Nomad
service Block
Placement | job -> group -> service job -> group -> task -> service |
The service
block instructs Nomad to register a service with the specified
provider; Nomad or Consul. This section of the documentation will discuss the
configuration, but please also read the
Nomad service discovery documentation for more detailed
information about the external integrations.
job "docs" {
group "example" {
task "server" {
service {
tags = ["leader", "mysql"]
port = "db"
provider = "consul"
meta {
meta = "for your service"
}
check {
type = "tcp"
port = "db"
interval = "10s"
timeout = "2s"
}
check {
type = "http"
name = "app_health"
path = "/health"
interval = "20s"
timeout = "5s"
check_restart {
limit = 3
grace = "90s"
ignore_warnings = false
}
}
}
}
}
}
This section of the documentation only cover the job file fields and blocks for service discovery. For more details on using Nomad with Consul please see the Consul integration documentation.
Nomad 0.10 also allows specifying the service
block at the task group level.
This enables services in the same task group to opt into Consul
Connect integration.
service
Parameters
provider
(string: "consul")
- Specifies the service registration provider to use for service registrations. Valid options are eitherconsul
ornomad
. All services within a single task group must utilise the same provider value.check
(Check: nil)
- Specifies a health check associated with the service. This can be specified multiple times to define multiple checks for the service. At this time, a check using the Nomad provider supportstcp
andhttp
checks. The Consul integration supports thegrpc
,http
,script
1, andtcp
checks.connect
- Configures the Consul Connect integration. Only available on group services and whereprovider = "consul"
.name
(string: "<job>-<taskgroup>-<task>")
- Specifies the name this service will be advertised as in Consul. If not supplied, this will default to the name of the job, task group, and task concatenated together with a dash, like"docs-example-server"
. Each service must have a unique name within the cluster. Names must adhere to RFC-1123 §2.1 and are limited to alphanumeric and hyphen characters (i.e.[a-z0-9\-]
), and be less than 64 characters in length.In addition to the standard Nomad interpolation, the following keys are also available:
${JOB}
- the name of the job${TASKGROUP}
- the name of the task group${TASK}
- the name of the task${BASE}
- shorthand for${JOB}-${TASKGROUP}-${TASK}
Validation of the name occurs in two parts. When the job is registered, an initial validation pass checks that the service name adheres to RFC-1123 §2.1 and the length limit, excluding any variables requiring interpolation. Once the client receives the service and all interpretable values are available, the service name will be interpolated and revalidated. This can cause certain service names to pass validation at submit time but fail at runtime.
port
(string: <optional>)
- Specifies the port to advertise for this service. The value ofport
depends on whichaddress_mode
is being used:alloc
- Advertise the mappedto
value of the labeled port and the allocation address. If ato
value is not set, the port falls back to using the allocated host port. Theport
field may be a numeric port or a port label specified in the same group's network block.driver
- Advertise the port determined by the driver (e.g. Docker). Theport
may be a numeric port or a port label specified in the driver'sports
field.host
- Advertise the host port for this service.port
must match a port label specified in thenetwork
block.
tags
(array<string>: [])
- Specifies the list of tags to associate with this service. If this is not supplied, no tags will be assigned to the service when it is registered.canary_tags
(array<string>: [])
- Specifies the list of tags to associate with this service when the service is part of an allocation that is currently a canary. Once the canary is promoted, the registered tags will be updated to those specified in thetags
parameter. If this is not supplied, the registered tags will be equal to that of thetags
parameter.enable_tag_override
(bool: false)
- Enables users of Consul's Catalog API to make changes to the tags of a service without having those changes be overwritten by Consul's anti-entropy mechanism. See Consul documentation for more information. Only available whereprovider = "consul"
.address
(string: <optional>)
- Specifies a custom address to advertise in Consul or Nomad service registration. If set,address_mode
must be inauto
mode. Useful with interpolation - for example to advertise the public IP address of an AWS EC2 instance set this to${attr.unique.platform.aws.public-ipv4}
.tagged_addresses
(map<string|string>
- Specifies custom tagged addresses to advertise in the Consul service registration. Only available whereprovider = "consul"
.address_mode
(string: "auto")
- Specifies which address (host, alloc or driver-specific) this service should advertise. See below for examples. Valid options are:alloc
- For allocations which create a network namespace, this address mode uses the IP address inside the namespace. Can only be used with "bridge" and "cni" networking modes. A numeric port may be specified for situations where no port mapping is necessary. This mode can only be set for services which are defined in a "group" block.auto
- Allows the driver to determine whether the host or driver address should be used. Defaults tohost
and only implemented by Docker. If you use a Docker network plugin such as weave, Docker will automatically use its address.driver
- Use the IP specified by the driver, and the port specified in a port map. A numeric port may be specified since port maps aren't required by all network plugins. Useful for advertising SDN and overlay network addresses. Task will fail if driver network cannot be determined. Only implemented for Docker. This mode can only be set for services which are defined in a "task" block.host
- Use the host IP and port.
task
(string: "")
- Specifies the name of the Nomad task associated with this service definition. Only available on group services. Must be set if this service definition represents a Consul Connect-native service and there is more than one task in the task group.meta
([Meta][]: nil)
- Specifies a key-value map that annotates the Consul service with user-defined metadata. Only available whereprovider = "consul"
.canary_meta
([Meta][]: nil)
- Specifies a key-value map that annotates the Consul service with user-defined metadata when the service is part of an allocation that is currently a canary. Once the canary is promoted, the registered meta will be updated to those specified in themeta
parameter. If this is not supplied, the registered meta will be set to that of themeta
parameter. Only available whereprovider = "consul"
.on_update
(string: "require_healthy")
- Specifies how checks should be evaluated when determining deployment health (including a job's initial deployment). This allows job submitters to define certain checks as readiness checks, progressing a deployment even if the Service's checks are not yet healthy. Checks inherit the Service's value by default. The check status is not altered in Consul and is only used to determine the check's health during an update.require_healthy
- In order for Nomad to consider the check healthy during an update it must report as healthy.ignore_warnings
- If a Service Check reports as warning, Nomad will treat the check as healthy. The Check will still be in a warning state in Consul.ignore
- Any status will be treated as healthy.
Caveat:
on_update
is only compatible with certaincheck_restart
configurations.on_update = "ignore_warnings"
requires thatcheck_restart.ignore_warnings = true
.check_restart
can however specifyignore_warnings = true
withon_update = "require_healthy"
. Ifon_update
is set toignore
,check_restart
must be omitted entirely.
service
Lifecycle
Nomad manages registering, updating, and deregistering services with the service provider. It is important to understand when each of these steps happens and how they can be customized.
Registration: Nomad will register group
services and checks before
starting any tasks. Services and checks for a specific task
are registered
after the task has started.
Updating: If a service or check definition is updated, Nomad will update the service in the provider as well. This update happens without restarting a task.
Deregistering: If a running task with a service block exits, the services and checks are immediately deregistered from the provider without delay. If, however, Nomad needs to kill a running task, the task is killed in the following order:
- Immediately remove the services and checks from the provider. This stops new traffic from being routed to the task that is being killed.
- If
shutdown_delay
is set, wait the configured duration before proceeding to step 3. Setting ashutdown_delay
can be useful if the application itself doesn't handle graceful shutdowns based on thekill_signal
. The configured delay will provide a period of time in which the service is no longer registered in the provider, and thus is not receiving additional requests, but hasn't been signalled to shutdown. This allows the application time to complete the requests and become idle. - Send the
kill_signal
to the task and wait for the task to exit. The task should use this time to gracefully drain and finish any existing requests. - If the task has not exited after the
kill_timeout
, Nomad will force kill the application.
service
Examples
The following examples only show the service
blocks. Remember that the
service
block is only valid in the placements listed above.
Basic Service
This example registers a service named "load-balancer" with no health checks using the Nomad provider:
service {
name = "load-balancer"
port = "lb"
provider = "nomad"
}
This example registers a service named "load-balancer" with no health checks using the Consul provider:
service {
name = "load-balancer"
port = "lb"
}
These examples must be accompanied by a network
block which
defines a static or dynamic port labeled "lb". For example:
network {
port "lb" {}
}
Using Driver Address Mode
The Docker driver supports the driver
setting for the address_mode
parameter in both service
and check
blocks.
The driver address mode allows advertising and health checking the IP and port
assigned to a task by the driver. This way, if you're using a network plugin like
Weave with Docker, you can advertise the Weave address in Consul instead of the
host's address.
For example if you were running the example Redis job in an environment with Weave but Consul was running on the host you could use the following configuration:
job "example" {
datacenters = ["dc1"]
group "cache" {
network {
port "db" {
to = 6379
}
}
task "redis" {
driver = "docker"
config {
image = "redis:7"
network_mode = "weave"
ports = ["db"]
}
resources {
cpu = 500 # 500 MHz
memory = 256 # 256MB
}
service {
name = "weave-redis"
port = "db"
check {
name = "host-redis-check"
type = "tcp"
interval = "10s"
timeout = "2s"
}
}
}
}
}
No explicit address_mode
required.
Services default to the auto
address mode. When a Docker network mode other
than "host"
or "bridge"
is used, services will automatically advertise the
driver's address (in this case Weave's). The service will advertise the
container's port: 6379.
However since Consul is often run on the host without access to the Weave
network, check
blocks default to host
address mode. The TCP check will run
against the host's IP and the dynamic host port assigned by Nomad.
Note that the check
still inherits the service
block's db
port label,
but each will resolve the port label according to their address mode.
If Consul has access to the Weave network the job could be configured like this:
job "example" {
datacenters = ["dc1"]
group "cache" {
task "redis" {
driver = "docker"
config {
image = "redis:7"
network_mode = "weave"
# No port map required.
}
resources {
cpu = 500 # 500 MHz
memory = 256 # 256MB
}
service {
name = "weave-redis"
port = 6379
address_mode = "driver"
check {
name = "host-redis-check"
type = "tcp"
interval = "10s"
timeout = "2s"
port = 6379
address_mode = "driver"
}
}
}
}
}
In this case Nomad doesn't need to assign Redis any host ports. The service
and check
blocks can both specify the port number to advertise and check
directly since Nomad isn't managing any port assignments.
IPv6 Docker containers
The Docker driver supports the
advertise_ipv6_address
parameter in its configuration.
Services will automatically advertise the IPv6 address when advertise_ipv6_address
is used.
Unlike services, checks do not have an auto
address mode as there's no way
for Nomad to know which is the best address to use for checks. Consul needs
access to the address for any HTTP or TCP checks.
So you have to set address_mode
parameter in the check
block to driver
.
For example using auto
address mode:
job "example" {
datacenters = ["dc1"]
group "cache" {
network {
port "db" {
to = 6379
}
}
task "redis" {
driver = "docker"
config {
image = "redis:7"
advertise_ipv6_address = true
ports = ["db"]
}
resources {
cpu = 500 # 500 MHz
memory = 256 # 256MB
}
service {
name = "ipv6-redis"
port = "db"
check {
name = "ipv6-redis-check"
type = "tcp"
interval = "10s"
timeout = "2s"
port = "db"
address_mode = "driver"
}
}
}
}
}
Or using address_mode=driver
for service
and check
with numeric ports:
job "example" {
datacenters = ["dc1"]
group "cache" {
task "redis" {
driver = "docker"
config {
image = "redis:7"
advertise_ipv6_address = true
# No port map required.
}
resources {
cpu = 500 # 500 MHz
memory = 256 # 256MB
}
service {
name = "ipv6-redis"
port = 6379
address_mode = "driver"
check {
name = "ipv6-redis-check"
type = "tcp"
interval = "10s"
timeout = "2s"
port = 6379
address_mode = "driver"
}
}
}
}
}
The service
and check
blocks can both specify the port number to
advertise and check directly since Nomad isn't managing any port assignments.