--- title: "Resetting a Machine" description: "" --- From time to time, it may be beneficial to reset a Talos machine to its "original" state. Bear in mind that this is a destructive action for the given machine. Doing this means removing the machine from Kubernetes, Etcd (if applicable), and clears any data on the machine that would normally persist a reboot. > WARNING: Running a `talosctl reset` on cloud VM's might result in the VM being unable to boot as this wipes the entire disk. It might be more useful to just wipe the `STATE` and `EPHEMERAL` partitions on a cloud VM if not booting via `iPXE`. `talosctl reset --system-labels-to-wipe STATE --system-labels-to-wipe EPHEMERAL` The API command for doing this is `talosctl reset`. There are a couple of flags as part of this command: ```bash Flags: --graceful if true, attempt to cordon/drain node and leave etcd (if applicable) (default true) --reboot if true, reboot the node after resetting instead of shutting down --system-labels-to-wipe strings if set, just wipe selected system disk partitions by label but keep other partitions intact keep other partitions intact ``` The `graceful` flag is especially important when considering HA vs. non-HA Talos clusters. If the machine is part of an HA cluster, a normal, graceful reset should work just fine right out of the box as long as the cluster is in a good state. However, if this is a single node cluster being used for testing purposes, a graceful reset is not an option since Etcd cannot be "left" if there is only a single member. In this case, reset should be used with `--graceful=false` to skip performing checks that would normally block the reset.