consul/website/content/commands/event.mdx

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---
layout: commands
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page_title: 'Commands: Event'
sidebar_title: event
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description: >-
The event command provides a mechanism to fire a custom user event to an
entire datacenter. These events are opaque to Consul, but they can be used to
build scripting infrastructure to do automated deploys, restart services, or
perform any other orchestration action. Events can be handled by using a
watch.
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---
# Consul Event
Command: `consul event`
The `event` command provides a mechanism to fire a custom user event to an
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entire datacenter. These events are opaque to Consul, but they can be used
to build scripting infrastructure to do automated deploys, restart services,
or perform any other orchestration action. Events can be handled by
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[using a watch](/docs/agent/watches).
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Under the hood, events are propagated using the [gossip protocol](/docs/internals/gossip).
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While the details are not important for using events, an understanding of
the semantics is useful. The gossip layer will make a best-effort to deliver
the event, but there is **no guaranteed delivery**. Unlike most Consul data, which is
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replicated using [consensus](/docs/internals/consensus), event data
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is purely peer-to-peer over gossip. This means it is not persisted and does
not have a total ordering. In practice, this means you cannot rely on the
order of message delivery. An advantage however is that events can still
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be used even in the absence of server nodes or during an outage.
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The underlying gossip also sets limits on the size of a user event
message. It is hard to give an exact number, as it depends on various
parameters of the event, but the payload should be kept very small
(< 100 bytes). Specifying too large of an event will return an error.
## Usage
Usage: `consul event [options] [payload]`
The only required option is `-name` which specifies the event name. An optional
payload can be provided as the final argument.
#### API Options
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@include 'http_api_options_client.mdx'
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@include 'http_api_options_server.mdx'
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#### Command Options
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- `-name` - The name of the event.
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- `-node` - Regular expression to filter nodes which should evaluate the event.
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- `-service` - Regular expression to filter to only nodes with matching services.
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- `-tag` - Regular expression to filter to only nodes with a service that has
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a matching tag. This must be used with `-service`. As an example, you may
do `-service mysql -tag secondary`.