Boundary
groups list
Command: boundary groups list
The groups list
command lists all groups within an enclosing scope or resource.
Examples
The following example lists all groups defined within the scope o_R0wbo0H6Zl
:
$ boundary groups list -scope-id o_R0wbo0H6Zl
Example output:
Group information:
ID: g_XzlDiNLgoz
Version: 2
Name: group01
Description: A test group
Authorized Actions:
no-op
read
update
delete
add-members
set-members
remove-members
ID: g_FNVVhAd0on
Version: 1
Name: webdev
Description: Web dev group
Authorized Actions:
no-op
read
update
delete
add-members
set-members
remove-members
ID: g_9SpLKOoTse
Version: 1
Name: support
Description: Support engineering group
Authorized Actions:
no-op
read
update
delete
add-members
set-members
remove-members
Usage
$ boundary groups list [options] [args]
Command options
-filter
(string: "")
- If set, Boundary filters the list operation before the results are returned. The filter operates against each item in the list. We recommend that you use single quotes, because the filters contain double quotes. Refer to the Filter resource listings documentation for more details.-recursive
- If set, runs the list operation recursively on any child scopes, if the type supports it. The default value isfalse
.-scope-id ``(string: "")
- The scope from which to list the groups. The default value isglobal
. You can also specify this value 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: