3.6 KiB
Automatic clustering via node-discovery
This document describes how to use Consul and etcd to automatically form rqlite clusters.
⚠️ This functionality was introduced in version 7.x. It does not exist in earlier releases.
Contents
Quickstart
Consul
Let's assume your Consul cluster is running at http://example.com:8500
. Let's also assume that you are going to run 3 rqlite nodes, each node on a different machine. Launch your rqlite nodes as follows:
Node 1:
rqlited -http-addr=$IP1:$HTTP_PORT -raft-addr=$IP1:$RAFT_PORT \
-disco-mode consul-kv -disco-config '{"address": "example.com:8500"}' data
Node 2:
rqlited -http-addr=$IP2:$HTTP_PORT -raft-addr=$IP2:$RAFT_PORT \
-disco-mode consul-kv -disco-config '{"address": "example.com:8500"}' data
Node 3:
rqlited -http-addr=$IP3:$HTTP_PORT -raft-addr=$IP3:$RAFT_PORT \
-disco-mode consul-kv -disco-config '{"address": "example.com:8500"}' data
These three nodes will automatically find each other, and cluster. You can start the nodes in any order and at anytime. Furthermore, the cluster Leader will continually update Consul with its address. This means other nodes can be launched later and automatically join the cluster, even if the Leader changes.
Docker
It's even easier with Docker, as you can launch every node identically:
docker run rqlite/rqlite -disco-mode=consul-kv -disco-config '{"address": "example.com:8500"}'
etcd
Autoclustering with etcd is very similar. Let's assume etcd is available at example.com:2379
.
Node 1:
rqlited -http-addr=$IP1:$HTTP_PORT -raft-addr=$IP1:$RAFT_PORT \
-disco-mode etcd-kv -disco-config '{"endpoints": ["example.com:2379"]}' data
Node 2:
rqlited -http-addr=$IP2:$HTTP_PORT -raft-addr=$IP2:$RAFT_PORT \
-disco-mode etcd-kv -disco-config '{"endpoints": ["example.com:2379"]}' data
Node 3:
rqlited -http-addr=$IP3:$HTTP_PORT -raft-addr=$IP3:$RAFT_PORT \
-disco-mode etcd-kv -disco-config '{"endpoints": ["example.com:2379"]}' data
Like with Consul autoclustering, the cluster Leader will continually report its address to etcd.
Docker
docker run rqlite/rqlite -disco-mode=etcd-kv -disco-config '{"endpoints": ["example.com:2379"]}'
More Details
Controlling configuration
For both Consul and etcd, -disco-confg
can either be an actual JSON string, or a path to a file containing a JSON-formatted configuration. The former option may be more convenient if the configuration you need to supply is very short, as in the example above.
Running multiple different clusters
If you wish a single Consul or etcd system to support multiple rqlite clusters, then set the -disco-key
command line argument to a different value for each cluster.
Design
When using either Consul or etcd for automatic clustering, rqlite uses the key-value store of each system. In each case the Leader atomically sets its HTTP URL, allowing other nodes to discover it. To prevent multiple nodes updating the Leader key at once, nodes uses a check-and-set operation, only updating the Leader key if it's value has not changed since it was last read by the node.