consul/website/source/docs/commands/index.html.markdown

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---
layout: "docs"
page_title: "Commands"
sidebar_current: "docs-commands"
description: |-
Consul is controlled via a very easy to use command-line interface (CLI). Consul is only a single command-line application: `consul`. This application then takes a subcommand such as agent or members. The complete list of subcommands is in the navigation to the left.
---
# Consul Commands (CLI)
Consul is controlled via a very easy to use command-line interface (CLI).
Consul is only a single command-line application: `consul`. This application
then takes a subcommand such as "agent" or "members". The complete list of
subcommands is in the navigation to the left.
The `Consul` CLI is a well-behaved command line application. In erroneous
cases, a non-zero exit status will be returned. It also responds to `-h` and `--help`
as you'd most likely expect. And some commands that expect input accept
"-" as a parameter to tell Consul to read the input from stdin.
To view a list of the available commands at any time, just run `consul` with
no arguments:
```text
$ consul
usage: consul [--version] [--help] <command> [<args>]
Available commands are:
agent Runs a Consul agent
event Fire a new event
exec Executes a command on Consul nodes
force-leave Forces a member of the cluster to enter the "left" state
info Provides debugging information for operators
join Tell Consul agent to join cluster
keygen Generates a new encryption key
keyring Manages gossip layer encryption keys
leave Gracefully leaves the Consul cluster and shuts down
lock Execute a command holding a lock
members Lists the members of a Consul cluster
monitor Stream logs from a Consul agent
reload Triggers the agent to reload configuration files
rtt Estimates network round trip time between nodes
version Prints the Consul version
watch Watch for changes in Consul
```
To get help for any specific command, pass the `-h` flag to the relevant
subcommand. For example, to see help about the `join` subcommand:
```text
$ consul join -h
Usage: consul join [options] address ...
Tells a running Consul agent (with "consul agent") to join the cluster
by specifying at least one existing member.
Options:
-rpc-addr=127.0.0.1:8400 Address to the RPC server of the agent you want to contact
to send this command. If this isn't specified, the command checks the
CONSUL_RPC_ADDR env variable.
-wan Joins a server to another server in the WAN pool
```