253 lines
8.6 KiB
Markdown
253 lines
8.6 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Systems
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group: Distribution
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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type: reference
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---
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# How to set up Consul **(PREMIUM SELF)**
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A Consul cluster consists of both
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[server and client agents](https://developer.hashicorp.com/consul/docs/agent).
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The servers run on their own nodes and the clients run on other nodes that in
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turn communicate with the servers.
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GitLab Premium includes a bundled version of [Consul](https://www.consul.io/)
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a service networking solution that you can manage by using `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`.
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## Prerequisites
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Before configuring Consul:
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1. Review the [reference architecture](reference_architectures/index.md#available-reference-architectures)
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documentation to determine the number of Consul server nodes you should have.
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1. If necessary, ensure the [appropriate ports are open](package_information/defaults.md#ports) in your firewall.
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## Configure the Consul nodes
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On _each_ Consul server node:
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1. Follow the instructions to [install](https://about.gitlab.com/install/)
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GitLab by choosing your preferred platform, but do not supply the
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`EXTERNAL_URL` value when asked.
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1. Edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`, and add the following by replacing the values
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noted in the `retry_join` section. In the example below, there are three
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nodes, two denoted with their IP, and one with its FQDN, you can use either
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notation:
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```ruby
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# Disable all components except Consul
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roles ['consul_role']
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# Consul nodes: can be FQDN or IP, separated by a whitespace
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consul['configuration'] = {
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server: true,
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retry_join: %w(10.10.10.1 consul1.gitlab.example.com 10.10.10.2)
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}
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# Disable auto migrations
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gitlab_rails['auto_migrate'] = false
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```
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1. [Reconfigure GitLab](restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure) for the changes
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to take effect.
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1. Run the following command to ensure Consul is both configured correctly and
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to verify that all server nodes are communicating:
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```shell
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sudo /opt/gitlab/embedded/bin/consul members
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```
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The output should be similar to:
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```plaintext
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Node Address Status Type Build Protocol DC
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CONSUL_NODE_ONE XXX.XXX.XXX.YYY:8301 alive server 0.9.2 2 gitlab_consul
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CONSUL_NODE_TWO XXX.XXX.XXX.YYY:8301 alive server 0.9.2 2 gitlab_consul
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CONSUL_NODE_THREE XXX.XXX.XXX.YYY:8301 alive server 0.9.2 2 gitlab_consul
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```
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If the results display any nodes with a status that isn't `alive`, or if any
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of the three nodes are missing, see the [Troubleshooting section](#troubleshooting-consul).
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## Upgrade the Consul nodes
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To upgrade your Consul nodes, upgrade the GitLab package.
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Nodes should be:
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- Members of a healthy cluster prior to upgrading the Omnibus GitLab package.
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- Upgraded one node at a time.
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Identify any existing health issues in the cluster by running the following command
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in each node. The command returns an empty array if the cluster is healthy:
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```shell
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curl "http://127.0.0.1:8500/v1/health/state/critical"
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```
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If the Consul version has changed, you see a notice at the end of `gitlab-ctl reconfigure`
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informing you that Consul must be restarted for the new version to be used.
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Restart Consul one node at a time:
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```shell
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sudo gitlab-ctl restart consul
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```
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Consul nodes communicate using the raft protocol. If the current leader goes
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offline, there must be a leader election. A leader node must exist to facilitate
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synchronization across the cluster. If too many nodes go offline at the same time,
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the cluster loses quorum and doesn't elect a leader due to
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[broken consensus](https://developer.hashicorp.com/consul/docs/architecture/consensus).
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Consult the [troubleshooting section](#troubleshooting-consul) if the cluster is not
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able to recover after the upgrade. The [outage recovery](#outage-recovery) may
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be of particular interest.
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GitLab uses Consul to store only easily regenerated, transient data. If the
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bundled Consul wasn't used by any process other than GitLab itself, you can
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[rebuild the cluster from scratch](#recreate-from-scratch).
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## Troubleshooting Consul
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Below are some operations should you debug any issues.
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You can see any error logs by running:
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```shell
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sudo gitlab-ctl tail consul
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```
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### Check the cluster membership
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To determine which nodes are part of the cluster, run the following on any member in the cluster:
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```shell
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sudo /opt/gitlab/embedded/bin/consul members
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```
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The output should be similar to:
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```plaintext
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Node Address Status Type Build Protocol DC
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consul-b XX.XX.X.Y:8301 alive server 0.9.0 2 gitlab_consul
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consul-c XX.XX.X.Y:8301 alive server 0.9.0 2 gitlab_consul
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consul-c XX.XX.X.Y:8301 alive server 0.9.0 2 gitlab_consul
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db-a XX.XX.X.Y:8301 alive client 0.9.0 2 gitlab_consul
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db-b XX.XX.X.Y:8301 alive client 0.9.0 2 gitlab_consul
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```
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Ideally all nodes have a `Status` of `alive`.
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### Restart Consul
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If it is necessary to restart Consul, it is important to do this in
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a controlled manner to maintain quorum. If quorum is lost, to recover the cluster,
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you follow the Consul [outage recovery](#outage-recovery) process.
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To be safe, it's recommended that you only restart Consul in one node at a time to
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ensure the cluster remains intact. For larger clusters, it is possible to restart
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multiple nodes at a time. See the
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[Consul consensus document](https://developer.hashicorp.com/consul/docs/architecture/consensus#deployment-table)
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for the number of failures it can tolerate. This is the number of simultaneous
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restarts it can sustain.
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To restart Consul:
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```shell
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sudo gitlab-ctl restart consul
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```
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### Consul nodes unable to communicate
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By default, Consul attempts to
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[bind](https://developer.hashicorp.com/consul/docs/agent/config/config-files#bind_addr) to `0.0.0.0`, but
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it advertises the first private IP address on the node for other Consul nodes
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to communicate with it. If the other nodes cannot communicate with a node on
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this address, then the cluster has a failed status.
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If you run into this issue, then messages like the following are output in `gitlab-ctl tail consul`:
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```plaintext
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2017-09-25_19:53:39.90821 2017/09/25 19:53:39 [WARN] raft: no known peers, aborting election
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2017-09-25_19:53:41.74356 2017/09/25 19:53:41 [ERR] agent: failed to sync remote state: No cluster leader
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```
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To fix this:
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1. Pick an address on each node that all of the other nodes can reach this node through.
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1. Update your `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`
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```ruby
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consul['configuration'] = {
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...
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bind_addr: 'IP ADDRESS'
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}
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```
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1. Reconfigure GitLab;
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```shell
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gitlab-ctl reconfigure
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```
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If you still see the errors, you may have to
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[erase the Consul database and reinitialize](#recreate-from-scratch) on the affected node.
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### Consul does not start - multiple private IPs
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If a node has multiple private IPs, Consul doesn't know about
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which of the private addresses to advertise, and then it immediately exits on start.
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Messages like the following are output in `gitlab-ctl tail consul`:
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```plaintext
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2017-11-09_17:41:45.52876 ==> Starting Consul agent...
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2017-11-09_17:41:45.53057 ==> Error creating agent: Failed to get advertise address: Multiple private IPs found. Please configure one.
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```
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To fix this:
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1. Pick an address on the node that all of the other nodes can reach this node through.
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1. Update your `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`
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```ruby
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consul['configuration'] = {
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...
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bind_addr: 'IP ADDRESS'
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}
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```
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1. Reconfigure GitLab;
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```shell
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gitlab-ctl reconfigure
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```
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### Outage recovery
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If you have lost enough Consul nodes in the cluster to break quorum, then the cluster
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is considered to have failed and cannot function without manual intervention.
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In that case, you can either recreate the nodes from scratch or attempt a
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recover.
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#### Recreate from scratch
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By default, GitLab does not store anything in the Consul node that cannot be
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recreated. To erase the Consul database and reinitialize:
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```shell
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sudo gitlab-ctl stop consul
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sudo rm -rf /var/opt/gitlab/consul/data
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sudo gitlab-ctl start consul
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```
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After this, the node should start back up, and the rest of the server agents rejoin.
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Shortly after that, the client agents should rejoin as well.
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#### Recover a failed node
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If you have taken advantage of Consul to store other data and want to restore
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the failed node, follow the
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[Consul guide](https://developer.hashicorp.com/consul/tutorials/datacenter-operations/recovery-outage)
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to recover a failed cluster.
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