# Reserved Services With v0.3, `zrok` introduced a concept of "reserving" services. The intention is that the `zrok` control plane will support limits on the number of reserved services (and eventually `frontend`instances) that an account is allowed to utilize. Service reservations could also be time-limited, or possibly even bandwidth-limited (the reservation expires after a bandwidth threshold is crossed). ## Reserved Services Example With v0.3 `zrok` introduced the `zrok reserve` command: ``` $ zrok reserve private http://localhost:9090 [ 0.047] INFO main.(*reserveCommand).run: your reserved service token is 'x88xujrpk4k3' [ 0.048] INFO main.(*reserveCommand).run: your reserved service frontend is 'http://x88xujrpk4k3.zrok.quigley.com:8080/' ``` The `reserve` command creates a service reservation that allows a service to become non-ephemeral. The service token `x88xujrpk4k3` is guaranteed to exist between `backend` executions. Running a `backend` against a service reservation is done like this: ``` $ zrok share reserved x88xujrpk4k3 [ 0.005] INFO main.(*shareReservedCommand).run: sharing target endpoint: 'http://localhost:9090' [ 0.040] INFO main.(*shareReservedCommand).run: use this command to access your zrok service: 'zrok access private x88xujrpk4k3' ^C $ zrok share reserved x88xujrpk4k3 [ 0.007] INFO main.(*shareReservedCommand).run: sharing target endpoint: 'http://localhost:9090' [ 0.047] INFO main.(*shareReservedCommand).run: use this command to access your zrok service: 'zrok access private x88xujrpk4k3' ``` The `share reserved` comand starts a backend process for the service. User-facing and public-facing `frontend` instances are allowed to come and go, just as if the service were ephemeral. Releasing a reserved service is done with the `zrok release` command: ``` $ zrok release x88xujrpk4k3 [ 0.056] INFO main.(*releaseCommand).run: reserved service 'x88xujrpk4k3' released ```