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Store and access key/value data
Consul includes a key/value store for that you can use to dynamically configure apps. Learn how to add and manage data in the Consul KV store using the Consul command-line interface.

Store and access key/value data

This page describes the processes for interacting with Consul's KV store. You can interact with the KV store using the consul kv CLI command or the /kv endpoint.

Add data to KV store

To insert values into the KV store or update an existing value, use the consul kv put command. The first entry after the command is the key and the second entry is the value.

$ consul kv put redis/config/minconns 1
Success! Data written to: redis/config/minconns

In the following example, the key is redis/config/maxconns and the value is set to 25.

$ consul kv put redis/config/maxconns 25
Success! Data written to: redis/config/maxconns

In the following example, the command includes a flags value of 42. Keys support setting a 64-bit integer flag value that is not used internally by Consul but can be used by clients to add metadata to a KV pair.

$ consul kv put -flags=42 redis/config/users/admin zaphod
Success! Data written to: redis/config/users/admin

Query data from KV store

To query for the value of one of the keys in the KV store, use the consul kv get command.

$ consul kv get redis/config/minconns
1

To retrieve metadata you included as flags, using the -detailed command line flag.

$ consul kv get -detailed redis/config/users/admin
CreateIndex      14
Flags            42
Key              redis/config/users/admin
LockIndex        0
ModifyIndex      14
Session          -
Value            zaphod

To list all the keys in the store, use the recurse option. Results return in lexicographical order.

$ consul kv get -recurse
redis/config/maxconns:25
redis/config/minconns:1
redis/config/users/admin:zaphod

Delete data

To delete the value of one of the keys in the KV store, use the consul kv delete command.

$ consul kv delete redis/config/minconns
Success! Deleted key: redis/config/minconns

Although the keys in the KV store are stored in a flat structure, you can manipulate keys that share a prefix as a group, as if they were in folders or subfolders, by using the -recurse flag.

The following example deletes all the keys with the redis prefix using the -recurse option.

$ consul kv delete -recurse redis
Success! Deleted keys with prefix: redis