Consul (software)
Consul is a software first released in 2014 for DNS-based service discovery and provides distributed Key-value storage, segmentation and configuration.[2]
Developer(s) | HashiCorp |
---|---|
Initial release | April 17, 2014[1] |
Stable release | 1.7.2
/ March 2020 |
Repository | github |
Written in | Go |
Operating system | Cross-platform |
Type | Distributed computing |
License | Mozilla Public License v2.0 |
Website | www |
Registered services and nodes can be queried using a DNS interface or an HTTP interface.[1]
Versions
- 1.7.2 (March 16, 2020)
- 1.7.1 (February 20, 2020)
- 1.7.0 (February 11, 2020)
- 1.6.4 (February 20, 2020)
- 1.6.3 (January 30, 2020)
- 1.6.2 (November 13, 2019)
- 1.6.1 (September 12, 2019)
- 1.6.0 (August 23, 2019)
- 1.5.3 (July 25, 2019)
- 1.5.2 (June 27, 2019)
- 1.5.1 (May 22, 2019)
- 1.5.0 (May 08, 2019)
- 1.4.5 (May 22, 2019)
- 1.4.4 (March 21, 2019)
- 1.4.3 (March 5, 2019)
- 1.4.2 (January 28, 2019)
- 1.4.1 (January 23, 2019)
- 1.4.0 (November 14, 2018)
- 1.3.1 (November 13, 2018)
- 1.3.0 (October 11, 2018)
- 1.2.4 (November 27, 2018)
- 1.2.3 (September 13, 2018)
- 1.2.2 (July 30, 2018)
- 1.2.1 (July 12, 2018)
- 1.2.0 (June 26, 2018)
- 1.1.1 (November 27, 2018)
- 1.1.0 (May 11, 2018)
- 1.0.8 (November 27, 2018)
- 1.0.7 (April 13, 2018)
- 1.0.6 (February 9, 2018)
- 1.0.5 (February 7, 2018)
- 1.0.3 (January 24, 2018)
- 1.0.2 (December 15, 2017)
- 1.0.1 (November 20, 2017)
- 1.0.0 (October 16, 2017)
- 0.9.4 (November 27, 2018)
- 0.9.3 (September 8, 2017)
- 0.9.2 (August 9, 2017)
- 0.9.1 (August 9, 2017)
- 0.9.0 (July 20, 2017)
- 0.8.5 (June 27, 2017)
- 0.8.4 (June 9, 2017)
- 0.8.3 (May 12, 2017)
- 0.8.2 (May 9, 2017)
- 0.8.1 (April 17, 2017)
- 0.8.0 (April 5, 2017)
- 0.7.5 (February 15, 2017)
- 0.7.4 (February 6, 2017)
- 0.7.3 (January 26, 2017)
- 0.7.2 (December 19, 2016)
- 0.7.1 (November 10, 2016)
- 0.7.0 (September 14, 2016)
- 0.6.4 (March 16, 2016)
- 0.6.3 (January 15, 2016)
- 0.6.2 (January 13, 2016)
- 0.6.1 (January 6, 2016)
- 0.6.0 (December 3, 2015)
- 0.5.2 (May 18, 2015)
- 0.5.1 (May 13, 2015)
- 0.5.0 (February 19, 2015)
- 0.4.1 (October 20, 2014)
- 0.4.0 (September 5, 2014)
- 0.3.1 (July 21, 2014)
- 0.3.0 (June 13, 2014)
- 0.2.1 (May 20, 2014)
- 0.2.0 (May 1, 2014)
- 0.1.0 (April 17, 2014)
gollark: Apparently whoever is doing the projectile thing is making a simple vaguely coilgun-type thing. I have no idea if it will actually work as they explained it.
gollark: Does it doing combustion count as *on* fire?
gollark: There would be significant legal issues and also quite likely damage to the box.
gollark: Maybe you would be better off using quantum field theory. Except that doesn't have gravity/general relativity, only special relativity, so you should work out how to unify those?
gollark: We can just say in the technical and artistic merit video that "the robot's projectile trajectory handling maths has relativistic corrections in it and would thus be equipped to fire projectiles near the speed of light, if we actually needed that, had a way to accelerate things that fast, could do so without destroying everything, did not have interactions with the air to worry about, and could safely ignore quantum effects".
See also
References
- "HashiCorp Consul". HashiCorp: Infrastructure enables innovation.
- "GitHub - HashiCorp - Consul". Retrieved 2019-02-27.
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