Consul
Consul Members
Command: consul members
Corresponding HTTP API Endpoint: [GET] /v1/agent/members
The members command outputs the current list of members that a Consul
agent knows about, along with their state. The state of a node can only
be "alive", "left", or "failed".
Nodes in the "failed" state are still listed because Consul attempts to reconnect with failed nodes for a certain amount of time in the case that the failure is actually just a network partition.
The table below shows this command's required ACLs. Configuration of blocking queries and agent caching are not supported from commands, but may be from the corresponding HTTP endpoint.
| ACL Required | 
|---|
| node:read | 
Usage
Usage: consul members [options]
Command Options
- -detailed- If provided, output shows more detailed information about each node.
- -segmentEnterprise - The segment to show members in. If not provided, members in all segments visible to the agent will be listed.
- -status- If provided, output is filtered to only nodes matching the regular expression for status
- -wan- For agents in Server mode, this will return the list of nodes in the WAN gossip pool. These are generally all the server nodes in each datacenter.
Enterprise Options
- -partition=<string>- Specifies the partition to query. If not provided, the partition will be inferred from the request's ACL token, or will default to the- defaultpartition. Partitions are a Consul Enterprise feature added in v1.11.0.
API Options
- -ca-file=<value>- Path to a CA file to use for TLS when communicating with Consul. This can also be specified via the- CONSUL_CACERTenvironment variable.
- -ca-path=<value>- Path to a directory of CA certificates to use for TLS when communicating with Consul. This can also be specified via the- CONSUL_CAPATHenvironment variable.
- -client-cert=<value>- Path to a client cert file to use for TLS when- verify_incomingis enabled. This can also be specified via the- CONSUL_CLIENT_CERTenvironment variable.
- -client-key=<value>- Path to a client key file to use for TLS when- verify_incomingis enabled. This can also be specified via the- CONSUL_CLIENT_KEYenvironment variable.
- -http-addr=<addr>- Address of the Consul agent with the port. This can be an IP address or DNS address, but it must include the port. This can also be specified via the- CONSUL_HTTP_ADDRenvironment variable. In Consul 0.8 and later, the default value is http://127.0.0.1:8500, and https can optionally be used instead. The scheme can also be set to HTTPS by setting the environment variable- CONSUL_HTTP_SSL=true. This may be a unix domain socket using- unix:///path/to/socketif the agent is configured to listen that way.
- -tls-server-name=<value>- The server name to use as the SNI host when connecting via TLS. This can also be specified via the- CONSUL_TLS_SERVER_NAMEenvironment variable.
- -token=<value>- ACL token to use in the request. This can also be specified via the- CONSUL_HTTP_TOKENenvironment variable. If unspecified, the query will default to the token of the Consul agent at the HTTP address.
- -token-file=<value>- File containing the ACL token to use in the request instead of one specified via the- -tokenargument or- CONSUL_HTTP_TOKENenvironment variable. This can also be specified via the- CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN_FILEenvironment variable.