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intro | KV Data | gettingstarted-kv | In addition to providing service discovery and integrated health checking, Consul provides an easy to use KV store. This can be used to hold dynamic configuration, assist in service coordination, build leader election, and enable anything else a developer can think to build. |
KV Data
In addition to providing service discovery and integrated health checking, Consul provides an easy to use KV store. This can be used to hold dynamic configuration, assist in service coordination, build leader election, and enable anything else a developer can think to build.
This step assumes you have at least one Consul agent already running.
Simple Usage
To demonstrate how simple it is to get started, we will manipulate a few keys in the KV store. There are two ways to interact with the Consul KV store: via the HTTP API and via the Consul KV CLI. The examples below show using the Consul KV CLI because it is the easiest to get started. For more advanced integrations, you may want to use the Consul KV HTTP API
First let us explore the KV store. We can ask Consul for the value of the key at
the path named redis/config/minconns
:
$ consul kv get redis/config/minconns
Error! No key exists at: redis/config/minconns
As you can see, we get no result, which makes sense because there is no data in the KV store. Next we can insert or "put" values into the KV store.
$ consul kv put redis/config/minconns 1
Success! Data written to: redis/config/minconns
$ consul kv put redis/config/maxconns 25
Success! Data written to: redis/config/maxconns
$ consul kv put -flags=42 redis/config/users/admin abcd1234
Success! Data written to: redis/config/users/admin
Now that we have keys in the store, we can query for the value of individual keys:
$ consul kv get redis/config/minconns
1
Consul retains additional metadata about the field, which is retrieved using the
-detailed
flag:
$ consul kv get -detailed redis/config/minconns
CreateIndex 207
Flags 0
Key redis/config/minconns
LockIndex 0
ModifyIndex 207
Session -
Value 1
For the key "redis/config/users/admin", we set a flag
value of 42. All keys
support setting a 64-bit integer flag value. This is not used internally by
Consul, but it can be used by clients to add meaningful metadata to any KV.
It is possible to list all the keys in the store using the recurse
options.
Results will be returned in lexicographical order:
$ consul kv get -recurse
redis/config/maxconns:25
redis/config/minconns:1
redis/config/users/admin:abcd1234
To delete a key from the Consul KV store, issue a "delete" call:
$ consul kv delete redis/config/minconns
Success! Deleted key: redis/config/minconns
It is also possible to delete an entire prefix using the recurse
option:
$ consul kv delete -recurse redis
Success! Deleted keys with prefix: redis
To update the value of an existing key, "put" a value at the same path:
$ consul kv put foo bar
$ consul kv get foo
bar
$ consul kv put foo zip
$ consul kv get foo
zip
Consul can provide atomic key updates using a Check-And-Set operation. To perform a CAS operation, specify the -cas
flag:
$ consul kv put -cas -modify-index=123 foo bar
Success! Data written to: foo
$ consul kv put -cas -modify-index=123 foo bar
Error! Did not write to foo: CAS failed
In this case, the first CAS update succeeds because the index is 123. The second operation fails because the index is no longer 123.
Next Steps
These are only a few examples of what the API supports. For the complete documentation, please see Consul KV HTTP API or Consul KV CLI documentation.
Next, we will look at the web UI options supported by Consul.