Boundary
authenticate ldap
Command: boundary authenticate ldap
The authenticate ldap
command lets you invokes the LDAP auth method to authenticate the
Boundary CLI.
Example
The following example uses an LDAP auth method with the ID amldap_1234567890
and the login name foo
to authenticate the Boundary CLI:
$ boundary authenticate ldap -auth-method-id amldap_1234567890 -login-name foo
Usage
$ boundary authenticate ldap [options] [args]
Command options
-auth-method-id
(string: "")
- The auth-method resource you want to use for authentication. You can also specify the auth method resource using the BOUNDARY_AUTH_METHOD_ID environment variable.-login-name
(string: "")
- A login name that corresponds to an account within the given auth method. You can also specify a login name using the BOUNDARY_AUTHENTICATE_PASSWORD_LOGIN_NAME environment variable.-password
(string: "")
- The password that is associated with the login name. If this value is blank, the command prompts you to enter the password interactively in a non-echoing way. Otherwise, this value can refer to a file on disk (file://
) from which a password is read or an environment variable (env://
) from which the password is read. You can also specify the password using the BOUNDARY_AUTHENTICATE_PASSWORD_PASSWORD environment variable.-scope-id
(string: "")
- The scope ID to use for the operation. You can also specify the scope ID using the BOUNDARY_SCOPE_ID environment variable.
CLI options
In addition to the command specific options, there are options common to all CLI commands and subcommands: