consul considers "healthy" and passing. The latter will return all services registered with the Consul agent and perform client-side filtering. As a general rule, do not use the "passing" argument alone if you want only healthy services - simply omit the second argument instead.
Query Consul for all services in the catalog.
{{ services "@<DATACENTER>" }}
The <DATACENTER>
attribute is optional; if omitted, the local datacenter is
used.
For example:
{{ range services }}
{{ .Name }}: {{ .Tags | join "," }}{{ end }}
renders
node01 tag1,tag2,tag3
Query Consul for all kv pairs at the given key path.
{{ tree "<PATH>@<DATACENTER>" }}
The <DATACENTER>
attribute is optional; if omitted, the local datacenter is
used.
For example:
{{ range tree "service/redis" }}
{{ .Key }}:{{ .Value }}{{ end }}
renders
minconns 2
maxconns 12
nested/config/value "value"
Unlike ls
, tree
returns all keys under the prefix, just like the Unix
tree
command.
The scratchpad (or "scratch" for short) is available within the context of a template to store temporary data or computations. Scratch data is not shared between templates and is not cached between invocations.
Returns a boolean if data exists in the scratchpad at the named key. Even if the data at that key is "nil", this still returns true.
{{ scratch.Key "foo" }}
Returns the value in the scratchpad at the named key. If the data does not exist, this will return "nil".
{{ scratch.Get "foo" }}
Saves the given value at the given key. If data already exists at that key, it is overwritten.
{{ scratch.Set "foo" "bar" }}
This behaves exactly the same as Set
, but does not overwrite if the value
already exists.
{{ scratch.SetX "foo" "bar" }}
Saves a value in a named key in the map. If data already exists at that key, it is overwritten.
{{ scratch.MapSet "vars" "foo" "bar" }}
This behaves exactly the same as MapSet
, but does not overwrite if the value
already exists.
{{ scratch.MapSetX "vars" "foo" "bar" }}
Returns a sorted list (by key) of all values in the named map.
{{ scratch.MapValues "vars" }}
Unlike API functions, helper functions do not query remote services. These functions are useful for parsing data, formatting data, performing math, etc.
Accepts a base64-encoded string and returns the decoded result, or an error if the given string is not a valid base64 string.
{{ base64Decode "aGVsbG8=" }}
renders
hello
Accepts a string and returns a base64-encoded string.
{{ base64Encode "hello" }}
renders
aGVsbG8=
Accepts a base64-encoded URL-safe string and returns the decoded result, or an error if the given string is not a valid base64 URL-safe string.
{{ base64URLDecode "aGVsbG8=" }}
renders
hello
Accepts a string and returns a base-64 encoded URL-safe string.
{{ base64Encode "hello" }}
renders
aGVsbG8=
Accepts a list of pairs returned from a tree
call and creates a map that groups pairs by their top-level directory.
For example:
groups/elasticsearch/es1
groups/elasticsearch/es2
groups/elasticsearch/es3
services/elasticsearch/check_elasticsearch
services/elasticsearch/check_indexes
with the following template
{{ range $key, $pairs := tree "groups" | byKey }}{{ $key }}:
{{ range $pair := $pairs }} {{ .Key }}={{ .Value }}
{{ end }}{{ end }}
renders
elasticsearch:
es1=1
es2=1
es3=1
Note that the top-most key is stripped from the Key value. Keys that have no prefix after stripping are removed from the list.
The resulting pairs are keyed as a map, so it is possible to look up a single value by key:
{{ $weights := tree "weights" }}
{{ range service "release.web" }}
{{ $weight := or (index $weights .Node) 100 }}
server {{ .Node }} {{ .Address }}:{{ .Port }} weight {{ $weight }}{{ end }}
Takes the list of services returned by the service
or
services
function and creates a map that groups services by tag.
{{ range $tag, $services := service "web" | byTag }}{{ $tag }}
{{ range $services }} server {{ .Name }} {{ .Address }}:{{ .Port }}
{{ end }}{{ end }}
Determines if a needle is within an iterable element.
{{ if .Tags | contains "production" }}
# ...
{{ end }}
Returns true
if all needles are within an iterable element, or false
otherwise. Returns true
if the list of needles is empty.
{{ if containsAll $requiredTags .Tags }}
# ...
{{ end }}
Returns true
if any needle is within an iterable element, or false
otherwise. Returns false
if the list of needles is empty.
{{ if containsAny $acceptableTags .Tags }}
# ...
{{ end }}
Returns true
if no needles are within an iterable element, or false
otherwise. Returns true
if the list of needles is empty.
{{ if containsNone $forbiddenTags .Tags }}
# ...
{{ end }}
Returns true
if some needle is not within an iterable element, or false
otherwise. Returns false
if the list of needles is empty.
{{ if containsNotAll $excludingTags .Tags }}
# ...
{{ end }}
Reads the given environment variable accessible to the current process.
{{ env "CLUSTER_ID" }}
This function can be chained to manipulate the output:
{{ env "CLUSTER_ID" | toLower }}
Executes and returns a defined template.
{{ define "custom" }}my custom template{{ end }}
This is my other template:
{{ executeTemplate "custom" }}
And I can call it multiple times:
{{ executeTemplate "custom" }}
Even with a new context:
{{ executeTemplate "custom" 42 }}
Or save it to a variable:
{{ $var := executeTemplate "custom" }}
Takes the result from a tree
or ls
call and converts it into a deeply-nested
map for parsing/traversing.
{{ tree "config" | explode }}
Note: You will lose any metadata about the key-pair after it has been exploded. You can also access deeply nested values:
{{ with tree "config" | explode }}
{{ .a.b.c }}{{ end }}
You will need to have a reasonable format about your data in Consul. Please see Go's text/template package for more information.
Determines if a needle is within an iterable element.
{{ if in .Tags "production" }}
# ...
{{ end }}
Accepts varying parameters and differs its behavior based on those parameters.
If loop
is given one integer, it will return a goroutine that begins at zero
and loops up to but not including the given integer:
{{ range loop 5 }}
# Comment{{end}}
If given two integers, this function will return a goroutine that begins at the first integer and loops up to but not including the second integer:
{{ range $i := loop 5 8 }}
stanza-{{ $i }}{{ end }}
which would render:
stanza-5
stanza-6
stanza-7
Note: It is not possible to get the index and the element since the function returns a goroutine, not a slice. In other words, the following is not valid:
# Will NOT work!
{{ range $i, $e := loop 5 8 }}
# ...{{ end }}
Takes the given list of strings as a pipe and joins them on the provided string:
{{ $items | join "," }}
Takes the provided input and trims all whitespace, tabs and newlines:
{{ file "/etc/ec2_version" | trimSpace }}
Takes the given string and parses it as a boolean:
{{ "true" | parseBool }}
This can be combined with a key and a conditional check, for example:
{{ if key "feature/enabled" | parseBool }}{{ end }}
Takes the given string and parses it as a base-10 float64:
{{ "1.2" | parseFloat }}
Takes the given string and parses it as a base-10 int64:
{{ "1" | parseInt }}
This can be combined with other helpers, for example:
{{ range $i := loop key "config/pool_size" | parseInt }}
# ...{{ end }}
Takes the given input (usually the value from a key) and parses the result as JSON:
{{ with $d := key "user/info" | parseJSON }}{{ $d.name }}{{ end }}
Note: Consul Template evaluates the template multiple times, and on the first evaluation the value of the key will be empty (because no data has been loaded yet). This means that templates must guard against empty responses.
Takes the given string and parses it as a base-10 int64:
{{ "1" | parseUint }}
Takes the name of a plugin and optional payload and executes a Consul Template plugin.
{{ plugin "my-plugin" }}
This is most commonly combined with a JSON filter for customization:
{{ tree "foo" | explode | toJSON | plugin "my-plugin" }}
Please see the plugins section for more information about plugins.
Takes the argument as a regular expression and will return true
if it matches
on the given string, or false
otherwise.
{{ if "foo.bar" | regexMatch "foo([.a-z]+)" }}
# ...
{{ else }}
# ...
{{ end }}
Takes the argument as a regular expression and replaces all occurrences of the regex with the given string. As in go, you can use variables like $1 to refer to subexpressions in the replacement string.
{{ "foo.bar" | regexReplaceAll "foo([.a-z]+)" "$1" }}
Takes the argument as a string and replaces all occurrences of the given string with the given string.
{{ "foo.bar" | replaceAll "." "_" }}
This function can be chained with other functions as well:
{{ service "web" }}{{ .Name | replaceAll ":" "_" }}{{ end }}
Splits the given string on the provided separator:
{{ "foo\nbar\n" | split "\n" }}
This can be combined with chained and piped with other functions:
{{ key "foo" | toUpper | split "\n" | join "," }}
Returns the current timestamp as a string (UTC). If no arguments are given, the result is the current RFC3339 timestamp:
{{ timestamp }} // e.g. 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z
If the optional parameter is given, it is used to format the timestamp. The magic reference date Mon Jan 2 15:04:05 -0700 MST 2006 can be used to format the date as required:
{{ timestamp "2006-01-02" }} // e.g. 1970-01-01
See Go's time.Format
for more
information.
As a special case, if the optional parameter is "unix"
, the unix timestamp in
seconds is returned as a string.
{{ timestamp "unix" }} // e.g. 0
Takes the result from a tree
or ls
call and converts it into a JSON object.
{{ tree "config" | explode | toJSON }}
renders
{"admin":{"port":1234},"maxconns":5,"minconns":2}
Takes the result from a tree
or ls
call and converts it into a
pretty-printed JSON object, indented by two spaces.
{{ tree "config" | explode | toJSONPretty }}
renders
{
"admin": {
"port": 1234
},
"maxconns": 5,
"minconns": 2,
}
Takes the argument as a string and converts it to lowercase.
{ {key "user/name" | toLower }}
See Go's strings.ToLower
for more
information.
Takes the argument as a string and converts it to titlecase.
{{ key "user/name" | toTitle }}
See Go's strings.Title
for more
information.
Takes the result from a tree
or ls
call and converts it into a TOML object.
{{ tree "config" | explode | toTOML }}
renders
maxconns = "5"
minconns = "2"
[admin]
port = "1134"
Takes the argument as a string and converts it to uppercase.
{{ key "user/name" | toUpper }}
See Go's strings.ToUpper
for more
information.
Takes the result from a tree
or ls
call and converts it into a
pretty-printed YAML object, indented by two spaces.
{{ tree "config" | explode | toYAML }}
renders
admin:
port: 1234
maxconns: 5
minconns: 2
The following functions are available on floats and integer values.
Returns the sum of the two values.
{{ add 1 2 }} // 3
This can also be used with a pipe function.
{{ 1 | add 2 }} // 3
Returns the difference of the second value from the first.
{{ subtract 2 5 }} // 3
This can also be used with a pipe function.
{{ 5 | subtract 2 }} // 3
Please take careful note of the order of arguments.
Returns the product of the two values.
{{ multiply 2 2 }} // 4
This can also be used with a pipe function.
{{ 2 | multiply 2 }} // 4
Returns the division of the second value from the first.
{{ divide 2 10 }} // 5
This can also be used with a pipe function.
{{ 10 | divide 2 }} // 5
Please take careful note of the order or arguments.
Returns the modulo of the second value from the first.
{{ modulo 2 5 }} // 1
This can also be used with a pipe function.
{{ 5 | modulo 2 }} // 1
Please take careful note of the order of arguments.
For some use cases, it may be necessary to write a plugin that offloads work to another system. This is especially useful for things that may not fit in the "standard library" of Consul Template, but still need to be shared across multiple instances.
Consul Template plugins must have the following API:
$ NAME [INPUT...]
-
NAME
- the name of the plugin - this is also the name of the binary, either a full path or just the program name. It will be executed in a shell with the inheritedPATH
so e.g. the plugincat
will run the first executablecat
that is found on thePATH
. -
INPUT
- input from the template - this will always be JSON if provided
-
Plugins execute user-provided scripts and pass in potentially sensitive data from Consul or Vault. Nothing is validated or protected by Consul Template, so all necessary precautions and considerations should be made by template authors
-
Plugin output must be returned as a string on stdout. Only stdout will be parsed for output. Be sure to log all errors, debugging messages onto stderr to avoid errors when Consul Template returns the value.
-
Always
exit 0
or Consul Template will assume the plugin failed to execute -
Ensure the empty input case is handled correctly (see Multi-phase execution)
-
Data piped into the plugin is appended after any parameters given explicitly (eg
{{ "sample-data" | plugin "my-plugin" "some-parameter"}}
will callmy-plugin some-parameter sample-data
)
Here is a sample plugin in a few different languages that removes any JSON keys that start with an underscore and returns the JSON string:
#! /usr/bin/env ruby
require "json"
if ARGV.empty?
puts JSON.fast_generate({})
Kernel.exit(0)
end
hash = JSON.parse(ARGV.first)
hash.reject! { |k, _| k.start_with?("_") }
puts JSON.fast_generate(hash)
Kernel.exit(0)
func main() {
arg := []byte(os.Args[1])
var parsed map[string]interface{}
if err := json.Unmarshal(arg, &parsed); err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, fmt.Sprintf("err: %s", err))
os.Exit(1)
}
for k, _ := range parsed {
if string(k[0]) == "_" {
delete(parsed, k)
}
}
result, err := json.Marshal(parsed)
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, fmt.Sprintf("err: %s", err))
os.Exit(1)
}
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stdout, fmt.Sprintf("%s", result))
os.Exit(0)
}
In Once mode, Consul Template will wait for all dependencies to be rendered. If a template specifies a dependency (a request) that does not exist in Consul, once mode will wait until Consul returns data for that dependency. Please note that "returned data" and "empty data" are not mutually exclusive.
When you query for all healthy services named "foo" ({{ service "foo" }}
), you
are asking Consul - "give me all the healthy services named foo". If there are
no services named foo, the response is the empty array. This is also the same
response if there are no healthy services named foo.
Consul template processes input templates multiple times, since the first result could impact later dependencies:
{{ range services }}
{{ range service .Name }}
{{ end }}
{{ end }}
In this example, we have to process the output of services
before we can
lookup each service
, since the inner loops cannot be evaluated until the outer
loop returns a response. Consul Template waits until it gets a response from
Consul for all dependencies before rendering a template. It does not wait until
that response is non-empty though.
As of version 0.16.0, Consul Template has the ability to maintain an arbitrary child process (similar to envconsul). This mode is most beneficial when running Consul Template in a container or on a scheduler like Nomad or Kubernetes. When activated, Consul Template will spawn and manage the lifecycle of the child process.
This mode is best-explained through example. Consider a simple application that reads a configuration file from disk and spawns a server from that configuration.
$ consul-template \
-template "/tmp/config.ctmpl:/tmp/server.conf" \
-exec "/bin/my-server -config /tmp/server.conf"
When Consul Template starts, it will pull the required dependencies and populate
the /tmp/server.conf
, which the my-server
binary consumes. After that
template is rendered completely the first time, Consul Template spawns and
manages a child process. When any of the list templates change, Consul Template
will send a configurable reload signal to the child process. Additionally,
Consul Template will proxy any signals it receives to the child process. This
enables a scheduler to control the lifecycle of the process and also eases the
friction of running inside a container.
A common point of confusion is that the command string behaves the same as the
shell; it does not. In the shell, when you run foo | bar
or foo > bar
, that
is actually running as a subprocess of your shell (bash, zsh, csh, etc.). When
Consul Template spawns the exec process, it runs outside of your shell. This
behavior is different from when Consul Template executes the template-specific
reload command. If you want the ability to pipe or redirect in the exec command,
you will need to spawn the process in subshell, for example:
exec {
command = "/bin/bash -c 'my-server > /var/log/my-server.log'"
}
Note that when spawning like this, most shells do not proxy signals to their child by default, so your child process will not receive the signals that Consul Template sends to the shell. You can avoid this by writing a tiny shell wrapper and executing that instead:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
trap "kill -TERM $child" SIGTERM
/bin/my-server -config /tmp/server.conf
child=$!
wait "$child"
Alternatively, you can use your shell's exec function directly, if it exists:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
exec /bin/my-server -config /tmp/server.conf > /var/log/my-server.log
There are some additional caveats with Exec Mode, which should be considered carefully before use:
-
If the child process dies, the Consul Template process will also die. Consul Template does not supervise the process! This is generally the responsibility of the scheduler or init system.
-
The child process must remain in the foreground. This is a requirement for Consul Template to manage the process and send signals.
-
The exec command will only start after all templates have been rendered at least once. One may have multiple templates for a single Consul Template process, all of which must be rendered before the process starts. Consider something like an nginx or apache configuration where both the process configuration file and individual site configuration must be written in order for the service to successfully start.
-
After the child process is started, any change to any dependent template will cause the reload signal to be sent to the child process. If no reload signal is provided, Consul Template will kill the process and spawn a new instance. The reload signal can be specified and customized via the CLI or configuration file.
-
When Consul Template is stopped gracefully, it will send the configurable kill signal to the child process. The default value is SIGTERM, but it can be customized via the CLI or configuration file.
-
Consul Template will forward all signals it receives to the child process except its defined
reload_signal
,dump_signal
, andkill_signal
. If you disable these signals, Consul Template will forward them to the child process. -
It is not possible to have more than one exec command (although each template can still have its own reload command).
-
Individual template reload commands still fire independently of the exec command.
Consul Template works by parsing templates to determine what data is needed and then watching Consul for any changes to that data. This allows Consul Template to efficiently re-render templates when a change occurs. However, if there are many instances of Consul Template rendering a common template there is a linear duplication of work as each instance is querying the same data.
To make this pattern more efficient Consul Template supports work de-duplication
across instances. This can be enabled with the -dedup
flag or via the
deduplicate
configuration block. Once enabled, Consul Template uses leader
election on a per-template basis to have only a single node perform the queries.
Results are shared among other instances rendering the same template by passing
compressed data through the Consul K/V store.
Please note that no Vault data will be stored in the compressed template. Because ACLs around Vault are typically more closely controlled than those ACLs around Consul's KV, Consul Template will still request the secret from Vault on each iteration.
When running in de-duplication mode, it is important that local template
functions resolve correctly. For example, you may have a local template function
that relies on the env
helper like this:
{{ key (env "KEY") }}
It is crucial that the environment variable KEY
in this example is consistent
across all machines engaged in de-duplicating this template. If the values are
different, Consul Template will be unable to resolve the template, and you will
not get a successful render.
By default Consul Template is highly fault-tolerant. If Consul is unreachable or
a template changes, Consul Template will happily continue running. The only
exception to this rule is if the optional command
exits non-zero. In this
case, Consul Template will also exit non-zero. The reason for this decision is
so the user can easily configure something like Upstart or God to manage Consul
Template as a service.
If you want Consul Template to continue watching for changes, even if the
optional command argument fails, you can append || true
to your command. Note
that ||
is a "shell-ism", not a built-in function. You will also need to run
your command under a shell:
$ consul-template \
-template "in.ctmpl:out.file:/bin/bash -c 'service nginx restart || true'"
In this example, even if the Nginx restart command returns non-zero, the overall
function will still return an OK exit code; Consul Template will continue to run
as a service. Additionally, if you have complex logic for restarting your
service, you can intelligently choose when you want Consul Template to exit and
when you want it to continue to watch for changes. For these types of complex
scripts, we recommend using a custom sh or bash script instead of putting the
logic directly in the consul-template
command or configuration file.
The current processes environment is used when executing commands with the following additional environment variables:
CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR
CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN
CONSUL_HTTP_AUTH
CONSUL_HTTP_SSL
CONSUL_HTTP_SSL_VERIFY
These environment variables are exported with their current values when the
command executes. Other Consul tooling reads these environment variables,
providing smooth integration with other Consul tools (like consul maint
or
consul lock
). Additionally, exposing these environment variables gives power
users the ability to further customize their command script.
Consul Template does an n-pass evaluation of templates, accumulating dependencies on each pass. This is required due to nested dependencies, such as:
{{ range services }}
{{ range service .Name }}
{{ .Address }}
{{ end }}{{ end }}
During the first pass, Consul Template does not know any of the services in Consul, so it has to perform a query. When those results are returned, the inner-loop is then evaluated with that result, potentially creating more queries and watches.
Because of this implementation, template functions need a default value that is
an acceptable parameter to a range
function (or similar), but does not
actually execute the inner loop (which would cause a panic). This is important
to mention because complex templates must account for the "empty" case. For
example, the following will not work:
{{ with index (service "foo") 0 }}
# ...
{{ end }}
This will raise an error like:
<index $services 0>: error calling index: index out of range: 0
That is because, during the first evaluation of the template, the service
key is returning an empty slice. You can account for this in your template like
so:
{{ with service "foo" }}
{{ with index . 0 }}
{{ .Node }}{{ end }}{{ end }}
This will still add the dependency to the list of watches, but will not evaluate the inner-if, avoiding the out-of-index error.
While there are multiple ways to run Consul Template, the most common pattern is to run Consul Template as a system service. When Consul Template first starts, it reads any configuration files and templates from disk and loads them into memory. From that point forward, changes to the files on disk do not propagate to running process without a reload.
The reason for this behavior is simple and aligns with other tools like haproxy.
A user may want to perform pre-flight validation checks on the configuration or
templates before loading them into the process. Additionally, a user may want to
update configuration and templates simultaneously. Having Consul Template
automatically watch and reload those files on changes is both operationally
dangerous and against some of the paradigms of modern infrastructure. Instead,
Consul Template listens for the SIGHUP
syscall to trigger a configuration
reload. If you update configuration or templates, simply send HUP
to the
running Consul Template process and Consul Template will reload all the
configurations and templates from disk.
Consul Template can print verbose debugging output. To set the log level for
Consul Template, use the -log-level
flag:
$ consul-template -log-level info ...
<timestamp> [INFO] (cli) received redis from Watcher
<timestamp> [INFO] (cli) invoking Runner
# ...
You can also specify the level as debug:
$ consul-template -log-level debug ...
<timestamp> [DEBUG] (cli) creating Runner
<timestamp> [DEBUG] (cli) creating Consul API client
<timestamp> [DEBUG] (cli) creating Watcher
<timestamp> [DEBUG] (cli) looping for data
<timestamp> [DEBUG] (watcher) starting watch
<timestamp> [DEBUG] (watcher) all pollers have started, waiting for finish
<timestamp> [DEBUG] (redis) starting poll
<timestamp> [DEBUG] (service redis) querying Consul with &{...}
<timestamp> [DEBUG] (service redis) Consul returned 2 services
<timestamp> [DEBUG] (redis) writing data to channel
<timestamp> [DEBUG] (redis) starting poll
<timestamp> [INFO] (cli) received redis from Watcher
<timestamp> [INFO] (cli) invoking Runner
<timestamp> [DEBUG] (service redis) querying Consul with &{...}
# ...
Q: How is this different than confd?
A: The answer is simple: Service Discovery as a first class citizen. You are also encouraged to read this Pull Request on the project for more background information. We think confd is a great project, but Consul Template fills a missing gap. Additionally, Consul Template has first class integration with Vault, making it easy to incorporate secret material like database credentials or API tokens into configuration files.
Q: How is this different than Puppet/Chef/Ansible/Salt?
A: Configuration management tools are designed to be used in unison with Consul Template. Instead of rendering a stale configuration file, use your configuration management software to render a dynamic template that will be populated by Consul.
To build and install Consul Template locally, you will need to install the Docker engine:
Clone the repository:
$ git clone https://github.com/hashicorp/consul-template.git
To compile the consul-template
binary for your local machine:
$ make dev
This will compile the consul-template
binary into bin/consul-template
as
well as your $GOPATH
and run the test suite.
If you want to compile a specific binary, set XC_OS
and XC_ARCH
or run the
following to generate all binaries:
$ make bin
If you just want to run the tests:
$ make test
Or to run a specific test in the suite:
go test ./... -run SomeTestFunction_name