--- layout: api page_title: Legacy ACLs - HTTP API description: >- The /acl endpoints create, update, destroy, and query Legacy ACL tokens in Consul. --- -> **Consul 1.4.0 deprecates the legacy ACL system completely.** It's _strongly_ recommended you do not build anything using the legacy system and consider using the new ACL [Token](/docs/api/acl-token) and [Policy](/docs/api/acl-policy) APIs instead. # ACL HTTP API These `/acl` endpoints create, update, destroy, and query ACL tokens in Consul. For more information about ACLs, please check the [ACL tutorial](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/consul/access-control-setup-production). ## Bootstrap ACLs This endpoint does a special one-time bootstrap of the ACL system, making the first management token if the [`acl_master_token`](/docs/agent/options#acl_master_token) is not specified in the Consul server configuration, and if the cluster has not been bootstrapped previously. This is available in Consul 0.9.1 and later, and requires all Consul servers to be upgraded in order to operate. This provides a mechanism to bootstrap ACLs without having any secrets present in Consul's configuration files. | Method | Path | Produces | | ------ | ---------------- | ------------------ | | `PUT` | `/acl/bootstrap` | `application/json` | The table below shows this endpoint's support for [blocking queries](/api/features/blocking), [consistency modes](/api/features/consistency), [agent caching](/api/features/caching), and [required ACLs](/api#authentication). | Blocking Queries | Consistency Modes | Agent Caching | ACL Required | | ---------------- | ----------------- | ------------- | ------------ | | `NO` | `none` | `none` | `none` | ### Sample Request ```shell-session $ curl \ --request PUT \ http://127.0.0.1:8500/v1/acl/bootstrap ``` ### Sample Response ```json { "ID": "adf4238a-882b-9ddc-4a9d-5b6758e4159e" } ``` You can detect if something has interfered with the ACL bootstrapping process by checking the response code. A 200 response means that the bootstrap was a success, and a 403 means that the cluster has already been bootstrapped, at which point you should consider the cluster in a potentially compromised state. The returned token will be a management token which can be used to further configure the ACL system. Please check the [ACL tutorial](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/consul/access-control-setup-production) for more details. ## Create ACL Token This endpoint makes a new ACL token. | Method | Path | Produces | | ------ | ------------- | ------------------ | | `PUT` | `/acl/create` | `application/json` | The table below shows this endpoint's support for [blocking queries](/api/features/blocking), [consistency modes](/api/features/consistency), [agent caching](/api/features/caching), and [required ACLs](/api#authentication). | Blocking Queries | Consistency Modes | Agent Caching | ACL Required | | ---------------- | ----------------- | ------------- | ------------ | | `NO` | `none` | `none` | `management` | ### Parameters - `ID` `(string: "")` - Specifies the ID of the ACL. If not provided, a UUID is generated. - `Name` `(string: "")` - Specifies a human-friendly name for the ACL token. - `Type` `(string: "client")` - Specifies the type of ACL token. Valid values are: `client` and `management`. - `Rules` `(string: "")` - Specifies rules for this ACL token. The format of the `Rules` property is documented in the [ACL tutorial](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/consul/access-control-setup-production). ### Sample Payload ```json { "Name": "my-app-token", "Type": "client", "Rules": "" } ``` ### Sample Request ```shell-session $ curl \ --request PUT \ --data @payload.json \ http://127.0.0.1:8500/v1/acl/create ``` ### Sample Response ```json { "ID": "adf4238a-882b-9ddc-4a9d-5b6758e4159e" } ``` ## Update ACL Token This endpoint is used to modify the policy for a given ACL token. Instead of generating a new token ID, the `ID` field must be provided. | Method | Path | Produces | | ------ | ------------- | ------------------ | | `PUT` | `/acl/update` | `application/json` | The table below shows this endpoint's support for [blocking queries](/api/features/blocking), [consistency modes](/api/features/consistency), [agent caching](/api/features/caching), and [required ACLs](/api#authentication). | Blocking Queries | Consistency Modes | Agent Caching | ACL Required | | ---------------- | ----------------- | ------------- | ------------ | | `NO` | `none` | `none` | `management` | ### Parameters The parameters are the same as the _create_ endpoint, except the `ID` field is required. ### Sample Payload ```json { "ID": "adf4238a-882b-9ddc-4a9d-5b6758e4159e", "Name": "my-app-token-updated", "Type": "client", "Rules": "# New Rules" } ``` ### Sample Request ```shell-session $ curl \ --request PUT \ --data @payload.json \ http://127.0.0.1:8500/v1/acl/update ``` ### Sample Response ```json { "ID": "adf4238a-882b-9ddc-4a9d-5b6758e4159e" } ``` ## Delete ACL Token This endpoint deletes an ACL token with the given ID. | Method | Path | Produces | | ------ | -------------------- | ------------------ | | `PUT` | `/acl/destroy/:uuid` | `application/json` | Even though the return type is application/json, the value is either true or false, indicating whether the delete succeeded. The table below shows this endpoint's support for [blocking queries](/api/features/blocking), [consistency modes](/api/features/consistency), [agent caching](/api/features/caching), and [required ACLs](/api#authentication). | Blocking Queries | Consistency Modes | Agent Caching | ACL Required | | ---------------- | ----------------- | ------------- | ------------ | | `NO` | `none` | `none` | `management` | ### Parameters - `uuid` `(string: )` - Specifies the UUID of the ACL token to destroy. This is required and is specified as part of the URL path. ### Sample Request ```shell-session $ curl \ --request PUT \ http://127.0.0.1:8500/v1/acl/destroy/8f246b77-f3e1-ff88-5b48-8ec93abf3e05 ``` ### Sample Response ```json true ``` ## Read ACL Token This endpoint reads an ACL token with the given ID. | Method | Path | Produces | | ------ | ----------------- | ------------------ | | `GET` | `/acl/info/:uuid` | `application/json` | The table below shows this endpoint's support for [blocking queries](/api/features/blocking), [consistency modes](/api/features/consistency), [agent caching](/api/features/caching), and [required ACLs](/api#authentication). | Blocking Queries | Consistency Modes | Agent Caching | ACL Required | | ---------------- | ----------------- | ------------- | ------------ | | `YES` | `all` | `none` | `none` | Note: No ACL is required because the ACL is specified in the URL path. ### Parameters - `uuid` `(string: )` - Specifies the UUID of the ACL token to read. This is required and is specified as part of the URL path. ### Sample Request ```shell-session $ curl \ http://127.0.0.1:8500/v1/acl/info/8f246b77-f3e1-ff88-5b48-8ec93abf3e05 ``` ### Sample Response ```json [ { "CreateIndex": 3, "ModifyIndex": 3, "ID": "8f246b77-f3e1-ff88-5b48-8ec93abf3e05", "Name": "Client Token", "Type": "client", "Rules": "..." } ] ``` ## Clone ACL Token This endpoint clones an ACL and returns a new token `ID`. This allows a token to serve as a template for others, making it simple to generate new tokens without complex rule management. | Method | Path | Produces | | ------ | ------------------ | ------------------ | | `PUT` | `/acl/clone/:uuid` | `application/json` | The table below shows this endpoint's support for [blocking queries](/api/features/blocking), [consistency modes](/api/features/consistency), [agent caching](/api/features/caching), and [required ACLs](/api#authentication). | Blocking Queries | Consistency Modes | Agent Caching | ACL Required | | ---------------- | ----------------- | ------------- | ------------ | | `NO` | `none` | `none` | `management` | ### Parameters - `uuid` `(string: )` - Specifies the UUID of the ACL token to be cloned. This is required and is specified as part of the URL path. ### Sample Request ```shell-session $ curl \ --request PUT \ http://127.0.0.1:8500/v1/acl/clone/8f246b77-f3e1-ff88-5b48-8ec93abf3e05 ``` ### Sample Response ```json { "ID": "adf4238a-882b-9ddc-4a9d-5b6758e4159e" } ``` ## List ACLs This endpoint lists all the active ACL tokens. | Method | Path | Produces | | ------ | ----------- | ------------------ | | `GET` | `/acl/list` | `application/json` | The table below shows this endpoint's support for [blocking queries](/api/features/blocking), [consistency modes](/api/features/consistency), [agent caching](/api/features/caching), and [required ACLs](/api#authentication). | Blocking Queries | Consistency Modes | Agent Caching | ACL Required | | ---------------- | ----------------- | ------------- | ------------ | | `YES` | `all` | `none` | `management` | ### Sample Request ```shell-session $ curl \ http://127.0.0.1:8500/v1/acl/list ``` ### Sample Response ```json [ { "CreateIndex": 3, "ModifyIndex": 3, "ID": "8f246b77-f3e1-ff88-5b48-8ec93abf3e05", "Name": "Client Token", "Type": "client", "Rules": "..." } ] ``` ## Check ACL Replication This endpoint returns the status of the ACL replication process in the datacenter. This is intended to be used by operators, or by automation checking the health of ACL replication. Please check the [ACL Replication tutorial](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/consul/access-control-replication-multiple-datacenters) for more details. | Method | Path | Produces | | ------ | ------------------ | ------------------ | | `GET` | `/acl/replication` | `application/json` | The table below shows this endpoint's support for [blocking queries](/api/features/blocking), [consistency modes](/api/features/consistency), [agent caching](/api/features/caching), and [required ACLs](/api#authentication). | Blocking Queries | Consistency Modes | Agent Caching | ACL Required | | ---------------- | ----------------- | ------------- | ------------ | | `NO` | `consistent` | `none` | `none` | ### Parameters - `dc` `(string: "")` - Specifies the datacenter to query. This will default to the datacenter of the agent being queried. This is specified as part of the URL as a query parameter. ### Sample Request ```shell-session $ curl \ http://127.0.0.1:8500/v1/acl/replication ``` ### Sample Response ```json { "Enabled": true, "Running": true, "SourceDatacenter": "dc1", "ReplicatedIndex": 1976, "LastSuccess": "2016-08-05T06:28:58Z", "LastError": "2016-08-05T06:28:28Z" } ``` - `Enabled` reports whether ACL replication is enabled for the datacenter. - `Running` reports whether the ACL replication process is running. The process may take approximately 60 seconds to begin running after a leader election occurs. - `SourceDatacenter` is the authoritative ACL datacenter that ACLs are being replicated from, and will match the [`primary_datacenter`](/docs/agent/options#primary_datacenter) configuration. - `ReplicatedIndex` is the last index that was successfully replicated. You can compare this to the `X-Consul-Index` header returned by the [`/v1/acl/list`](#list-acls) endpoint to determine if the replication process has gotten all available ACLs. Replication runs as a background process approximately every 30 seconds, and that local updates are rate limited to 100 updates/second, so so it may take several minutes to perform the initial sync of a large set of ACLs. After the initial sync, replica lag should be on the order of about 30 seconds. - `LastSuccess` is the UTC time of the last successful sync operation. Since ACL replication is done with a blocking query, this may not update for up to 5 minutes if there have been no ACL changes to replicate. A zero value of "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z" will be present if no sync has been successful. - `LastError` is the UTC time of the last error encountered during a sync operation. If this time is later than `LastSuccess`, you can assume the replication process is not in a good state. A zero value of "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z" will be present if no sync has resulted in an error.