52 lines
1.6 KiB
Plaintext
52 lines
1.6 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: commands
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page_title: 'Commands: Peering Delete'
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description: |
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The `consul peering delete` command ends a cluster peering connection with another cluster.
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---
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# Consul Peering Delete
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Command: `consul peering delete`
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Corresponding HTTP API Endpoint: [\[DELETE\] /v1/peering/:name](/consul/api-docs/peering#delete-a-peering-connection)
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The `peering delete` removes a peering connection with another cluster.
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Consul deletes all data imported from the peer in the background.
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The peering connection is removed after all associated data has been deleted.
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Operators can still read the peering connections while the data is being removed.
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The command adds a `DeletedAt` field to the peering connection object with the timestamp of when the peering was marked for deletion.
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You can only use a peering token to establish the connection once. If you need to reestablish a peering connection, you must generate a new token.
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The table below shows this command's [required ACLs](/consul/api-docs/api-structure#authentication).
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| ACL Required |
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| ------------ |
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| `peering:write` |
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## Usage
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Usage: `consul peering delete [options] -name <peer name>`
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#### Command Options
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- `-name=<string>` - (Required) The name of the peer.
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#### Enterprise Options
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@include 'http_api_partition_options.mdx'
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#### API Options
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@include 'http_api_options_client.mdx'
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## Examples
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The following examples deletes a peering connection to a cluster locally referred to as "cluster-02":
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```shell-session hideClipboard
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$ consul peering delete -name cluster-02
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Successfully submitted peering connection, cluster-02, for deletion
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```
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