Consul
Security models overview
Requirements and recommendations for operating a secure Consul deployment may vary drastically depending on your intended workloads, operating system, and environment. Consul is not secure by default, but can be configured to satisfy the security requirements for a wide-range of use cases from local developer environments without any configuration to container orchestrators in-production with ACL authorization, and mTLS authentication.
Core
The core Consul product provides several options for enabling encryption, authentication, and authorization controls for a cluster. You can read more about the various personas, recommendations, requirements, and threats here.
NIA
Network Infrastructure Automation (NIA) enables dynamic updates to network infrastructure devices triggered
by service changes. Both the core Consul product's configuration and the configuration for the consul-terraform-sync
daemon used by NIA can affect the security of your deployment. You can read more about the various personas,
recommendations, requirements, and threats here.