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@salesforce/plugin-settings
Advanced tools
Config and alias commands for the sf
Salesforce CLI
NOTE: This repo combines
plugin-config
andplugin-alias
forsf
.If you are looking for the
sfdx
command repos, they can be found here: plugin-config and plugin-alias
This plugin is bundled with the Salesforce CLI. For more information on the CLI, read the getting started guide.
We always recommend using the latest version of these commands bundled with the CLI, however, you can install a specific version or tag if needed.
sf plugins install settings@x.y.z
Please report any issues at https://github.com/forcedotcom/cli/issues
External contributors will be required to sign a Contributor's License Agreement. You can do so by going to https://cla.salesforce.com/sign-cla.
To build the plugin locally, make sure to have yarn installed and run the following commands:
# Clone the repository
git clone git@github.com:salesforcecli/plugin-settings
# Install the dependencies and compile
yarn install
yarn build
To use your plugin, run using the local ./bin/dev.js
or ./bin/dev.cmd
file.
# Run using local run file.
./bin/dev config
There should be no differences when running via the Salesforce CLI or using the local run file. However, it can be useful to link the plugin to do some additional testing or run your commands from anywhere on your machine.
# Link your plugin to the sf cli
sf plugins link .
# To verify
sf plugins
sf alias list
List all aliases currently set on your local computer.
USAGE
$ sf alias list [--json] [--flags-dir <value>]
GLOBAL FLAGS
--flags-dir=<value> Import flag values from a directory.
--json Format output as json.
DESCRIPTION
List all aliases currently set on your local computer.
Aliases are global, which means that you can use all the listed aliases in any Salesforce DX project on your computer.
ALIASES
$ sf force alias list
EXAMPLES
List all the aliases you've set:
$ sf alias list
See code: src/commands/alias/list.ts
sf alias set
Set one or more aliases on your local computer.
USAGE
$ sf alias set [--json] [--flags-dir <value>]
GLOBAL FLAGS
--flags-dir=<value> Import flag values from a directory.
--json Format output as json.
DESCRIPTION
Set one or more aliases on your local computer.
Aliases are user-defined short names that make it easier to use the CLI. For example, users often set an alias for a
scratch org usernames because they're long and unintuitive. Check the --help of a CLI command to determine where you
can use an alias.
You can associate an alias with only one value at a time. If you set an alias multiple times, the alias points to the
most recent value. Aliases are global; after you set an alias, you can use it in any Salesforce DX project on your
computer.
Use quotes to specify an alias value that contains spaces. You typically use an equal sign to set your alias, although
you don't need it if you're setting a single alias in a command.
ALIASES
$ sf force alias set
EXAMPLES
Set an alias for a scratch org username:
$ sf alias set my-scratch-org=test-sadbiytjsupn@example.com
Set multiple aliases with a single command:
$ sf alias set my-scratch-org=test-sadbiytjsupn@example.com my-other-scratch-org=test-ss0xut7txzxf@example.com
Set an alias that contains spaces:
$ sf alias set my-alias='alias with spaces'
Set a single alias without using an equal sign:
$ sf alias set my-scratch-org test-ss0xut7txzxf@example.com
See code: src/commands/alias/set.ts
sf alias unset
Unset one or more aliases that are currently set on your local computer.
USAGE
$ sf alias unset [--json] [--flags-dir <value>] [-a] [-p]
FLAGS
-a, --all Unset all currently set aliases.
-p, --no-prompt Don't prompt the user for confirmation when unsetting all aliases.
GLOBAL FLAGS
--flags-dir=<value> Import flag values from a directory.
--json Format output as json.
DESCRIPTION
Unset one or more aliases that are currently set on your local computer.
Aliases are global, so when you unset one it's no longer available in any Salesforce DX project.
ALIASES
$ sf force alias unset
EXAMPLES
Unset an alias:
$ sf alias unset my-alias
Unset multiple aliases with a single command:
$ sf alias unset my-alias my-other-alias
Unset all aliases:
$ sf alias unset --all [--no-prompt]
See code: src/commands/alias/unset.ts
sf config get
Get the value of a configuration variable.
USAGE
$ sf config get [--json] [--flags-dir <value>] [--verbose]
FLAGS
--verbose Display whether the configuration variables are set locally or globally.
GLOBAL FLAGS
--flags-dir=<value> Import flag values from a directory.
--json Format output as json.
DESCRIPTION
Get the value of a configuration variable.
Run "sf config list" to see the configuration variables you've already set and their level (local or global).
Run "sf config set" to set a configuration variable. For the full list of available configuration variables, see
https://developer.salesforce.com/docs/atlas.en-us.sfdx_setup.meta/sfdx_setup/sfdx_dev_cli_config_values.htm.
ALIASES
$ sf force config get
EXAMPLES
Get the value of the "target-org" configuration variable.
$ sf config get target-org
Get multiple configuration variables and display whether they're set locally or globally:
$ sf config get target-org api-version --verbose
See code: src/commands/config/get.ts
sf config list
List the configuration variables that you've previously set.
USAGE
$ sf config list [--json] [--flags-dir <value>]
GLOBAL FLAGS
--flags-dir=<value> Import flag values from a directory.
--json Format output as json.
DESCRIPTION
List the configuration variables that you've previously set.
A config variable can be global or local, depending on whether you used the --global flag when you set it. Local
config variables apply only to the current project and override global config variables, which apply to all projects.
You can set all config variables as environment variables. Environment variables override their equivalent local and
global config variables.
The output of this command takes into account your current context. For example, let's say you run this command from a
Salesforce DX project in which you've locally set the "target-org" config variable. The command displays the local
value, even if you've also set "target-org" globally. If you haven't set the config variable locally, then the global
value is displayed, if set. If you set the SF_TARGET_ORG environment variable, it's displayed as such and overrides
any locally or globally set "target-org" config variable.
For the full list of available configuration variables, see
https://developer.salesforce.com/docs/atlas.en-us.sfdx_setup.meta/sfdx_setup/sfdx_dev_cli_config_values.htm.
ALIASES
$ sf force config list
EXAMPLES
List the global and local configuration variables that apply to your current context:
$ sf config list
See code: src/commands/config/list.ts
sf config set
Set one or more configuration variables, such as your default org.
USAGE
$ sf config set [--json] [--flags-dir <value>] [-g]
FLAGS
-g, --global Set the configuration variables globally, so they can be used from any Salesforce DX project.
GLOBAL FLAGS
--flags-dir=<value> Import flag values from a directory.
--json Format output as json.
DESCRIPTION
Set one or more configuration variables, such as your default org.
Use configuration variables to set CLI defaults, such as your default org or the API version you want the CLI to use.
For example, if you set the "target-org" configuration variable, you don't need to specify it as a "sf deploy
metadata" flag if you're deploying to your default org.
Local configuration variables apply only to your current project. Global variables, specified with the --global flag,
apply in any Salesforce DX project.
The resolution order if you've set a flag value in multiple ways is as follows:
1. Flag value specified at the command line.
2. Local (project-level) configuration variable.
3. Global configuration variable.
Run "sf config list" to see the configuration variables you've already set and their level (local or global).
If you're setting a single config variable, you don't need to use an equal sign between the variable and value. But
you must use the equal sign if setting multiple config variables.
For the full list of available configuration variables, see
https://developer.salesforce.com/docs/atlas.en-us.sfdx_setup.meta/sfdx_setup/sfdx_dev_cli_config_values.htm.
ALIASES
$ sf force config set
EXAMPLES
Set the local target-org configuration variable to an org username:
$ sf config set target-org me@my.org
Set the local target-org configuration variable to an alias:
$ sf config set target-org my-scratch-org
Set the global target-org and target-dev-hub configuration variables using aliases:
$ sf config set --global target-org=my-scratch-org target-dev-hub=my-dev-hub
See code: src/commands/config/set.ts
sf config unset
Unset local or global configuration variables.
USAGE
$ sf config unset [--json] [--flags-dir <value>] [-g]
FLAGS
-g, --global Unset the configuration variables globally.
GLOBAL FLAGS
--flags-dir=<value> Import flag values from a directory.
--json Format output as json.
DESCRIPTION
Unset local or global configuration variables.
Local configuration variables apply only to your current project. Global configuration variables apply in any
Salesforce DX project.
For the full list of available configuration variables, see
https://developer.salesforce.com/docs/atlas.en-us.sfdx_setup.meta/sfdx_setup/sfdx_dev_cli_config_values.htm.
ALIASES
$ sf force config unset
EXAMPLES
Unset the local "target-org" configuration variable:
$ sf config unset target-org
Unset multiple configuration variables globally:
$ sf config unset target-org api-version --global
See code: src/commands/config/unset.ts
FAQs
configure the Salesforce CLI
The npm package @salesforce/plugin-settings receives a total of 136,381 weekly downloads. As such, @salesforce/plugin-settings popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @salesforce/plugin-settings demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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