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