consul/website/source/docs/agent/http/acl.html.markdown

7.7 KiB

layout page_title sidebar_current description
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

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 contrast, 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 ID field may be provided, and if omitted a random UUID will be generated. The security of the ACL system depends on the difficulty of guessing the token. Tokens should not be generated in a predictable manner or with too little entropy.

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. If the ID does not exist, the ACL will be inserted. In this sense, create and update are identical.

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": "..."
  },
  ...
]

/v1/acl/replication

Available in Consul 0.7 and later, the endpoint must be hit with a GET and returns the status of the ACL replication process in the datacenter. This is intended to be used by operators, or by automation checking the health of ACL replication.

By default, the datacenter of the agent is queried; however, the dc can be provided using the ?dc= query parameter.

It returns a JSON body like this:

{
  "Enabled": true,
  "Running": true,
  "SourceDatacenter": "dc1",
  "ReplicatedIndex": 1976,
  "LastSuccess": "2016-08-05T06:28:58Z",
  "LastError": "2016-08-05T06:28:28Z"
}

Enabled reports whether ACL replication is enabled for the datacenter.

Running reports whether the ACL replication process is running. The process may take approximately 60 seconds to begin running after a leader election occurs.

SourceDatacenter is the authoritative ACL datacenter that ACLs are being replicated from, and will match the acl_datacenter configuration.

ReplicatedIndex is the last index that was successfully replicated. You can compare this to the X-Consul-Index header returned by the /v1/acl/list endpoint to determine if the replication process has gotten all available ACLs. Replication runs as a background process approximately every 30 seconds, and that local updates are rate limited to 100 updates/second, so so it may take several minutes to perform the initial sync of a large set of ACLs. After the initial sync, replica lag should be on the order of about 30 seconds.

LastSuccess is the UTC time of the last successful sync operation. Since ACL replication is done with a blocking query, this may not update for up to 5 minutes if there have been no ACL changes to replicate. A zero value of "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z" will be present if no sync has been successful.

LastError is the UTC time of the last error encountered during a sync operation. If this time is later than LastSuccess, you can assume the replication process is not in a good state. A zero value of "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z" will be present if no sync has resulted in an error.

Please see the ACL replication section of the internals guide for more details.