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Important: This documentation is about an older version. It's relevant only to the release noted, many of the features and functions have been updated or replaced. Please view the current version.

Enterprise Open source

Authentication API

Tokens

Currently you can authenticate via an API Token or via a Session cookie (acquired using regular login or OAuth).

X-Grafana-Org-Id Header

X-Grafana-Org-Id is an optional property that specifies the organization to which the action is applied. If it is not set, the created key belongs to the current context org. Use this header in all requests except those regarding admin.

Example Request:

http
POST /api/auth/keys HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
Content-Type: application/json
X-Grafana-Org-Id: 2
Authorization: Bearer eyJrIjoiT0tTcG1pUlY2RnVKZTFVaDFsNFZXdE9ZWmNrMkZYbk

{
  "name": "mykey",
  "role": "Admin",
  "secondsToLive": 86400
}

Basic Auth

If basic auth is enabled (it is enabled by default), then you can authenticate your HTTP request via standard basic auth. Basic auth will also authenticate LDAP users.

curl example:

bash
curl http://admin:admin@localhost:3000/api/org
{"id":1,"name":"Main Org."}

Create API Token

Open the sidemenu and click the organization dropdown and select the API Keys option.

You use the token in all requests in the Authorization header, like this:

Example:

http
GET http://your.grafana.com/api/dashboards/db/mydash HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
Authorization: Bearer eyJrIjoiT0tTcG1pUlY2RnVKZTFVaDFsNFZXdE9ZWmNrMkZYbk

The Authorization header value should be Bearer <your api key>.

The API Token can also be passed as a Basic authorization password with the special username api_key:

curl example:

bash
curl http://api_key:eyJrIjoiT0tTcG1pUlY2RnVKZTFVaDFsNFZXdE9ZWmNrMkZYbk@localhost:3000/api/org
{"id":1,"name":"Main Org."}

Auth HTTP resources / actions

Api Keys

GET /api/auth/keys

Example Request:

http
GET /api/auth/keys HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
Content-Type: application/json
Authorization: Bearer eyJrIjoiT0tTcG1pUlY2RnVKZTFVaDFsNFZXdE9ZWmNrMkZYbk

Query Parameters:

  • includeExpired: boolean. enable listing of expired keys. Optional.

Example Response:

http
HTTP/1.1 200
Content-Type: application/json

[
  {
    "id": 3,
    "name": "API",
    "role": "Admin"
  },
  {
    "id": 1,
    "name": "TestAdmin",
    "role": "Admin",
    "expiration": "2019-06-26T10:52:03+03:00"
  }
]

Create API Key

POST /api/auth/keys

Example Request:

http
POST /api/auth/keys HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
Content-Type: application/json
Authorization: Bearer eyJrIjoiT0tTcG1pUlY2RnVKZTFVaDFsNFZXdE9ZWmNrMkZYbk

{
  "name": "mykey",
  "role": "Admin",
  "secondsToLive": 86400
}

JSON Body schema:

  • name – The key name
  • role – Sets the access level/Grafana Role for the key. Can be one of the following values: Viewer, Editor or Admin.
  • secondsToLive – Sets the key expiration in seconds. It is optional. If it is a positive number an expiration date for the key is set. If it is null, zero or is omitted completely (unless api_key_max_seconds_to_live configuration option is set) the key will never expire.

Error statuses:

  • 400api_key_max_seconds_to_live is set but no secondsToLive is specified or secondsToLive is greater than this value.
  • 500 – The key was unable to be stored in the database.

Example Response:

http
HTTP/1.1 200
Content-Type: application/json

{"name":"mykey","key":"eyJrIjoiWHZiSWd3NzdCYUZnNUtibE9obUpESmE3bzJYNDRIc0UiLCJuIjoibXlrZXkiLCJpZCI6MX1=","id":1}

Delete API Key

DELETE /api/auth/keys/:id

Example Request:

http
DELETE /api/auth/keys/3 HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
Content-Type: application/json
Authorization: Bearer eyJrIjoiT0tTcG1pUlY2RnVKZTFVaDFsNFZXdE9ZWmNrMkZYbk

Example Response:

http
HTTP/1.1 200
Content-Type: application/json

{"message":"API key deleted"}