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CloudTruth CLI

The CloudTruth CLI tool is used for interacting with the CloudTruth configuration management service.

In order to use this utility you must have an active CloudTruth account and generate a personal access token for authenticating with the API.

Prerequisites

The CloudTruth service is secured using SSL certificates issued by Amazon's CA service. Amazon's CA is trusted by recent operating systems and browsers out of the box, but may require installation of an updated CA certificate package for older operating system releases. E.g., Debian-based systems may require the installation of the ca-certificates package. If you install our Debian package, the necessary certificates package will be installed automatically.

For other systems, you may have to see your operating system vendor or distribution provides if you see any SSL-related errors when running the cloudtruth application.

Configuration

The CloudTruth CLI tool has several ways of configuring it, allowing you to pick whichever method is most suitable for your environment. You can configure the application using:

  • A configuration file
  • Environment variables
  • Command-line arguments

File-based Configuration

The CloudTruth CLI utility stores its configuration in the YAML format. The configuration file must be named cli.yml and must reside in the standard application configuration location for your platform:

  • Linux -> $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/cloudtruth/cli.yml
  • macOS -> $HOME/Library/Application Support/com.cloudtruth.CloudTruth-CLI/cli.yml
  • Windows -> %AppData%\CloudTruth\CloudTruth CLI\config\cli.yml

You can run cloudtruth config edit to initialize and open the configuration in your default editor.

The available configuration options are:

--- 
profiles:
  default:
    api_key: <Your personal access token>

  another_profile:
    source_profile: default
    api_key: <Another personal access token>
    description: Profile for different user
    # project: <something other than default?>
    # environment: <something other than default>

Note that you can have multiple named profiles in your configuration, allowing you to maintain multiple sets of configuration fields in the configuration file. Values can be inherited from one profile to another by way of the source_profile configuration field. Profiles without an explicit source_profile configuration implicitly inherit from the default profile. You may choose which profile to use by passing the --profile to the CloudTruth CLI binary:

cloudtruth --profile another-profile <subcommand>

If the --profile argument is not supplied, the profile named default will be used.

Environment-based Configuration

The CloudTruth CLI utility maps all environment variables with the CLOUDTRUTH_ followed by a configuration name to the same settings as would be available in the configuration file format.

If a configuration file is found, the configuration values from the environment will be merged with and take precedence over any values from the configuration file.

The available configuration options are:

  • $CLOUDTRUTH_API_KEY -> Your personal access token
  • $CLOUDTRUTH_PROFILE -> Your profile (which can contain API key, project, and environment)
  • $CLOUDTRUTH_PROJECT -> Your "default" CloudTruth project
  • $CLOUDTRUTH_ENVIRONMENT -> Your "default" CloudTruth environment

Argument-based Configuration

The CloudTruth CLI utility is able to be configured by supplying command-line arguments for the necessary settings. As with the other configuration options available to you, care should be taken to ensure secret values are not exposed to other users on your system.

You may want to prefix commands with at space " " in order to avoid having secret values stored in your shell history.

The available configurations options can be displayed by running the tool with the --help or -h options:

cloudtruth --help, cloudtruth -h, or cloudtruth help.

Running

Once you have the application configured with your CloudTruth API key, you can interact with your CloudTruth data by running commands.

The CloudTruth CLI application uses subcommands to scope available actions as appropriate for a given resource. You can see the full list of commands by running:

cloudtruth help

To make command discovery easier you can also get auto-completions for most popular shells by running:

cloudtruth completions <SHELL>, where "SHELL" is the name of your shell.

To see the full list of supported shells, you can run:

cloudtruth completions --help

All subcommands support a --help option to show you how the command should be invoked.

Switching Active Configuration Profile

CloudTruth CLI profiles are a way of organizing the application's configuration data into multiple named groups. Profiles, in this sense, are unrelated to configuration values in your CloudTruth account. They simply allow you to configure the CloudTruth CLI for multiple organizations or multiple API keys with different access restrictions.

By default, the profile named default will be used, but you can select the active profile with the --profile flag:

cloudtruth --profile my-profile parameters get my_param

or the CLOUDTRUTH_PROFILE environment variable

CLOUDTRUTH_PROFILE=my-profile cloudtruth parameters get my_param

Switching Active CloudTruth Environment

By default, all commands will run against the default CloudTruth environment. To change the target environment, you can supply the global --env flag:

cloudtruth --env production parameters get my_param

or the CLOUDTRUTH_ENVIRONMENT environment variable

CLOUDTRUTH_ENVIRONMENT=production cloudtruth parameters get my_param