View tokens
View API tokens and permissions using the InfluxDB user interface (UI), the influx
command line interface (CLI), or the InfluxDB API.
Tokens are visible to the user who created the token. Users who own a token with Operator permissions also have access to all tokens. Tokens stop working when the user who created the token is deleted.
We recommend creating a generic user to create and manage tokens for writing data.
View tokens in the InfluxDB UI
In the navigation menu on the left, select Data (Load Data) > API Tokens.
Load Data
Click a token name in the list to view the token and a summary of access permissions.
View tokens using the influx CLI
Use the influx auth list command to view tokens.
influx auth list
Filtering options such as filtering by authorization ID, username, or user ID are available. See the influx auth list documentation for information about other available flags.
View tokens using the InfluxDB API
Use the /authorizations
endpoint of the InfluxDB API to view tokens and permissions.
GET /api/v2/authorizations
Include the following in your request:
Requirement | Include by |
---|---|
API token with the read: authorizations permission | Use the Authorization: Token YOUR_API_TOKEN header. |
INFLUX_TOKEN=YOUR_API_TOKEN
curl --request GET \
"http://localhost:8086/api/v2/authorizations" \
--header "Authorization: Token ${INFLUX_TOKEN}" \
--header 'Content-type: application/json'
View a single token
To view a specific authorization and token, include the authorization ID in the URL path.
GET /api/v2/authorizations/{authID}
Filter the token list
InfluxDB returns authorizations from the same organization as the token used in the request. To filter tokens by user, include userID
as a query parameter in your request.
# The example below uses the common `curl` and `jq` command-line tools
# with the InfluxDB API to do the following:
# 1. Find a user by username and extract the user ID.
# 2. Find the user's authorizations by user ID.
# 3. Filter for `active` authorizations that have `write` permission.
INFLUX_TOKEN=YOUR_API_TOKEN
function list_write_auths() {
curl "http://localhost:8086/api/v2/users/?name=$1" \
--header "Authorization: Token ${INFLUX_TOKEN}" \
--header 'Content-type: application/json' | \
jq --arg USER $1 '.users[] | select(.name == $USER) | .id' | \
xargs -I '%' \
curl "http://localhost:8086/api/v2/authorizations/?userID=%" \
--header "Authorization: Token ${INFLUX_TOKEN}" \
--header 'Content-type: application/json' | \
jq '.authorizations[]
| select(.permissions[] | select(.action=="write"))
| select(.status=="active")'
}
list_write_auths 'iot_user_1'
Operator tokens have access to all organizations’ authorizations. To filter authorizations by organization when using an operator token, include an org
or orgID
query parameter in your request.
See the /authorizations endpoint documentation for more information about available parameters.