DNS
#
service discovery via DNSSome service discovery system, like Consul, support exposing service information via DNS. Therefore we can use this way to discover service directly.
First of all, we need to configure the address of DNS servers:
# add this to config.yaml
discovery:
dns:
servers:
- "127.0.0.1:8600" # use the real address of your dns server
Unlike configuring the domain in the Upstream's nodes
field, service discovery via
DNS will return all records. For example, with upstream configuration:
{
"id": 1,
"discovery_type": "dns",
"service_name": "test.consul.service",
"type": "roundrobin"
}
and test.consul.service
be resolved as 1.1.1.1
and 1.1.1.2
, this result will be the same as:
{
"id": 1,
"type": "roundrobin",
"nodes": [
{"host": "1.1.1.1", "weight": 1},
{"host": "1.1.1.2", "weight": 1}
]
}
Note that all the IPs from test.consul.service
share the same weight.
The resolved records will be cached according to their TTL.
For service whose record is not in the cache, we will query it in the order of SRV -> A -> AAAA -> CNAME
.
When we refresh the cache record, we will try from the last previously successful type.
If you want to specify the port for the upstream server, you can add it to the service_name
:
{
"id": 1,
"discovery_type": "dns",
"service_name": "test.consul.service:1980",
"type": "roundrobin"
}
Another way to do it is via the SRV record, see below.
#
SRV recordBy using SRV record you can specify the port and the weight of a service.
Assumed you have the SRV record like this:
; under the section of blah.service
A 300 IN A 1.1.1.1
B 300 IN A 1.1.1.2
B 300 IN A 1.1.1.3
; name TTL type priority weight port
srv 86400 IN SRV 10 60 1980 A
srv 86400 IN SRV 20 20 1981 B
Upstream configuration like:
{
"id": 1,
"discovery_type": "dns",
"service_name": "srv.blah.service",
"type": "roundrobin"
}
is the same as:
{
"id": 1,
"type": "roundrobin",
"nodes": [
{"host": "1.1.1.1", "port": 1980, "weight": 60, "priority": -10},
{"host": "1.1.1.2", "port": 1981, "weight": 10, "priority": -20},
{"host": "1.1.1.3", "port": 1981, "weight": 10, "priority": -20}
]
}
Note that two records of domain B split the weight evenly. For SRV record, nodes with lower priority are chosen first, so the final priority is negative.
As for 0 weight SRV record, the RFC 2782 says:
Domain administrators SHOULD use Weight 0 when there isn't any server selection to do, to make the RR easier to read for humans (less noisy). In the presence of records containing weights greater than 0, records with weight 0 should have a very small chance of being selected.
We treat weight 0 record has a weight of 1 so the node "have a very small chance of being selected", which is also the common way to treat this type of record.
For SRV record which has port 0, we will fallback to use the upstream protocol's default port. You can also specify the port in the "service_name" field directly, like "srv.blah.service:8848".