etcdctl
is a command line client for etcd.
It can be used in scripts or for administrators to explore an etcd cluster.
The latest release is available as a binary at Github along with etcd.
You can also build etcdctl from source:
./build
Set a value on the /foo/bar
key:
$ etcdctl set /foo/bar "Hello world"
Hello world
Set a value on the /foo/bar
key with a value that expires in 60 seconds:
$ etcdctl set /foo/bar "Hello world" --ttl 60
Hello world
Conditionally set a value on /foo/bar
if the previous value was "Hello world":
$ etcdctl set /foo/bar "Goodbye world" --swap-with-value "Hello world"
Goodbye world
Conditionally set a value on /foo/bar
if the previous etcd index was 12:
$ etcdctl set /foo/bar "Goodbye world" --swap-with-index 12
Goodbye world
Create a new key /foo/bar
, only if the key did not previously exist:
$ etcdctl mk /foo/new_bar "Hello world"
Hello world
Create a new dir /fooDir
, only if the key did not previously exist:
$ etcdctl mkdir /fooDir
Update an existing key /foo/bar
, only if the key already existed:
$ etcdctl update /foo/bar "Hola mundo"
Hola mundo
Create or update a directory called /mydir
:
$ etcdctl setDir /mydir
Get the current value for a single key in the local etcd node:
$ etcdctl get /foo/bar
Hello world
Get the current value for a key within the cluster:
$ etcdctl get /foo/bar --consistent
Hello world
Get the value of a key with additional metadata in a parseable format:
$ etcdctl -o extended get /foo/bar
Key: /foo/bar
Modified-Index: 72
TTL: 0
Etcd-Index: 72
Raft-Index: 5611
Raft-Term: 1
Hello World
Explore the keyspace using the ls
command
$ etcdctl ls
/akey
/adir
$ etcdctl ls /adir
/adir/key1
/adir/key2
Add -recursive
to recursively list subdirectories encountered.
$ etcdctl ls --recursive
/akey
/adir
/adir/key1
/adir/key2
Delete a key:
$ etcdctl rm /foo/bar
Delete an empty directory or a key-value pair
$ etcdctl rmdir /path/to/dir
or
$ etcdctl rm /path/to/dir --dir
Recursively delete a key and all child keys:
$ etcdctl rm /path/to/dir --recursive
Conditionally delete /foo/bar
if the previous value was "Hello world":
$ etcdctl rm /foo/bar --with-value "Hello world"
Conditionally delete /foo/bar
if the previous etcd index was 12:
$ etcdctl rm /foo/bar --with-index 12
Watch for only the next change on a key:
$ etcdctl watch /foo/bar
Hello world
Continuously watch a key:
$ etcdctl watch /foo/bar --forever
Hello world
.... client hangs forever until ctrl+C printing values as key change
Continuously watch a key, starting with a given etcd index:
$ etcdctl watch /foo/bar --forever --index 12
Hello world
.... client hangs forever until ctrl+C printing values as key change
Continuously watch a key and exec a program:
$ etcdctl exec-watch /foo/bar -- sh -c "env | grep ETCD"
ETCD_WATCH_ACTION=set
ETCD_VALUE=My configuration stuff
ETCD_MODIFIED_INDEX=1999
ETCD_KEY=/foo/bar
ETCD_WATCH_ACTION=set
ETCD_VALUE=My new configuration stuff
ETCD_MODIFIED_INDEX=2000
ETCD_KEY=/foo/bar
Continuously and recursively watch a key and exec a program:
$ etcdctl exec-watch /foo -- sh -c "env | grep ETCD"
ETCD_WATCH_ACTION=set
ETCD_VALUE=My configuration stuff
ETCD_MODIFIED_INDEX=1999
ETCD_KEY=/foo/bar
ETCD_WATCH_ACTION=set
ETCD_VALUE=My new configuration stuff
ETCD_MODIFIED_INDEX=2000
ETCD_KEY=/foo/barbar
The following exit codes can be returned from etcdctl:
0 Success
1 Malformed etcdctl arguments
2 Failed to connect to host
3 Failed to auth (client cert rejected, ca validation failure, etc)
4 400 error from etcd
5 500 error from etcd
If your etcd cluster isn't available on http://127.0.0.1:4001
you can specify
a --peers
flag or ETCDCTL_PEERS
environment variable.
ETCDCTL_PEERS="http://10.0.28.1:4002" etcdctl set my-key to-a-value
etcdctl uses semantic versioning. Releases will follow lockstep with the etcd release cycle.
etcdctl is under the Apache 2.0 license. See the LICENSE file for details.