mirror of https://github.com/hashicorp/consul
169 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown
169 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "ACLs (HTTP)"
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sidebar_current: "docs-agent-http-acl"
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description: >
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The ACL endpoints are used to create, update, destroy, and query ACL tokens.
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---
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# ACL HTTP Endpoint
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The ACL endpoints are used to create, update, destroy, and query ACL tokens.
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The following endpoints are supported:
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* [`/v1/acl/create`](#acl_create): Creates a new token with a given policy
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* [`/v1/acl/update`](#acl_update): Updates the policy of a token
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* [`/v1/acl/destroy/<id>`](#acl_destroy): Destroys a given token
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* [`/v1/acl/info/<id>`](#acl_info): Queries the policy of a given token
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* [`/v1/acl/clone/<id>`](#acl_clone): Creates a new token by cloning an existing token
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* [`/v1/acl/list`](#acl_list): Lists all the active tokens
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### <a name="acl_create"></a> /v1/acl/create
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The `create` endpoint is used to make a new token. A token has a name,
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a type, and a set of ACL rules.
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The `Name` property is opaque to Consul. To aid human operators, it should
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be a meaningful indicator of the ACL's purpose.
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Type is either `client` or `management`. A management token is comparable
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to a root user and has the ability to perform any action including
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creating, modifying, and deleting ACLs.
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By constrast, a client token can only perform actions as permitted by the
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rules associated. Client tokens can never manage ACLs. Given this limitation,
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only a management token can be used to make requests to the `/v1/acl/create`
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endpoint.
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In any Consul cluster, only a single datacenter is authoritative for ACLs, so
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all requests are automatically routed to that datacenter regardless
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of the agent to which the request is made.
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The create endpoint supports a JSON request body with the PUT. The request
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body may take the form:
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```javascript
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{
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"Name": "my-app-token",
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"Type": "client",
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"Rules": ""
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}
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```
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None of the fields are mandatory. In fact, no body needs to be PUT if the
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defaults are to be used. The `Name` and `Rules` fields default to being
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blank, and the `Type` defaults to "client".
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The `ID` field may be provided, and if omitted a random UUID will be generated.
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The security of the ACL system depends on the difficulty of guessing the token.
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Tokens should not be generated in a predictable manner or with too little entropy.
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The format of the `Rules` property is [documented here](/docs/internals/acl.html).
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A successful response body will return the `ID` of the newly created ACL, like so:
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```javascript
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{
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"ID": "adf4238a-882b-9ddc-4a9d-5b6758e4159e"
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}
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```
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### <a name="acl_update"></a> /v1/acl/update
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The update endpoint is used to modify the policy for a given ACL token. It
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is very similar to the create endpoint; however, instead of generating a new
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token ID, the `ID` field must be provided. As with [`/v1/acl/create`](#acl_create),
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requests to this endpoint must be made with a management token. If the ID does not
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exist, the ACL will be upserted. In this sense, create and update are identical.
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In any Consul cluster, only a single datacenter is authoritative for ACLs, so
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all requests are automatically routed to that datacenter regardless
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of the agent to which the request is made.
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The update endpoint requires a JSON request body to the PUT. The request
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body may look like:
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```javascript
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{
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"ID": "adf4238a-882b-9ddc-4a9d-5b6758e4159e"
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"Name": "my-app-token-updated",
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"Type": "client",
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"Rules": "# New Rules",
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}
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```
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Only the `ID` field is mandatory. The other fields provide defaults: the
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`Name` and `Rules` fields default to being blank, and `Type` defaults to "client".
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The format of `Rules` is [documented here](/docs/internals/acl.html).
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### <a name="acl_destroy"></a> /v1/acl/destroy/\<id\>
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The destroy endpoint must be hit with a PUT. This endpoint destroys the ACL
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token identified by the `id` portion of the path.
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The request is automatically routed to the authoritative ACL datacenter.
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Requests to this endpoint must be made with a management token.
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### <a name="acl_info"></a> /v1/acl/info/\<id\>
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The info endpoint must be hit with a GET. This endpoint returns the ACL
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token information identified by the `id` portion of the path.
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It returns a JSON body like this:
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```javascript
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[
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{
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"CreateIndex": 3,
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"ModifyIndex": 3,
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"ID": "8f246b77-f3e1-ff88-5b48-8ec93abf3e05",
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"Name": "Client Token",
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"Type": "client",
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"Rules": "..."
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}
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]
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```
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If the ACL is not found, null is returned instead of a JSON list.
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### <a name="acl_clone"></a> /v1/acl/clone/\<id\>
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The clone endpoint must be hit with a PUT. It clones the ACL identified
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by the `id` portion of the path and returns a new token `ID`. This allows
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a token to serve as a template for others, making it simple to generate new
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tokens without complex rule management.
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The request is automatically routed to the authoritative ACL datacenter.
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Requests to this endpoint must be made with a management token.
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As with `create`, a successful response body will return the `ID` of the newly
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created ACL, like so:
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```javascript
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{
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"ID": "adf4238a-882b-9ddc-4a9d-5b6758e4159e"
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}
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```
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### <a name="acl_list"></a> /v1/acl/list
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The list endpoint must be hit with a GET. It lists all the active
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ACL tokens. This is a privileged endpoint and requires a
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management token.
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It returns a JSON body like this:
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```javascript
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[
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{
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"CreateIndex": 3,
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"ModifyIndex": 3,
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"ID": "8f246b77-f3e1-ff88-5b48-8ec93abf3e05",
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"Name": "Client Token",
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"Type": "client",
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"Rules": "..."
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},
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...
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]
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```
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