Get started with the Code42 command-line interface (CLI)¶
Licensing¶
This project uses the MIT License.
Installation¶
You can install the Code42 CLI from PyPI, from source, or from distribution.
From PyPI¶
The easiest and most common way is to use pip
:
python3 -m pip install code42cli
To install a previous version of the Code42 CLI via pip
, add the version number. For example, to install version
0.4.1, enter:
python3 -m pip install code42cli==0.5.3
Visit the project history on PyPI to see all published versions.
From source¶
Alternatively, you can install the Code42 CLI directly from source code:
git clone https://github.com/code42/code42cli.git
When it finishes downloading, from the root project directory, run:
python setup.py install
From distribution¶
If you want create a .tar
ball for installing elsewhere, run the following command from the project’s root directory:
python setup.py sdist
After it finishes building, the .tar
ball will be located in the newly created dist
directory. To install it, enter:
python3 -m pip install code42cli-[VERSION].tar.gz
Authentication¶
Important
The Code42 CLI currently only supports token-based authentication.
To use the CLI, you must provide your credentials (basic authentication). If you choose not to store your password in the CLI, you must enter it for each command that requires a connection.
The Code42 CLI currently does not support SSO login providers or any other identity providers such as Active Directory or Okta.
Windows and Mac¶
For Windows and Mac systems, the CLI uses Keyring when storing passwords.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux¶
To use Keyring to store the credentials you enter in the Code42 CLI, enter the following commands before installing.
yum -y install python-pip python3 dbus-python gnome-keyring libsecret dbus-x11
pip3 install code42cli
If the following directories do not already exist, create them:
mkdir -p ~/.cache
mkdir -p ~/.local/share/keyring
In the following commands, replace the example value \n
with the Keyring password (if the default Keyring already exists).
eval "$(dbus-launch --sh-syntax)"
eval "$(printf '\n' | gnome-keyring-daemon --unlock)"
eval "$(printf '\n' | /usr/bin/gnome-keyring-daemon --start)"
Close out your D-bus session and GNOME Keyring:
pkill gnome
pkill dbus
If you do not use Keyring to store your credentials, the Code42 CLI will ask permission to store your credentials in a local flat file with read/write permissions for only the operating system user who set the password. Alternatively, you can enter your password with each command you enter.
Ubuntu¶
If Keyring doesn’t support your Ubuntu system, the Code42 CLI will ask permission to store your credentials in a local flat file with read/write permissions for only the operating system user who set the password. Alternatively, you can enter your password with each command you enter.
To learn more about authenticating in the CLI, follow the Configure profile guide.
Troubleshooting and support¶
Debug mode¶
Debug mode may be useful if you are trying to determine if you are experiencing permissions issues. When debug mode is
on, the CLI logs HTTP request data to the console. Use the -d
flag to enable debug mode for a particular command.
-d
can appear anywhere in the command chain:
code42 <command> <subcommand> <args> -d
File an issue on GitHub¶
If you are experiencing an issue with the Code42 CLI, select New issue at the project repository to create an issue. See the Github guide on creating an issue for more information.
Contact Code42 Support¶
If you don’t have a GitHub account and are experiencing issues, contact Code42 support.
What’s next?¶
Learn how to Set up a profile.