Thank you. I used Chrome developers tool to track all API calls. I added all the steps in my blogs. It is needed by many users. https://milandas.wordpress.com/2018/12/27/nifi-grant-all-access-to-initial-admin-user/ <https://milandas.wordpress.com/2018/12/27/nifi-grant-all-access-to-initial-admin-user/>
Thanks, Milan Das > On Dec 18, 2018, at 4:50 PM, Andy LoPresto <alopre...@apache.org> wrote: > > You can also use tools like the NiFi CLI [1] or community-provided tools like > NiPyAPI [2] to exercise the REST API via command-line actions rather than > having to execute individual curl commands, etc. > > [1] https://github.com/apache/nifi/tree/master/nifi-toolkit/nifi-toolkit-cli > [2] https://nipyapi.readthedocs.io/en/latest/readme.html > > > Andy LoPresto > alopre...@apache.org > alopresto.apa...@gmail.com > PGP Fingerprint: 70EC B3E5 98A6 5A3F D3C4 BACE 3C6E F65B 2F7D EF69 > >> On Dec 18, 2018, at 11:05 AM, Bryan Bende <bbe...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> Anything you can do from the UI you can do from the REST API. >> >> You can open something like Chrome Dev tools and watch the network tab >> which performing the desired action in the UI. Then you can see what >> API calls the UI makes. >> On Tue, Dec 18, 2018 at 1:53 PM Milan Das <m...@interset.com> wrote: >>> >>> I am wondering if it is possible to set root level access policies using >>> NiFi REST API. >>> >>> >>> >>> There is an unanswerd forum. >>> >>> https://community.hortonworks.com/answers/213913/post.html >>> >>> >>> >>> Thanks, >>> >>> Milan Das >>> >