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docs | ACLs (HTTP) | docs-agent-http-acl | The ACL endpoints are used to create, update, destroy, and query ACL tokens. |
ACL HTTP Endpoint
The ACL endpoints are used to create, update, destroy, and query ACL tokens. The following endpoints are supported:
/v1/acl/create
: Creates a new token with a given policy/v1/acl/update
: Updates the policy of a token/v1/acl/destroy/<id>
: Destroys a given token/v1/acl/info/<id>
: Queries the policy of a given token/v1/acl/clone/<id>
: Creates a new token by cloning an existing token/v1/acl/list
: Lists all the active tokens
/v1/acl/create
The create
endpoint is used to make a new token. A token has a name,
a type, and a set of ACL rules.
The Name
property is opaque to Consul. To aid human operators, it should
be a meaningful indicator of the ACL's purpose.
Type is either client
or management
. A management token is comparable
to a root user and has the ability to perform any action including
creating, modifying, and deleting ACLs.
By constrast, a client token can only perform actions as permitted by the
rules associated. Client tokens can never manage ACLs. Given this limitation,
only a management token can be used to make requests to the /v1/acl/create
endpoint.
In any Consul cluster, only a single datacenter is authoritative for ACLs, so all requests are automatically routed to that datacenter regardless of the agent to which the request is made.
The create endpoint supports a JSON request body with the PUT. The request body may take the form:
{
"Name": "my-app-token",
"Type": "client",
"Rules": ""
}
None of the fields are mandatory. In fact, no body needs to be PUT if the
defaults are to be used. The Name
and Rules
fields default to being
blank, and the Type
defaults to "client".
The format of the Rules
property is documented here.
A successful response body will return the ID
of the newly created ACL, like so:
{
"ID": "adf4238a-882b-9ddc-4a9d-5b6758e4159e"
}
/v1/acl/update
The update endpoint is used to modify the policy for a given ACL token. It
is very similar to the create endpoint; however, instead of generating a new
token ID, the ID
field must be provided. As with /v1/acl/create
,
requests to this endpoint must be made with a management
token.
In any Consul cluster, only a single datacenter is authoritative for ACLs, so all requests are automatically routed to that datacenter regardless of the agent to which the request is made.
The update endpoint requires a JSON request body to the PUT. The request body may look like:
{
"ID": "adf4238a-882b-9ddc-4a9d-5b6758e4159e"
"Name": "my-app-token-updated",
"Type": "client",
"Rules": "# New Rules",
}
Only the ID
field is mandatory. The other fields provide defaults: the
Name
and Rules
fields default to being blank, and Type
defaults to "client".
The format of Rules
is documented here.
/v1/acl/destroy/<id>
The destroy endpoint must be hit with a PUT. This endpoint destroys the ACL
token identified by the id
portion of the path.
The request is automatically routed to the authoritative ACL datacenter. Requests to this endpoint must be made with a management token.
/v1/acl/info/<id>
The info endpoint must be hit with a GET. This endpoint returns the ACL
token information identified by the id
portion of the path.
It returns a JSON body like this:
[
{
"CreateIndex": 3,
"ModifyIndex": 3,
"ID": "8f246b77-f3e1-ff88-5b48-8ec93abf3e05",
"Name": "Client Token",
"Type": "client",
"Rules": "..."
}
]
If the ACL is not found, null is returned instead of a JSON list.
/v1/acl/clone/<id>
The clone endpoint must be hit with a PUT. It clones the ACL identified
by the id
portion of the path 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.
The request is automatically routed to the authoritative ACL datacenter. Requests to this endpoint must be made with a management token.
As with create
, a successful response body will return the ID
of the newly
created ACL, like so:
{
"ID": "adf4238a-882b-9ddc-4a9d-5b6758e4159e"
}
/v1/acl/list
The list endpoint must be hit with a GET. It lists all the active ACL tokens. This is a privileged endpoint and requires a management token.
It returns a JSON body like this:
[
{
"CreateIndex": 3,
"ModifyIndex": 3,
"ID": "8f246b77-f3e1-ff88-5b48-8ec93abf3e05",
"Name": "Client Token",
"Type": "client",
"Rules": "..."
},
...
]