Consul-Terraform-Sync Command (CLI)

Consul-Terraform-Sync (CTS) is controlled via an easy to use command-line interface (CLI). CTS is only a single command-line application: consul-terraform-sync. CTS can be run as a daemon and execute CLI commands. When CTS is run as a daemon, it acts as a server to the CLI commands. Users can use the commands to interact and modify the daemon as it is running. The complete list of commands is in the navigation to the left. Both the daemon and commands return a non-zero exit status on error.

Daemon

When running as a daemon, there is no default configuration to run CTS in a meaningful way. Setting a configuration flag -config-file or -config-dir is required. For example:

  1. $ consul-terraform-sync -config-file=config.hcl

To view a list of available flags, use the -help or -h flag.

Modes

CTS can be run as a daemon in different modes.

Long-running Mode

Flag: none

Behavior: This is the default mode in which CTS passes through a once-mode phase and then turns into a long running process. During the once-mode phase, the daemon will exit with a non-zero status if it encounters an error. After successfully passing through once-mode phase, it will begin a long-running process in which errors are logged and exiting is not expected behavior. Once beginning the long-running process, the daemon serves any API and command requests.

Usage: Intended to be run as a long running process after running once-mode successfully for given configuration and tasks.

Inspect Mode

Flag: -inspect

Behavior: CTS will display the proposed state changes for all tasks once and exit. No changes are applied in this mode. On encountering an error before completing, CTS will exit with a non-zero status.

Usage: Intended to be run before daemon-mode in order to confirm configuration is accurate and tasks would update network infrastructure as expected.


Flag: -inspect-task [task-name]

Behavior: This has similar behavior as -inspect mode for the selected task. The flag can be specified multiple times to inspect multiple tasks. No changes are applied in this mode.

Usage: Useful to debug one or more tasks to confirm configuration is accurate and the selected tasks would update network infrastructure as expected.

Once Mode

Flag: -once

Behavior: CTS will run all tasks once with buffer periods disabled and exit. On encountering an error before completing, CTS will exit with a non-zero status.

Usage: Intended to be run before daemon-mode in order to confirm configuration is accurate and tasks update network infrastructure as expected.

Commands

In addition to running the daemon, CTS has a set of commands that act as a client to the daemon server. The commands provide a user-friendly experience interacting with the daemon. The commands use the CTS APIs but does not correspond one-to-one with it. Please see the individual commands in the left navigation for more details.

To get help for a command, run: consul-terraform-sync <command> -h

CLI Structure

CTS commands follow the below structure

  1. consul-terraform-sync <command> [options] [args]
  • options: Flags to specify additional settings. There are general options that can be used across all commands and command-specific options.
  • args: Required arguments specific to a commands

Example:

  1. consul-terraform-sync task disable -http-addr=http://localhost:2000 task_a

General Options

Below are options that can be used across all commands:

OptionRequiredTypeDescriptionDefault
-portOptionalintegerDeprecated in Consul-Terraform-Sync 0.5.0 and will be removed in a later version. Use -http-addr option instead to specify the address and port of the Consul-Terraform-Sync API.

Port from which the CTS daemon serves its API.
The value is prepended with http://localhost:, but you can specify a different scheme or address with the -http-addr if necessary.
8558
-http-addrOptionalstringAddress and port of the CTS API. You can specify an IP or DNS address.

Alternatively, you can specify a value using the CTS_HTTP_ADDR environment variable.
http://localhost:8558
-ssl-verifyOptionalbooleanEnables verification for TLS/SSL connections to the API if set to true. This does not affect insecure HTTP connections.

Alternatively, you can specify the value using the CTS_SSL_VERIFY environment variable.
true
-ca-certOptionalstringPath to a PEM-encoded certificate authority file that is used to verify TLS/SSL connections. Takes precedence over -ca-path if both are provided.

Alternatively, you can specify the value using the CTS_CACERT environment variable.
none
-ca-pathOptionalstringPath to a directory containing a PEM-encoded certificate authority file that is used to verify TLS/SSL connections.

Alternatively, you can specify the value using the CTS_CAPATH environment variable.
none
-client-cert                                                  OptionalstringPath to a PEM-encoded client certificate that the CTS API requires when verify_incoming is set to true on the API.

Alternatively, you can specify the value using the CTS_CLIENT_CERT environment variable.
none
-client-keyOptionalstringPath to a PEM-encoded client key for the certificate configured with the -client-cert option. This is required if -client-cert is set and if verify_incoming is set to true on the CTS API.

Alternatively, you can specify the value using the CTS_CLIENT_KEY environment variable.
none