pulumi config set-all

Set multiple configuration values

Synopsis

pulumi set-all allows you to set multiple configuration values in one command.

Each key-value pair must be preceded by either the --secret or the --plaintext flag to denote whether it should be encrypted:

  • pulumi config set-all --secret key1=value1 --plaintext key2=value --secret key3=value3

The --path flag can be used to set values inside a map or list:

  • pulumi config set-all --path --plaintext "names[0]"=a --plaintext "names[1]"=b will set the value to a list with the first item a and second item b.
  • pulumi config set-all --path --plaintext parent.nested=value --plaintext parent.other=value2 will set the value of parent to a map {nested: value, other: value2}.
  • pulumi config set-all --path --plaintext '["parent.name"].["nested.name"]'=value will set the value of parent.name to a map nested.name: value.
pulumi config set-all --plaintext key1=value1 --plaintext key2=value2 --secret key3=value3 [flags]

Options

  -h, --help                    help for set-all
      --path                    Parse the keys as paths in a map or list rather than raw strings
      --plaintext stringArray   Marks a value as plaintext (unencrypted)
      --secret stringArray      Marks a value as secret to be encrypted

Options inherited from parent commands

      --color string                 Colorize output. Choices are: always, never, raw, auto (default "auto")
      --config-file string           Use the configuration values in the specified file rather than detecting the file name
  -C, --cwd string                   Run pulumi as if it had been started in another directory
      --disable-integrity-checking   Disable integrity checking of checkpoint files
  -e, --emoji                        Enable emojis in the output
      --logflow                      Flow log settings to child processes (like plugins)
      --logtostderr                  Log to stderr instead of to files
      --non-interactive              Disable interactive mode for all commands
      --profiling string             Emit CPU and memory profiles and an execution trace to '[filename].[pid].{cpu,mem,trace}', respectively
  -s, --stack string                 The name of the stack to operate on. Defaults to the current stack
      --tracing file:                Emit tracing to the specified endpoint. Use the file: scheme to write tracing data to a local file
  -v, --verbose int                  Enable verbose logging (e.g., v=3); anything >3 is very verbose

SEE ALSO

Auto generated by spf13/cobra on 15-Mar-2023