Dapr and service meshes

How Dapr compares to, and works with service meshes

Dapr uses a sidecar architecture, running as a separate process alongside the application and includes features such as, service invocation, network security and distributed tracing. This often raises the question - how does Dapr compare to service mesh solutions such as Linkerd, Istio and Open Service Mesh (OSM)?

How Dapr and service meshes compare

While Dapr and service meshes do offer some overlapping capabilities, Dapr is not a service mesh where a service mesh, is defined as a networking service mesh. Unlike a service mesh which is focused on networking concerns, Dapr is focused on providing building blocks that make it easier for developers to build applications as microservices. Dapr is developer-centric versus service meshes being infrastructure-centric.

In most cases, developers do not need to be aware that the application they are building will be deployed in an environment which includes a service mesh since a service mesh intercepts network traffic. Service meshes are mostly managed and deployed by system operators. However, Dapr building block APIs are intended to be used by developers explicitly in their code.

Some common capabilities that Dapr shares with service meshes include:

  • Secure service-to-service communication with mTLS encryption
  • Service-to-service metric collection
  • Service-to-service distributed tracing
  • Resiliency through retries

Importantly Dapr provides service discovery and invocation via names which is a developer centric concern. This means that through Dapr’s service invocation API, developers call a method on a service name, whereas service meshes deal with network concepts such as IPs and DNS addresses. However, Dapr does not provide capabilities for traffic behavior such as routing or traffic splitting. Traffic routing is often addressed with ingress proxies to an application and does not have to use a service mesh. In addition, Dapr does provides other application level building blocks for state management, pub/sub messaging, actors and more.

Another difference between Dapr and service meshes is with observability (tracing and metrics). Service meshes operate at the network level and trace the network calls between services. Dapr does this with service invocation, however Dapr also provides observability (tracing and metrics) over pub/sub calls using trace ids written into the Cloud Events envelope. This means that the metrics and tracing with Dapr is more extensive than with a service mesh for applications that use both service-to-service invocation and pub/sub to communicate.

The illustration below captures the overlapping features and unique capabilities that Dapr and service meshes offer:

Using Dapr with a service mesh

Dapr does work with service meshes. In the case where both are deployed together, both Dapr and service mesh sidecars are running in the application environment. In this case, it is recommended to configure only Dapr or only the service mesh to perform mTLS encryption and distributed tracing.

Watch these recordings from the Dapr community calls showing presentations on running Dapr together with different service meshes:

When to choose using Dapr, a service mesh or both

Should you be using Dapr, a service mesh or both? The answer depends on your requirements. If, for example, you are looking to use Dapr for one or more building blocks such as state management or pub/sub and considering using a service mesh just for network security or observability, you may find that Dapr is a good fit and a service mesh is not required.

Typically you would use a service mesh with Dapr where there is a corporate policy that traffic on the network needs to be encrypted regardless for all applications. For example, you may be using Dapr in only part of your application and other services and processes that are not using Dapr in your application also need encrypted traffic. In this scenario a service mesh is the better option and most likely you should use mTLS and distributed tracing on the service mesh and disable this on Dapr.

If you need traffic splitting for A/B testing scenarios you would benefit from using a service mesh, since Dapr does not provide these capabilities.

In some cases, where you require capabilities that are unique to both you will find it useful to leverage both Dapr and a service mesh - as mentioned above, there is no limitation for using them together.