From 89b51c7f3c53d8399859954295959bc170524cc3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ryan Breen Date: Thu, 19 Mar 2015 19:22:05 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] Website: GH-730 and cleanup for intro/getting-started/ui.html. --- .../intro/getting-started/ui.html.markdown | 64 +++++++++++-------- 1 file changed, 38 insertions(+), 26 deletions(-) diff --git a/website/source/intro/getting-started/ui.html.markdown b/website/source/intro/getting-started/ui.html.markdown index 55f8ab4531..de18e770de 100644 --- a/website/source/intro/getting-started/ui.html.markdown +++ b/website/source/intro/getting-started/ui.html.markdown @@ -3,43 +3,57 @@ layout: "intro" page_title: "Web UI" sidebar_current: "gettingstarted-ui" description: |- - Consul comes with support for a beautiful, functional web UI out of the box. This UI can be used for viewing all services and nodes, viewing all health checks and their current status, and for reading and setting key/value data. The UI automatically supports multi-datacenter. + Consul comes with support for beautiful, functional web UIs out of the box. UIs can be used for viewing all services and nodes, for viewing all health checks and their current status, and for reading and setting key/value data. The UIs automatically supports multi-datacenter. --- # Consul Web UI -Consul comes with support for a beautiful, functional web UI. -The UI can be used for viewing all services and nodes, viewing all -health checks and their current status, and for reading and setting -key/value data. The UI automatically supports multi-datacenter. +Consul comes with support for beautiful, functional web UIs out of the +box. UIs can be used for viewing all services and nodes, for viewing +all health checks and their current status, and for reading and setting +key/value data. The UIs automatically support multi-datacenter. -There are two options for running a web UI for Consul. The first option is self-hosting and using the [open-source UI](/downloads.html), the second option is using [Atlas by HashiCorp](https://atlas.hashicorp.com) to host the dashboard for you. +There are two options for running a web UI for Consul. The first option +is self-hosting the [open-source UI](/downloads.html); the second option +is using [Atlas by HashiCorp](https://atlas.hashicorp.com) to host the +dashboard for you. ## Atlas-hosted Dashboard -To setup the Atlas UI for Consul, you must add two fields to your configuration — the name of your Atlas infrastructure and your Atlas token. Below is an example configuration: + +
+![Atlas Web UI](atlas_web_ui.png) +
+ +To set up the Atlas UI for Consul, you must add two fields to your +configuration: the +[name of your Atlas infrastructure](/docs/agent/options.html#_atlas) +and [your Atlas token](/docs/agent/options.html#_atlas_token). Below is +an example command-line invocation of the Consul agent providing these +settings: ```text $ consul agent -atlas=ATLAS_USERNAME/demo -atlas-token="ATLAS_TOKEN" ``` +To get an Atlas username and token, +[create an account](https://atlas.hashicorp.com/account/new?utm_source=oss&utm_medium=getting-started-ui&utm_campaign=consul) +and replace the respective values in your Consul configuration with +your credentials. -To get an Atlas username and token, [create an account here](https://atlas.hashicorp.com/account/new?utm_source=oss&utm_medium=getting-started-ui&utm_campaign=consul) and replace the respective values in your Consul configuration with your credentials. - -You can view a live demo of the Atlas UI [here](https://atlas.hashicorp.com/hashicorp/infrastructures/consul-demo). +You can view a live demo +[here](https://atlas.hashicorp.com/hashicorp/infrastructures/consul-demo). -A screenshot of one page of the demo is shown below so you can get an -idea of what the web UI is like. +## Self-hosted Dashboard
-![Atlas Web UI](atlas_web_ui.png) +![Consul Web UI](consul_web_ui.png)
-## Self-hosted Dashboard -To set up the self-hosted UI, -[download the web UI package](/downloads.html) -and unzip it to a directory somewhere on the server where the Consul agent -is also being run. Then append the `-ui-dir` to the `consul agent` -command pointing to the directory where you unzipped the UI (the -directory with the `index.html` file): +To set up the self-hosted UI, [download the web UI package](/downloads.html) +and unzip it to a directory somewhere on a system with a Consul agent +install. Restart the Consul agent, and append a +[`-ui-dir` parameter](/docs/agent/options.html#_ui_dir) +pointing to the directory where you unzipped the UI (that is, the +directory containing the `index.html` file): ```text $ consul agent -ui-dir /path/to/ui @@ -48,7 +62,6 @@ $ consul agent -ui-dir /path/to/ui The UI is available at the `/ui` path on the same port as the HTTP API. By default this is `http://localhost:8500/ui`. --datacenter. You can view a live demo of the Consul Web UI [here](http://demo.consul.io). @@ -59,9 +72,8 @@ we've also setup demo endpoints in the specific datacenters: [SFO1](http://sfo1.demo.consul.io) (San Francisco), and [NYC3](http://nyc3.demo.consul.io) (New York). -A screenshot of one page of the demo is shown below so you can get an -idea of what the web UI is like. Click the screenshot for the full size. +## Next Steps -
-![Consul Web UI](consul_web_ui.png) -
\ No newline at end of file +This concludes our Getting Started guide. See the +[next steps](next-steps.html) page to learn more about how to continue +your journey with Consul!