## Consul Web UI This directory contains the Consul Web UI. Consul contains a built-in HTTP server that serves this directory, but any common HTTP server is capable of serving it. It uses JavaScript and [Ember](http://emberjs.com) to communicate with the [Consul API](http://www.consul.io/docs/agent/http.html). The basic features it provides are: - Service view. A list of your registered services, their health and the nodes they run on. - Node view. A list of your registered nodes, the services running on each and the health of the node. - Key/value view and update It's aware of multiple data centers, so you can get a quick global overview before drilling into specific data-centers for detailed views. The UI uses some internal undocumented HTTP APIs to optimize performance and usability. ### Development Improvements and bug fixes are welcome and encouraged for the Web UI. You'll need sass to compile CSS stylesheets. Install that with bundler: cd ui/ bundle Reloading compilation for development: make watch Consul ships with an HTTP server for the API and UI. By default, when you run the agent, it is off. However, if you pass a `-ui-dir` flag with a path to this directory, you'll be able to access the UI via the Consul HTTP server address, which defaults to `localhost:8500/ui`. An example of this command, from inside the `ui/` directory, would be: consul agent -bootstrap -server -data-dir /tmp/ -ui-dir . Basic tests can be run by adding the `?test` query parameter to the application. When developing Consul, it's recommended that you use the included development configuration. consul agent -config-file=development_config.json ### Releasing `make dist` The `dist` folder will contain the files you should use for deployment.