glooctl create upstream consul

glooctl create upstream consul

Create a Consul Upstream

Synopsis

Consul Upstreams represent a collection of endpoints for Services registered with Consul. Typically, Gloo will automatically discover these upstreams, meaning you don’t have to create them. However, if upstream discovery in Gloo is disabled, or ACL permissions have not been granted to Gloo to read from the registry, Consul services can be added to Gloo manually via the CLI.

glooctl create upstream consul [flags]

Options

      --consul-service string         name of the service in the consul registry
      --consul-service-tags strings   comma-separated list of tags for choosing a subset of the service in the consul registry
  -h, --help                          help for consul
      --service-spec-type string      if set, Gloo supports additional routing features to upstreams with a service spec. The service spec defines a set of features 

Options inherited from parent commands

  -c, --config string              set the path to the glooctl config file (default "<home_directory>/.gloo/glooctl-config.yaml")
      --consul-address string      address of the Consul server. Use with --use-consul (default "127.0.0.1:8500")
      --consul-allow-stale-reads   Allows reading using Consul's stale consistency mode.
      --consul-datacenter string   Datacenter to use. If not provided, the default agent datacenter is used. Use with --use-consul
      --consul-root-key string     key prefix for the Consul key-value storage. (default "gloo")
      --consul-scheme string       URI scheme for the Consul server. Use with --use-consul (default "http")
      --consul-token string        Token is used to provide a per-request ACL token which overrides the agent's default token. Use with --use-consul
      --dry-run                    print kubernetes-formatted yaml rather than creating or updating a resource
  -i, --interactive                use interactive mode
      --kube-context string        kube context to use when interacting with kubernetes
      --kubeconfig string          kubeconfig to use, if not standard one
      --name string                name of the resource to read or write
  -n, --namespace string           namespace for reading or writing resources (default "gloo-system")
  -o, --output OutputType          output format: (yaml, json, table, kube-yaml, wide) (default table)
      --use-consul                 use Consul Key-Value storage as the backend for reading and writing config (VirtualServices, Upstreams, and Proxies)

SEE ALSO