dc: show: title: Cluster Overview serverstatus: title: Server status unassigned: Unassigned Zones tolerance: link: | Learn how to improve fault tolerance header: Server fault tolerance immediate: header: Immediate body: the number of healthy active voting servers that can fail at once without causing an outage optimistic: header: Optimistic body: the number of healthy active and back-up voting servers that can fail gradually without causing an outage cataloghealth: title: Health license: title: License expiry: header: Expiry expired: header: Expired body: |
Your license expired on {date} at {time}.
valid: header: '' body: |Your license expires on {date} at {time}.
documentation: title: Learn More body: | nodes: index: empty: header: | {items, select, 0 {Welcome to Nodes} other {No Nodes found} } body: |
{items, select,
0 {There don't seem to be any registered Nodes in this Consul cluster}
other {No Nodes were found matching your search}
}, or you may not have service:read
and node:read
permissions access to this view.
Consul provides a session mechanism which can be used to build distributed locks. Sessions act as a binding layer between Nodes, Health Checks, and Key/Value data. There are currently no Lock Sessions present, or you may not have key:read
or session:read
permissions.
This Node has no Service Instances{items, select, 0 {} other { matching that search} }.
healthchecks: title: Health Checks empty: |This Node has no Health Checks{items, select, 0 {} other { matching that search} }.
critical-serf-notice: header: Failing serf check body: |This node has a failing serf node check. The health statuses shown on this page are the statuses as they were known before the node became unreachable.
peers: index: detail: imported: count: | {count} imported services tooltip: The number of services imported from {name} exported: count: | {count} exported services tooltip: The number of services exported from {name} services: index: empty: header: | {items, select, 0 {Welcome to Services} other {No Services found} } body: |
{items, select,
0 {There don't seem to be any registered services in this Consul cluster}
other {No Services were found matching your search}
}, or you may not have service:read
and node:read
access to this view. Use Terraform, Kubernetes CRDs, Vault, or the Consul CLI to register Services.
The following list shows individual HTTP paths exposed through Envoy for external services like Prometheus. Read more about this in our documentation.
empty: body: |There are no individual HTTP paths exposed through Envoy for external services like Prometheus. Read more about this in our documentation.
healthchecks: empty: |This instance has no health checks{items, select, 0 {} other { matching that search} }.
critical-serf-notice: header: Failing serf check body: |This instance has a failing serf node check. The health statuses shown on this page are the statuses as they were known before the node became unreachable.
upstreams: tproxy-mode: header: Transparent proxy mode body: |The upstreams listed on this page have been defined in a proxy registration. There may be more upstreams, though, as "transparent" mode is enabled on this proxy.
footer: | empty: |This Service Instance has no Upstreams{items, select, 0 {} other { matching that search} }.
show: topology: notices: open: Expand Banners close: Collapse Banners notice: filtered-by-acls: header: Limited Access body: This service may have dependencies you won’t see because you don’t have access to them. default-allow: header: Intentions are set to default allow body: Your Intention settings are currently set to default allow. This means that this view will show connections to every service in your cluster. We recommend changing your Intention settings to default deny and creating specific Intentions for upstream and downstream services for this view to be useful. footer: | wildcard-intention: header: Permissive Intention body: One or more of your Intentions are set to allow traffic to and/or from all other services in a namespace. This Topology view will show all of those connections if that remains unchanged. We recommend setting more specific Intentions for upstream and downstream services to make this visualization more useful. footer: | not-defined-intention: header: Connections are not explicitly defined body: There appears to be an Intention allowing traffic, but the services are unable to communicate until that connection is enabled by defining an explicit upstream or proxies are set to 'transparent' mode. footer: | no-dependencies: header: No dependencies body: The service you are viewing currently has no dependencies. You will only see metrics for the current service until dependencies are added. footer: | acls-disabled: header: Enable ACLs body: This connect-native service may have dependencies, but Consul isn't aware of them when ACLs are disabled. Enable ACLs to make this view more useful. footer: | intentions: index: empty: header: | {items, select, 0 {Welcome to Intentions} other {No Intentions found} } body: |
{items, select,
0 {There don't seem to be any Intentions in this Consul cluster}
other {No Intentions were found matching your search}
}, or you may not have intentions:read
permissions access to this view.
This Service has no Instances{items, select, 0 {} other { matching that search} }.
services: intro: |The following services may receive traffic from external services through this gateway. Learn more about configuring gateways in our step-by-step guide.
empty: |There are no Services{items, select, 0 {} other { matching that search} }.
tags: empty: header: Welcome to Tags body: |There are no tags for this Service.
upstreams: intro: |
Upstreams are services that may receive traffic from this gateway. If you are not using Consul DNS, please make sure your Host:
header uses the correct domain name for the gateway to correctly proxy to its upstreams. Learn more about configuring gateways in our documentation.
This Service has no Upstreams{items, select, 0 {} other { matching that search} }.
routing-config: source: Routing Configuration intentions: index: empty: header: | {items, select, 0 {Welcome to Intentions} other {No Intentions found} } body: |
{items, select,
0 {There don't seem to be any Intentions in this Consul cluster}
other {No Intentions were found matching your search}
}, or you may not have intentions:read
permissions access to this view.
{items, select,
0 {There don't seem to be any K/V pairs in this Consul cluster yet}
other {No K/V pairs were found matching your search}
}, or you may not have key:read
permissions access to this view.
{items, select,
0 {There don't seem to be any Tokens}
other {No Tokens were found matching your search}
}, or you may not have acl:read
permissions to view Tokens yet.
{items, select,
0 {There don't seem to be any Policies}
other {No Policies were found matching your search}
}, or you may not have acl:read
permissions to view Policies yet.
{items, select,
0 {There don't seem to be any Roles}
other {No Roles were found matching your search}
}, or you may not have acl:read
permissions to view Roles yet.
Binding rules allow an operator to express a systematic way of automatically linking roles and service identities to newly created tokens without operator intervention.
nspace-rules: empty: header: No Namespace Rules body: |A set of rules that can control which namespace tokens created via this auth method will be created within. Unlike binding rules, the first matching namespace rule wins.
index: empty: header: | {items, select, 0 {Welcome to Auth Methods} other {No Auth Methods found} } body: |
{items, select,
0 {There don't seem to be any Auth Methods}
other {No Auth Methods were found matching your search}
}, or you may not have acl:read
permissions to view Auth Methods yet.