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---
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layout: docs
page_title: Consul Dataplane CLI Reference
description: >-
Consul Dataplane runs as a separate binary controlled with the `consul-dataplane` CLI command. Learn how to use this command to configure your dataplane on Kubernetes with this reference guide and example code.
---
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# Consul Dataplane CLI Reference
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The `consul-dataplane` command interacts with the binary for [simplified service mesh with Consul Dataplane](/consul/docs/k8s/dataplane). Use this command to install Consul Dataplane, configure its Envoy proxies, and secure Dataplane deployments.
## Usage
Usage: `consul-dataplane [options]`
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### Requirements
Consul Dataplane requires servers running Consul version `v1.14-beta+`. To find a specific version of Consul, refer to [Hashicorp's Official Release Channels](https://www.hashicorp.com/official-release-channels).
### Startup
The following options are required when starting `consul-dataplane` with the CLI:
- `-addresses`
- `-service-node-name`
- `-proxy-service-id`
### Command Options
- `-addresses` - Consul server gRPC addresses. Can be a DNS name or an executable command. Refer to [go-netaddrs](https://github.com/hashicorp/go-netaddrs#summary) for details and examples.
- `-ca-certs` - The path to a file or directory containing CA certificates used to verify the server's certificate.
- `-credential-type` - The type of credentials used to authenticate with Consul servers, either `"static"` or `"login"`.
- `-envoy-admin-bind-address` - The address the Envoy admin server is available on. Default is `"127.0.0.1"`.
- `-envoy-admin-bind-port` - The port the Envoy admin server is available on. Default is `19000`.
- `-envoy-concurrency` - The number of worker threads that Envoy uses. Default is `2`.
- `-envoy-ready-bind-address` - The address Envoy's readiness probe is available on.
- `-grpc-port` - The Consul server gRPC port to which consul-dataplane connects. Default is `8502`.
- `-log-json` - Enables log messages in JSON format. Default is `false`.
- `-log-level` - Log level of the messages to print. Available log levels are `"trace"`, `"debug"`, `"info"`, `"warn"`, and `"error"`. Default is `"info"`.
- `-login-auth-method` - The auth method used to log in.
- `-login-bearer-token` - The bearer token presented to the auth method.
- `-login-bearer-token-path` - The path to a file containing the bearer token presented to the auth method.
- `-login-datacenter` - The datacenter containing the auth method.
- `-login-meta` - A set of key/value pairs to attach to the ACL token. Each pair is formatted as `<key>=<value>`. This flag may be passed multiple times.
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- `-login-namespace` <EnterpriseAlert inline /> - The Consul Enterprise namespace containing the auth method.
- `-login-partition` <EnterpriseAlert inline /> - The Consul Enterprise partition containing the auth method.
- `-proxy-service-id` - The proxy service instance's ID.
- `-server-watch-disabled` - Prevent `consul-dataplane` from consuming the server update stream. Use this flag when Consul servers are behind a load balancer. Default is `false`.
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- `-service-namespace` <EnterpriseAlert inline /> - The Consul Enterprise namespace in which the proxy service instance is registered.
- `-service-node-id` - The ID of the Consul node to which the proxy service instance is registered.
- `-service-node-name` - The name of the Consul node to which the proxy service instance is registered.
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- `-service-partition` <EnterpriseAlert inline /> - The Consul Enterprise partition in which the proxy service instance is registered.
- `-static-token` - The ACL token used to authenticate requests to Consul servers when `-credential-type` is set to `"static"`.
- `-telemetry-use-central-config` - Controls whether the proxy applies the central telemetry configuration. Default is `true`.
- `-tls-cert` - The path to a client certificate file. This flag is required if `tls.grpc.verify_incoming` is enabled on the server.
- `-tls-disabled` - Communicate with Consul servers over a plaintext connection. Useful for testing, but not recommended for production. Default is `false`.
- `-tls-insecure-skip-verify` - Do not verify the server's certificate. Useful for testing, but not recommended for production. Default is `false`.
- `-tls-key` - The path to a client private key file. This flag is required if `tls.grpc.verify_incoming` is enabled on the server.
- `-tls-server-name` - The hostname to expect in the server certificate's subject. This flag is required if `-addresses` is not a DNS name.
- `-version` - Print the current version of `consul-dataplane`.
- `-xds-bind-addr` - The address the Envoy xDS server is available on. Default is `"127.0.0.1"`.
## Examples
### DNS
Consul Dataplane resolves a domain name to discover Consul server IP addresses.
```shell-session
$ consul-dataplane -addresses my.consul.example.com
```
### Executable Command
Consul Dataplane runs a script that, on success, returns one or more IP addresses separated by whitespace.
```shell-session
$ ./my-script.sh
172.20.0.1
172.20.0.2
172.20.0.3
$ consul-dataplane -addresses "exec=./my-script.sh"
```
### Go Discover Nodes for Cloud Providers
The [`go-discover`](https://github.com/hashicorp/go-discover) binary is included in the `hashicorp/consul-dataplane` image for use with this mode of server discovery, which functions in
a way similar to [Cloud Auto-join](/consul/docs/install/cloud-auto-join). The
following example demonstrates how to use the `go-discover` binary with Consul Dataplane.
```shell-session
$ consul-dataplane -addresses "exec=discover -q addrs provider=aws region=us-west-2 tag_key=consul-server tag_value=true"
```
### Static token
A static ACL token is passed to Consul Dataplane.
```shell-session
$ consul-dataplane -credential-type "static"` -static-token "12345678-90ab-cdef-0000-12345678abcd"
```
### Auth method login
Consul Dataplane logs in to one of Consul's supported [auth methods](/consul/docs/security/acl/auth-methods).
```shell-session
$ consul-dataplane -credential-type "login"
-login-auth-method <method> \
-login-bearer-token <token> \ ## Or -login-bearer-token-path
-login-datacenter <datacenter> \
-login-meta key1=val1 -login-meta key2=val2 \
-login-namespace <namespace> \
-login-partition <partition>
```
### Consul Servers Behind a Load Balancer
When Consul servers are behind a load balancer, you must pass `-server-watch-disabled` to Consul
Dataplane.
```shell-session
$ consul-dataplane -server-watch-disabled
```
By default, Consul Dataplane opens a server watch stream to a Consul server, which enables the server
to inform Consul Dataplane of new or different Consul server addresses. However, if Consul Dataplane
is connecting through a load balancer, then it must ignore the Consul server addresses that are
returned from the server watch stream.