2017-05-26 23:18:05 +00:00
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---
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layout: api
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page_title: HTTP API
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sidebar_current: api-overview
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description: |-
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Nomad exposes a RESTful HTTP API to control almost every aspect of the
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Nomad agent.
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---
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# HTTP API
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The main interface to Nomad is a RESTful HTTP API. The API can query the current
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state of the system as well as modify the state of the system. The Nomad CLI
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actually invokes Nomad's HTTP for many commands.
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## Version Prefix
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All API routes are prefixed with `/v1/`.
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This documentation is only for the v1 API.
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~> **Backwards compatibility:** At the current version, Nomad does not yet
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promise backwards compatibility even with the v1 prefix. We'll remove this
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warning when this policy changes. We expect to reach API stability by Nomad
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1.0.
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## Addressing & Ports
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Nomad binds to a specific set of addresses and ports. The HTTP API is served via
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the `http` address and port. This `address:port` must be accessible locally. If
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you bind to `127.0.0.1:4646`, the API is only available _from that host_. If you
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bind to a private internal IP, the API will be available from within that
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network. If you bind to a public IP, the API will be available from the public
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Internet (not recommended).
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The default port for the Nomad HTTP API is `4646`. This can be overridden via
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the Nomad configuration block. Here is an example curl request to query a Nomad
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server with the default configuration:
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```text
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$ curl http://127.0.0.1:4646/v1/agent/members
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```
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The conventions used in the API documentation do not list a port and use the
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standard URL `nomad.rocks`. Be sure to replace this with your Nomad agent URL
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when using the examples.
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## Data Model and Layout
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2017-08-12 14:06:20 +00:00
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There are five primary nouns in Nomad:
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2017-05-26 23:18:05 +00:00
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- jobs
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- nodes
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- allocations
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2017-06-29 23:15:13 +00:00
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- deployments
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2017-05-26 23:18:05 +00:00
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- evaluations
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[![Nomad Data Model](/assets/images/nomad-data-model.png)](/assets/images/nomad-data-model.png)
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Jobs are submitted by users and represent a _desired state_. A job is a
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declarative description of tasks to run which are bounded by constraints and
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require resources. Nodes are the servers in the clusters that tasks can be
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scheduled on. The mapping of tasks in a job to nodes is done using allocations.
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An allocation is used to declare that a set of tasks in a job should be run on a
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particular node. Scheduling is the process of determining the appropriate
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allocations and is done as part of an evaluation. Deployments are objects to
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track a rolling update of allocations between two versions of a job.
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The API is modeled closely on the underlying data model. Use the links to the
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left for documentation about specific endpoints. There are also "Agent" APIs
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which interact with a specific agent and not the broader cluster used for
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administration.
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## ACLs
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The Nomad API does not support ACLs at this time.
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## Authentication
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The Nomad API does not support authentication at this time.
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## Blocking Queries
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Many endpoints in Nomad support a feature known as "blocking queries". A
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blocking query is used to wait for a potential change using long polling. Not
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all endpoints support blocking, but each endpoint uniquely documents its support
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for blocking queries in the documentation.
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Endpoints that support blocking queries return an HTTP header named
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`X-Nomad-Index`. This is a unique identifier representing the current state of
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the requested resource.
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On subsequent requests for this resource, the client can set the `index` query
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string parameter to the value of `X-Nomad-Index`, indicating that the client
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wishes to wait for any changes subsequent to that index.
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When this is provided, the HTTP request will "hang" until a change in the system
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occurs, or the maximum timeout is reached. A critical note is that the return of
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a blocking request is **no guarantee** of a change. It is possible that the
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timeout was reached or that there was an idempotent write that does not affect
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the result of the query.
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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
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limited to 10 minutes. If not set, the wait time defaults to 5 minutes. This
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value can be specified in the form of "10s" or "5m" (i.e., 10 seconds or 5
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minutes, respectively). A small random amount of additional wait time is added
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to the supplied maximum `wait` time to spread out the wake up time of any
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concurrent requests. This adds up to `wait / 16` additional time to the maximum
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duration.
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## Consistency Modes
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Most of the read query endpoints support multiple levels of consistency. Since
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no policy will suit all clients' needs, these consistency modes allow the user
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to have the ultimate say in how to balance the trade-offs inherent in a
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distributed system.
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The two read modes are:
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- `default` - If not specified, the default is strongly consistent in almost all
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cases. However, there is a small window in which a new leader may be elected
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during which the old leader may service stale values. The trade-off is fast
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reads but potentially stale values. The condition resulting in stale reads is
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hard to trigger, and most clients should not need to worry about this case.
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Also, note that this race condition only applies to reads, not writes.
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- `stale` - This mode allows any server to service the read regardless of
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whether it is the leader. This means reads can be arbitrarily stale; however,
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results are generally consistent to within 50 milliseconds of the leader. The
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trade-off is very fast and scalable reads with a higher likelihood of stale
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values. Since this mode allows reads without a leader, a cluster that is
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unavailable will still be able to respond to queries.
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To switch these modes, use the `stale` query parameter on requests.
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To support bounding the acceptable staleness of data, responses provide the
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`X-Nomad-LastContact` header containing the time in milliseconds that a server
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was last contacted by the leader node. The `X-Nomad-KnownLeader` header also
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indicates if there is a known leader. These can be used by clients to gauge the
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staleness of a result and take appropriate action.
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## Cross-Region Requests
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By default, any request to the HTTP API will default to the region on which the
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machine is servicing the request. If the agent runs in "region1", the request
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will query the region "region1". A target region can be explicitly request using
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the `?region` query parameter. The request will be transparently forwarded and
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serviced by a server in the requested region.
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## Compressed Responses
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The HTTP API will gzip the response if the HTTP request denotes that the client
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accepts gzip compression. This is achieved by passing the accept encoding:
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```
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$ curl \
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--header "Accept-Encoding: gzip" \
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https://nomad.rocks/v1/...
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```
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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
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passes `pretty` on the query string, formatted JSON will be returned.
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In general, clients should prefer a client-side parser like `jq` instead of
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server-formatted data. Asking the server to format the data takes away
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processing cycles from more important tasks.
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```
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$ curl https://nomad.rocks/v1/page?pretty
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```
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## HTTP Methods
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Nomad's API aims to be RESTful, although there are some exceptions. The API
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responds to the standard HTTP verbs GET, PUT, and DELETE. Each API method will
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clearly document the verb(s) it responds to and the generated response. The same
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path with different verbs may trigger different behavior. For example:
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```text
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PUT /v1/jobs
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GET /v1/jobs
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```
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Even though these share a path, the `PUT` operation creates a new job whereas
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the `GET` operation reads all jobs.
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