open-vault/website/source/docs/concepts/dev-server.html.md

54 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

2015-04-14 01:13:19 +00:00
---
layout: "docs"
page_title: "Dev Server Mode"
sidebar_current: "docs-concepts-devserver"
description: |-
The dev server in Vault can be used for development or to experiment with Vault.
---
# "Dev" Server Mode
You can start Vault as a server in "dev" mode like so: `vault server -dev`.
This dev-mode server requires no further setup, and your local `vault` CLI will
be authenticated to talk to it. This makes it easy to experiment with Vault or
2016-01-14 18:42:47 +00:00
start a Vault instance for development. Every feature of Vault is available in
"dev" mode. The `-dev` flag just short-circuits a lot of setup to insecure
defaults.
2015-04-14 01:13:19 +00:00
~> **Warning:** Never, ever, ever run a "dev" mode server in production.
It is insecure and will lose data on every restart (since it stores data
in-memory). It is only made for development or experimentation.
## Properties
The properties of the dev server:
* **Initialized and unsealed** - The server will be automatically initialized
and unsealed. You don't need to use `vault unseal`. It is ready for use
immediately.
* **In-memory storage** - All data is stored (encrypted) in-memory. Vault
server doesn't require any file permissions.
* **Bound to local address without TLS** - The server is listening on
`127.0.0.1:8200` (the default server address) _without_ TLS.
* **Automatically Authenticated** - The server stores your root access
token so `vault` CLI access is ready to go. If you are accessing Vault
via the API, you'll need to authenticate using the token printed out.
* **Single unseal key** - The server is initialized with a single unseal
2015-04-28 18:32:04 +00:00
key. The Vault is already unsealed, but if you want to experiment with
2015-04-14 01:13:19 +00:00
seal/unseal, then only the single outputted key is required.
## Use Case
The dev server should be used for experimentation with Vault features, such
as different authentication backends, secret backends, audit backends, etc.
2016-01-14 18:42:47 +00:00
If you're new to Vault, you may want to pick up with [Your First
Secret](https://www.vaultproject.io/intro/getting-started/first-secret.html) in
our getting started guide.
2015-04-14 01:13:19 +00:00
In addition to experimentation, the dev server is very easy to automate
for development environments.