/consul-templaterb

consul-template-like with erb (ruby) template expressiveness

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consul-templaterb

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The ruby GEM consul-templaterb is both a library and an executable that allows generating files using data from Consul (Discovery and Key/Value Store) easily using ruby's ERB templates. It also supports launching programs and babysitting processes when rendering the files, thus notifying programs when data do change.

It is intended for the users accustomed to expressiveness or Ruby templating, allowing for more flexibility and features than Go templates.

It also allows using all of the Ruby language, especially useful for generating files in several formats (JSON, XML) for which text substitutions are hard to get right (escaping, attributes encoding...).

It also focuses on providing good performance and lightweight usage of bandwidth, especially for very large clusters and watching lots of services.

For the rendering of complex templates in large Consul Clusters, it usually renders faster with a more predictable way the template than the original consul-template.

It provides a very simple API to write your templates with fully working examples.

It also allows displaying a very nice and hi-performance HTML5 UI for Consul, see consul-ui for details.

There is an article docs/article-06_Template-based_discovery_with_consul-templaterb.md summarizing why we developped this tool (also available on medium).

Video introduction to consul-templaterb

Introduction to Consul-templaterb

Differences with HashiCorp's consul-template

Hashicorp's Consul Template inspired strongly the creation of this GEM and this executable wants to achieve better results in some use cases, especially for very large Consul clusters with many nodes and servers.

Consul Template uses Go templates which is very limited in its set of features: it is complicated to sort, apply real transformations using code and even interact with the OS (ex: get the current date, format timestamps...).

The sort feature for instances allow you to create a predictable output (i.e: meaning that the order of nodes is predictable), thus it might offer better performance since the reload of processes if happening ONLY when the files are binary different. Thus, if using consul-templaterb, you will reload less your HAProxy or load-balancer than you would do with consul-template.

Compared to consul-template, consul-templaterb offers the following features:

  • Hot-Reload of template files
  • Bandwidth limitation per endpoint (will soon support dynamic bandwidth limiter)
  • Supports launch and supervision of multiple child processes
  • Supports launching commands when files do change on disk (reload commands...)
  • Supports all Ruby features (ex: base64, real JSON/XML generation...)
  • Information about bandwidth

The executable supports semantics and command-line flags and options similar to HashiCorp's Consul-template, so many flags you might use in consul-template will work in a similar way. It also supports the same environment variable CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR to find the Consul Agent to query and CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN to get the token.

Installation

You might either use the executable directly OR use this GEM as a library by adding this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'consul-templaterb'

And then execute:

$ bundle
[...]

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install consul-templaterb
[...]

If you simply want to use the executable on your preferred Linux distribution, you have to install first: ruby and ruby-dev.

Quick install on Ubuntu-Linux

sudo apt-get install ruby ruby-dev && sudo gem install consul-templaterb

You can now use it directly using the binary consul-templaterb in your path.

Quick install on Windows

On Windows, a bug exists with Ruby greater than 2.4.

To make it work, use this command as explained in oneclick/rubyinstaller2#96 (comment)

gem install eventmachine consul-templaterb --platform ruby

Run it with Docker

A Docker image is also available https://hub.docker.com/r/discoverycriteo/consul-templaterb and allows to quickly have a working Consul-UI that will serve the UI to explore your Consul Cluster.

Playing with the samples templates

Samples are installed with the GEM, you can either download them or simply use the ones installed with the gem. To figure out where the templates are installed:

$ gem contents consul-templaterb|grep samples
[...]

Will output the path where the samples are being installed, you can copy the directory somewhere and then issue the command:

$ consul-templaterb samples/*.html.erb
Using samples/checks.html output for samples/checks.html.erb
[...]

It will render a full web site you may browse to look in real-time the status of your Consul Cluster.

You can now have a look to the API Documentation to modify existing templates or write your owns, it is very easy!

Usage of consul-templaterb

Show help

$ consul-templaterb --help
USAGE: consul-templaterb [[options]]
    -h, --help                       Show help
    -v, --version                    Show Version
        --retry, --consul-retry-attempts [RETRIES]
                                     If consul fails after n retries, stop the program, default=10
    -f, --[no-]fail-fast             If consul/vault endpoints fail at startup, fail immediately
    -g, --no-gzip-compression        Disable GZIP compression in HTTP requests
    -c, --consul-addr=<address>      Address of Consul, eg: http://localhost:8500
    -l, --log-level=<log_level>      Log level, default=info, any of none|error|info|debug
        --consul-token=<token>       Use a token to connect to Consul
    -V, --vault-addr=<address>       Address of Vault, eg: http://localhost:8200
        --vault-token=<token>        Token used to authenticate against vault.
        --[no-]vault-renew           Control auto-renewal of the Vault token. Default: activated
        --vault-retry, --vault-retry-attempts [RETRIES]
                                     If vault fails after n retries, stop the program, default=10
        --vault-lease-duration-factor=<factor>
                                     Wait at least <factor> * lease time before updating a Vault secret. Default: 0.5
    -w, --wait=<min_duration>        Wait at least n seconds before each template generation
    -r, --retry-delay=<min_duration> Min Retry delay on Error/Missing Consul Index
    -k, --hot-reload=<behavior>      Control hot reload behaviour, one of :[die (kill daemon on hot reload failure), keep (on error, keep running), disable (hot reload disabled)]
    -K, --sig-term=kill_signal       Signal to send to next --exec command on kill, default=TERM
    -T, --trim-mode=trim_mode        ERB Trim mode to use (- by default)
    -R, --sig-reload=reload_signal   Signal to send to next --exec command on reload (NONE supported), default=HUP
    -M, --debug-memory-usage         Display messages when RAM grows
    -e, --exec=<command>             Execute the following command
    -d, --debug-network-usage        Debug the network usage
    -t erb_file:[output]:[command]:[params_file],
        --template                   Add a erb template, its output and optional reload command
    -o, --once                       Do not run the process as a daemon

When launched with file arguments ending with .erb, the executable will assume the file is a template and will render the corresponding file without the .erb extension.

It means that you can call consul-templaterb with *.erb arguments, the shell will then substitute all files and render it by removing the .erb extension as if the --template my_file.ext.erb:myfile.ext was used.

Generate multiple templates

In the same way as consul-template, consul-templaterb supports multiple templates and executing commands when the files do change. The parameter --template <ERB>:<DEST>:[reload_command]:params_file works in the following way:

  • ERB: the ERB file to use as a template
  • DEST: the destination file
  • reload_command: optional shell command executed whenever the file has been modified
  • params_file: JSON or YAML file to load and to use as parameter for the template (see param() function to retrieve the values)

The argument can be specified multiple times, ex:

Example of usage:

$ consul-templaterb \\
  --template "samples/ha_proxy.cfg.erb:/opt/haproxy/etc/haproxy.cfg:sudo service haproxy reload"
  --template "samples/consul_template.erb:consul-summary.txt"

Process management and signalization of configuration files

With the --exec argument (can be specified multiple times), consul-templaterb will launch the process specified when all templates have been generated. When generated file(s) do change, a POSIX signal (HUP by default) is sent to the spawned process. If you generate several files at the same time, the signal will be sent only once the rendering of all templates is completed, so if your process is using several configuration files, all files will be modified and consistent before the signal is sent to process.

If any template does return nothing (aka use return nil in the code of a template), consul-templaterb does consider that the template is not ready and will not launch the executable nor write the file.

Signals can be customized per process. Two signals are supported with options --sig-reload and --sig-term. When the option is added, the next --exec options to start a process will use the given signal. By default, HUP will be sent to reload events (you can use NONE to avoid sending any reload signal), TERM will be used when leaving consul-templaterb.

Bandwidth limitation

This is actually the original reason for the creation of this GEM: on Criteo's large clusters, consul-template generated several hundreds of Mb/s to the Consul-Agent which also generated several hundreds of Mb/s with the Consul servers.

By design, the GEM supports limiting the number of requests per endpoints (see code in bin/consul-templaterb file). It avoids using too much network to fetch data from Consul in large Consul Clusters (especially when watching lots of files).

The limitation is static for now, but fair dynamic bandwidth allocation will allow limiting the bandwidth used to get information for all services by capping the global bandwidth used by consul-templaterb.

Samples

Have a look into the samples/ directory to browse example files which contains those examples:

  1. List all nodes on Cluster
  2. Show all services in Cluster
  3. Show all Key/Values nicely
  4. Services in XML
  5. Services in JSON or YAML
  6. Generate HAProxy Configuration
  7. Export Consul Statistics to Prometheus: count all services, their state, datacenters and nodes and export it to Prometheus easily to trigger alerts.
  8. List all services/Nodes with their statuses for all datacenters
  9. Show all services/instances not passing on all DCs
  10. List all RubyGems consul versions from remote server JSON

If you want to test it quickly, you might try with (assuming your consul agent is listening on http://localhost:8500):

$ be bin/consul-templaterb -c 'http://localhost:8500' samples/*.html.erb
[...]

It will generate a full website in samples/ directory with lots of Consul information ready to use (website updated automagically when values to change).

All templates are validated using the Travis CI, so all should be working for your Consul Configuration.

Structured text generation (YAML, JSON, XML...)

Since ERB supports real language features, we recommend you to use Hashes or Arrays in Ruby and at the end to generate the output. It allows changing very quickly from JSON to YAML or XML and avoiding all the pitfalls of structured language serialization (such as escaping attributes or indentation).

See Services in JSON or YAML to look at a working example.

Template development

Please look at the template API to have a list of all functions you might use for your templates. Don't forget to have a look at the samples/ directory to have full working examples.

Development

Quick start

We recommend using bundle using bundle install, you can now run bundle exec bin/consul-templaterb. Help is available running bundle exec bin/consul-templaterb --help

The following example will generate static HTML pages and JSON data for consul-ui:

bundle exec bin/consul-templaterb -c your.consul.agent:8500 samples/consul-ui/*.erb

If you need remote calls, you need an HTTP server. A simple way to have one is using Python's simple HTTP server. Example for consul-ui:

cd samples/consul-ui
python -m SimpleHTTPServer

Installation

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Known bugs

Here are the known bugs of the application:

  • render_file might create an infinite recursion if a template includes itself indirectly.
  • On Windows, the consul-templaterb cannot work with more than 2048 endpoints watched (see oneclick/rubyinstaller#104 (comment))

Please consult CHANGELOG.md for fixed bugs.

TODO

  • Hashi's Vault support
  • Implement automatic dynamic rate limit
  • More samples: apache, nginx, a full website displaying consul information...
  • Optimize rendering speed at start-up: an iteration is done every second by default, but it would be possible to speed up rendering by iterating with higher frequency until the first write of result has been performed.
  • Allow tuning bandwidth using a simple configuration file (while it should not be necessary for 90% of use-cases)

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md for guidance: Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/criteo/consul-templaterb.

This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct. See CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md

License

The gem is available as Open-Source under the terms of the Apache v2 license. See LICENSE.txt file.