99 lines
5.0 KiB
Markdown
99 lines
5.0 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "HTTP API"
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sidebar_current: "docs-agent-http"
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description: |-
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The main interface to Consul is a RESTful HTTP API. The API can be used to perform CRUD operations on nodes, services, checks, configuration, and more. The endpoints are versioned to enable changes without breaking backwards compatibility.
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---
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# HTTP API
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The main interface to Consul is a RESTful HTTP API. The API can be used to perform CRUD
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operations on nodes, services, checks, configuration, and more. The endpoints are versioned
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to enable changes without breaking backwards compatibility.
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Each endpoint manages a different aspect of Consul:
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* [acl](http/acl.html) - Access Control Lists
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* [agent](http/agent.html) - Consul Agent
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* [catalog](http/catalog.html) - Nodes and services
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* [coordinate](http/coordinate.html) - Network coordinates
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* [event](http/event.html) - User Events
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* [health](http/health.html) - Health checks
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* [kv](http/kv.html) - Key/Value store
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* [query](http/query.html) - Prepared Queries
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* [session](http/session.html) - Sessions
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* [status](http/status.html) - Consul system status
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Each of these is documented in detail at the links above. Consul also has a number
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of internal APIs which are purposely undocumented and subject to change.
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## Blocking Queries
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Certain endpoints support a feature called a "blocking query." A blocking query
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is used to wait for a potential change using long polling.
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Not all endpoints support blocking, but those that do are clearly designated in the
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documentation. Any endpoint that supports blocking will also set the HTTP header
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`X-Consul-Index`, a unique identifier representing the current state of the
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requested resource. On subsequent requests for this resource, the client can set the `index`
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query string parameter to the value of `X-Consul-Index`, indicating that the client wishes
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to wait for any changes subsequent to that index.
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In addition to `index`, endpoints that support blocking will also honor a `wait`
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parameter specifying a maximum duration for the blocking request. This is limited to
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10 minutes. If not set, the wait time defaults to 5 minutes. This value can be specified
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in the form of "10s" or "5m" (i.e., 10 seconds or 5 minutes, respectively).
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A critical note is that the return of a blocking request is **no guarantee** of a change. It
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is possible that the timeout was reached or that there was an idempotent write that does
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not affect the result of the query.
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## Consistency Modes
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Most of the read query endpoints support multiple levels of consistency. Since no policy will
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suit all clients' needs, these consistency modes allow the user to have the ultimate say in
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how to balance the trade-offs inherent in a distributed system.
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The three read modes are:
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* default - If not specified, the default is strongly consistent in almost all cases. However,
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there is a small window in which a new leader may be elected during which the old leader may
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service stale values. The trade-off is fast reads but potentially stale values. The condition
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resulting in stale reads is hard to trigger, and most clients should not need to worry about
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this case. Also, note that this race condition only applies to reads, not writes.
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* consistent - This mode is strongly consistent without caveats. It requires
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that a leader verify with a quorum of peers that it is still leader. This
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introduces an additional round-trip to all server nodes. The trade-off is
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increased latency due to an extra round trip. Most clients should not use this
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unless they cannot tolerate a stale read.
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* stale - This mode allows any server to service the read regardless of whether
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it is the leader. This means reads can be arbitrarily stale; however, results are generally
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consistent to within 50 milliseconds of the leader. The trade-off is very fast and
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scalable reads with a higher likelihood of stale values. Since this mode allows reads without
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a leader, a cluster that is unavailable will still be able to respond to queries.
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To switch these modes, either the `stale` or `consistent` query parameters
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should be provided on requests. It is an error to provide both.
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To support bounding the acceptable staleness of data, responses provide the `X-Consul-LastContact`
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header containing the time in milliseconds that a server was last contacted by the leader node.
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The `X-Consul-KnownLeader` header also indicates if there is a known leader. These can be used
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by clients to gauge the staleness of a result and take appropriate action.
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## Formatted JSON Output
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By default, the output of all HTTP API requests is minimized JSON. If the client passes `pretty`
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on the query string, formatted JSON will be returned.
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## ACLs
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Several endpoints in Consul use or require ACL tokens to operate. An agent
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can be configured to use a default token in requests using the `acl_token`
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configuration option. However, the token can also be specified per-request
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by using the `X-Consul-Token` request header or the `token` querystring
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parameter. The request header takes precedence over the default token, and
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the querystring parameter takes precedence over everything.
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