Nomad
Command: alloc fs
Alias: nomad fs
The alloc fs
command allows a user to navigate an allocation directory on a Nomad
client. The following functionalities are available - cat
, tail
, ls
and
stat
.
cat
: If the target path is a file, Nomad willcat
the file.tail
: If the target path is a file and-tail
flag is specified, Nomad willtail
the file.ls
: If the target path is a directory, Nomad displays the name of a file and directories and their associated information.stat
: If the-stat
flag is used, Nomad will display information about a file.
Usage
nomad alloc fs [options] <allocation> <path>
This command accepts a single allocation ID (unless the -job
flag is
specified, in which case an allocation is chosen from the given job) and a path.
The path is relative to the root of the allocation directory. The path is
optional and it defaults to /
of the allocation directory.
General Options
-address=<addr>
: The address of the Nomad server. Overrides theNOMAD_ADDR
environment variable if set. Defaults tohttp://127.0.0.1:4646
.-region=<region>
: The region of the Nomad server to forward commands to. Overrides theNOMAD_REGION
environment variable if set. Defaults to the Agent's local region.-no-color
: Disables colored command output. Alternatively,NOMAD_CLI_NO_COLOR
may be set.-ca-cert=<path>
: Path to a PEM encoded CA cert file to use to verify the Nomad server SSL certificate. Overrides theNOMAD_CACERT
environment variable if set.-ca-path=<path>
: Path to a directory of PEM encoded CA cert files to verify the Nomad server SSL certificate. If both-ca-cert
and-ca-path
are specified,-ca-cert
is used. Overrides theNOMAD_CAPATH
environment variable if set.-client-cert=<path>
: Path to a PEM encoded client certificate for TLS authentication to the Nomad server. Must also specify-client-key
. Overrides theNOMAD_CLIENT_CERT
environment variable if set.-client-key=<path>
: Path to an unencrypted PEM encoded private key matching the client certificate from-client-cert
. Overrides theNOMAD_CLIENT_KEY
environment variable if set.-tls-server-name=<value>
: The server name to use as the SNI host when connecting via TLS. Overrides theNOMAD_TLS_SERVER_NAME
environment variable if set.-tls-skip-verify
: Do not verify TLS certificate. This is highly not recommended. Verification will also be skipped ifNOMAD_SKIP_VERIFY
is set.-token
: The SecretID of an ACL token to use to authenticate API requests with. Overrides theNOMAD_TOKEN
environment variable if set.
Fs Options
-H
: Machine friendly output.-verbose
: Display verbose output.-job
: Use a random allocation from the specified job, preferring a running allocation.-stat
: Show stat information instead of displaying the file, or listing the directory.-f
: Causes the output to not stop when the end of the file is reached, but rather to wait for additional output.-tail
: Show the files contents with offsets relative to the end of the file. If no offset is given, -n is defaulted to 10.-n
: Sets the tail location in best-efforted number of lines relative to the end of the file.-c
: Sets the tail location in number of bytes relative to the end of the file.
Examples
$ nomad alloc fs eb17e557
Mode Size Modified Time Name
drwxrwxr-x 4096 28 Jan 16 05:39 UTC alloc/
drwxrwxr-x 4096 28 Jan 16 05:39 UTC redis/
-rw-rw-r-- 0 28 Jan 16 05:39 UTC redis_exit_status
$ nomad alloc fs eb17e557 redis/local
Mode Size Modified Time Name
-rw-rw-rw- 0 28 Jan 16 05:39 UTC redis.stderr
-rw-rw-rw- 17 28 Jan 16 05:39 UTC redis.stdout
$ nomad alloc fs -stat eb17e557 redis/local/redis.stdout
Mode Size Modified Time Name
-rw-rw-rw- 17 28 Jan 16 05:39 UTC redis.stdout
$ nomad alloc fs eb17e557 redis/local/redis.stdout
foobar
baz
$ nomad alloc fs -tail -f -n 3 eb17e557 redis/local/redis.stdout
foobar
baz
bam
<blocking>
Using Job ID instead of Allocation ID
Setting the -job
flag causes a random allocation of the specified job to be
selected. Nomad will prefer to select a running allocation ID for the job, but
if no running allocations for the job are found, Nomad will use a dead
allocation.
nomad alloc fs -job <job-id> <path>
This can be useful for debugging a job that has multiple allocations, and it is not required to observe a specific allocation.