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stepzen

The StepZen CLI

  • 0.36.0-beta.0
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StepZen CLI

The StepZen Command Line Interface (CLI) tool enables you to set up and manage StepZen using commands in your command-line shell.

After you have written or imported your GraphQL schema in the form of a Schema Definition Language (SDL) file, and defined your "configuration" in a YAML files, you can upload and deploy them to StepZen using the StepZen CLI - resulting in a live GraphQL endpoint.

Installing

npm install -g stepzen

Verifying your installation

To verify your CLI installation, use the stepzen --version command:

$ stepzen (-v|--version|version)


  • StepZen CLI
  • Installing
  • Verifying your installation
  • Usage
  • QA from cloned repo
  • Commands

Usage

$ npm install -g stepzen
$ stepzen COMMAND
running command...
$ stepzen (--version|-v)
stepzen/0.36.0-beta.0 linux-x64 node-v18.19.1
$ stepzen --help [COMMAND]
USAGE
  $ stepzen COMMAND
...

QA from cloned repo

To run from code: path-to-repo/bin/run start (start or whatever command you're QAing)

Commands

-- OR (deprecated) --

$ stepzen deploy ENDPOINT --schema=schema [--configurationsets=cs1[,cs2[,..]]]`](#stepzen-deploy-endpoint---configpathtoconfigyaml---dirpathtoworkspace---or-deprecated----stepzen-deploy-endpoint---schemaschema---configurationsetscs1cs2)

stepzen delete ENDPOINT

Delete an endpoint from your StepZen account.

USAGE
  $ stepzen delete [ENDPOINT] [-h] [--non-interactive]

ARGUMENTS
  ENDPOINT  name of the endpoint (e.g. api/customers)

FLAGS
  -h, --help         Show CLI help
  --non-interactive  Disable all interactive prompts

DESCRIPTION
  Delete an endpoint from your StepZen account.

`stepzen deploy [ENDPOINT] [--config=path/to/config.yaml] [--dir=path/to/workspace]

-- OR (deprecated) --

$ stepzen deploy ENDPOINT --schema=schema [--configurationsets=cs1[,cs2[,..]]]`

Deploy to StepZen.

USAGE
  $ stepzen deploy [ENDPOINT] [--config=path/to/config.yaml] [--dir=path/to/workspace]

  -- OR (deprecated) --

  $
    stepzen deploy ENDPOINT --schema=schema [--configurationsets=cs1[,cs2[,..]]]

ARGUMENTS
  ENDPOINT  name of the endpoint (e.g. api/customers)
            [default: use the endpoint property from stepzen.config.json]

FLAGS
  -h, --help
      Show CLI help

  --config=path/to/config.yaml
      [default: config.yaml] Configuration file to use (relative to the current directory)

  --configurationsets=<value>
      Name(s) of configuration sets uploaded earlier with stepzen upload
      [DEPRECATED: this flag will be removed in future versions]

      Instead, please use one of these options:
      - stepzen deploy (without the --configurationsets flag)
      to use the configuration from the config.yaml file in the current directory (if exists)
      - stepzen deploy --config path/to/config.yaml
      to explicitly specify the configuration file

  --dir=<value>
      Working directory

  --non-interactive
      Disable all interactive prompts

  --schema=<value>
      Name of a schema uploaded earlier with stepzen upload
      [DEPRECATED: this flag will be removed in future versions]

      Instead, please use one of these options:
      - stepzen deploy (without the --schema flag)
      to deploy the schema from a StepZen workspace in your current directory
      - stepzen deploy --dir path/to/workspace
      to deploy from a StepZen workspace in another folder

  --silent

DESCRIPTION
  Deploy to StepZen.

stepzen help [COMMANDS]

Display help for stepzen.

USAGE
  $ stepzen help [COMMANDS] [-n]

ARGUMENTS
  COMMANDS  Command to show help for.

FLAGS
  -n, --nested-commands  Include all nested commands in the output.

DESCRIPTION
  Display help for stepzen.

See code: @oclif/plugin-help

stepzen import [SOURCE]

Import a schema for an external data source or an API endpoint into your GraphQL API.

USAGE
  $ stepzen import [SOURCE] [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dir <value>]

ARGUMENTS
  SOURCE  kind of the data source: curl, graphql, mysql, postgresql, snowflake (or a full DSN string)

FLAGS
  -h, --help         Show CLI help
  --dir=<value>      Working directory
  --non-interactive  Disable all interactive prompts

DESCRIPTION
  Import a schema for an external data source or an API endpoint into your GraphQL API.
  See more details with stepzen import [SOURCE] --help

stepzen import curl

Import a schema for a REST endpoint into your GraphQL API (uses the curl syntax).

USAGE
  $ stepzen import curl [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dir <value>] [--name <value>] [--prefix <value>] [-H <value>]
    [--header-param <value>] [--query-name <value>] [--query-type <value>] [--path-params <value>]

FLAGS
  -H, --header=<value>...
      Specifies a request header to pass

      Example:
      stepzen import curl https://example.com/api/customers \
      -H "Authorization: apikey SecretAPIKeyValue"

  -h, --help
      Show CLI help

  --dir=<value>
      Working directory

  --header-param=<value>...
      Specifies a parameter in a header value. Can be formed by taking a -H, --header flag and replacing the variable part
      of the header value with a $paramName placeholder. Repeat this flag once for each header with a parameter.

      Example:
      stepzen import curl https://example.com/api/customers \
      -H "Authorization: apikey SecretAPIKeyValue" \
      --header-param 'Authorization: apikey $apikey'

  --name=<value>
      Subfolder inside the workspace folder to save the imported schema files to. Defaults to the name of the imported
      schema.

  --non-interactive
      Disable all interactive prompts

  --path-params=<value>
      Specifies path parameters in the URL path. Can be formed by taking the original path and replacing the variable
      segments with $paramName placeholders.

      Example:
      stepzen import curl https://example.com/users/jane/posts/12 --path-params '/users/$userId/posts/$postId'

  --prefix=<value>
      Prefix to add to every type in the generated schema

  --query-name=<value>
      Property name to add to the Query type as a way to access the imported endpoint

  --query-type=<value>
      Name for the type returned by the curl request in the generated schema. The name specified by --query-type is not
      prefixed by --prefix if both flags are present.

DESCRIPTION
  Import a schema for a REST endpoint into your GraphQL API (uses the curl syntax).

  stepzen import curl automatically introspects a REST endpoint, generates a GraphQL schema for accessing this endpoint
  through a StepZen API, and adds the generated types and a query field into your GraphQL schema.

stepzen import flow [FLOW]

Import StepZen flow expression as a query field into your GraphQL API.

USAGE
  $ stepzen import flow [FLOW] [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dir <value>] [--name <value>] [-H <value> --endpoint
    <value>]

FLAGS
  -H, --header=<value>...  Specifies a request header to pass

                           Example:
                           stepzen import curl https://example.com/api/customers \
                           -H "Authorization: apikey SecretAPIKeyValue"
  -h, --help               Show CLI help
  --dir=<value>            Working directory
  --endpoint=<value>       Use a custom GraphQL schema instead of the project's schema as the schema providing the steps
                           in the flow.
  --name=<value>           Subfolder inside the workspace folder to save the imported schema files to. Defaults to the
                           name of the imported schema.
  --non-interactive        Disable all interactive prompts

DESCRIPTION
  Import StepZen flow expression as a query field into your GraphQL API.

  stepzen import flow automatically introspects a GraphQL endpoint and adds a @sequence implementing the given flow
  expression into your GraphQL schema.

stepzen import graphql [URL]

Import a GraphQL API as a subgraph into your GraphQL API.

USAGE
  $ stepzen import graphql [URL] [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dir <value>] [--name <value>] [--prefix <value>] [-H
    <value>] [--header-param <value>]

FLAGS
  -H, --header=<value>...
      Specifies a request header to pass

      Example:
      stepzen import curl https://example.com/api/customers \
      -H "Authorization: apikey SecretAPIKeyValue"

  -h, --help
      Show CLI help

  --dir=<value>
      Working directory

  --header-param=<value>...
      Specifies a parameter in a header value. Can be formed by taking a -H, --header flag and replacing the variable part
      of the header value with a $paramName placeholder. Repeat this flag once for each header with a parameter.

      Example:
      stepzen import curl https://example.com/api/customers \
      -H "Authorization: apikey SecretAPIKeyValue" \
      --header-param 'Authorization: apikey $apikey'

  --name=<value>
      Subfolder inside the workspace folder to save the imported schema files to. Defaults to the name of the imported
      schema.

  --non-interactive
      Disable all interactive prompts

  --prefix=<value>
      Prefix to add to every type in the generated schema

DESCRIPTION
  Import a GraphQL API as a subgraph into your GraphQL API.

  stepzen import graphql automatically introspects a GraphQL endpoint and merges the types, queries, mutations and
  subscriptions for accessing this endpoint through a StepZen API into your GraphQL schema.

stepzen import mysql [DSN]

Import a schema for a MySQL data source into your GraphQL API.

USAGE
  $ stepzen import mysql [DSN] [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dir <value>] [--name <value>] [--db-host <value>]
    [--db-user <value>] [--db-password <value>] [--db-database <value>] [--db-link-types] [--db-include
    tables-only|views-only|tables-and-views] [--db-use-deprecated-2022-naming]

ARGUMENTS
  DSN  (optional) Data Source Name (DSN) of a MySQL database.
       Example: mysql://user:password@host:port/database

       Flags, such as --db-host, override the corresponding parts of the DSN (if both are provided).

FLAGS
  -h, --help
      Show CLI help

  --db-database=<value>
      Name of database to import

  --db-host=<value>
      Database host and optional port (as HOST[:PORT])

  --db-include=<option>
      Should the generated GraphQL schema be based only on database views, only on tables or on both
      <options: tables-only|views-only|tables-and-views>

  --db-link-types
      Automatically link types based on foreign key relationships using @materializer
      (https://stepzen.com/docs/features/linking-types)

  --db-password=<value>
      Database password

  --db-use-deprecated-2022-naming
      Use the deprecated pre-2023 naming convention in the generated GraphQL schema:
      - the generated type and property names are auto-capitalized into PascalCase
      - the generated field names use the getCustomer and getCustomerList style.

      On the other hand, when using the default naming convention:
      - the generated type and property names match exactly the DB table and column names
      - the generated field names use the customer and customerList style.

  --db-user=<value>
      Database user name

  --dir=<value>
      Working directory

  --name=<value>
      Subfolder inside the workspace folder to save the imported schema files to. Defaults to the name of the imported
      schema.

  --non-interactive
      Disable all interactive prompts

DESCRIPTION
  Import a schema for a MySQL data source into your GraphQL API.

  stepzen import mysql automatically introspects a MySQL database, generates a GraphQL schema for accessing this
  database through a StepZen API, and merges the generated types, queries and mutations into your into your GraphQL
  schema.

ALIASES
  $ stepzen import singlestore

stepzen import postgres [DSN]

Import a schema for a PostgreSQL data source into your GraphQL API.

USAGE
  $ stepzen import postgres [DSN] [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dir <value>] [--name <value>] [--db-host <value>]
    [--db-user <value>] [--db-password <value>] [--db-database <value>] [--db-schema <value>] [--db-link-types]
    [--db-include tables-only|views-only|tables-and-views] [--db-use-deprecated-2022-naming]

ARGUMENTS
  DSN  (optional) Data Source Name (DSN) of a PostgreSQL database.
       Example: postgresql://user:password@host:port/database?schema=schema

       Flags, such as --db-host, override the corresponding parts of the DSN (if both are provided).

FLAGS
  -h, --help
      Show CLI help

  --db-database=<value>
      Name of database to import

  --db-host=<value>
      Database host and optional port (as HOST[:PORT])

  --db-include=<option>
      Should the generated GraphQL schema be based only on database views, only on tables or on both
      <options: tables-only|views-only|tables-and-views>

  --db-link-types
      Automatically link types based on foreign key relationships using @materializer
      (https://stepzen.com/docs/features/linking-types)

  --db-password=<value>
      Database password

  --db-schema=<value>
      Database schema to import tables from (default: public)

  --db-use-deprecated-2022-naming
      Use the deprecated pre-2023 naming convention in the generated GraphQL schema:
      - the generated type and property names are auto-capitalized into PascalCase
      - the generated field names use the getCustomer and getCustomerList style.

      On the other hand, when using the default naming convention:
      - the generated type and property names match exactly the DB table and column names
      - the generated field names use the customer and customerList style.

  --db-user=<value>
      Database user name

  --dir=<value>
      Working directory

  --name=<value>
      Subfolder inside the workspace folder to save the imported schema files to. Defaults to the name of the imported
      schema.

  --non-interactive
      Disable all interactive prompts

DESCRIPTION
  Import a schema for a PostgreSQL data source into your GraphQL API.

  stepzen import postgresql automatically introspects a PostgreSQL database, generates a GraphQL schema for accessing
  this database through a StepZen API, and merges the generated types, queries and mutations into your GraphQL schema.

ALIASES
  $ stepzen import postgres

stepzen import postgresql [DSN]

Import a schema for a PostgreSQL data source into your GraphQL API.

USAGE
  $ stepzen import postgresql [DSN] [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dir <value>] [--name <value>] [--db-host <value>]
    [--db-user <value>] [--db-password <value>] [--db-database <value>] [--db-schema <value>] [--db-link-types]
    [--db-include tables-only|views-only|tables-and-views] [--db-use-deprecated-2022-naming]

ARGUMENTS
  DSN  (optional) Data Source Name (DSN) of a PostgreSQL database.
       Example: postgresql://user:password@host:port/database?schema=schema

       Flags, such as --db-host, override the corresponding parts of the DSN (if both are provided).

FLAGS
  -h, --help
      Show CLI help

  --db-database=<value>
      Name of database to import

  --db-host=<value>
      Database host and optional port (as HOST[:PORT])

  --db-include=<option>
      Should the generated GraphQL schema be based only on database views, only on tables or on both
      <options: tables-only|views-only|tables-and-views>

  --db-link-types
      Automatically link types based on foreign key relationships using @materializer
      (https://stepzen.com/docs/features/linking-types)

  --db-password=<value>
      Database password

  --db-schema=<value>
      Database schema to import tables from (default: public)

  --db-use-deprecated-2022-naming
      Use the deprecated pre-2023 naming convention in the generated GraphQL schema:
      - the generated type and property names are auto-capitalized into PascalCase
      - the generated field names use the getCustomer and getCustomerList style.

      On the other hand, when using the default naming convention:
      - the generated type and property names match exactly the DB table and column names
      - the generated field names use the customer and customerList style.

  --db-user=<value>
      Database user name

  --dir=<value>
      Working directory

  --name=<value>
      Subfolder inside the workspace folder to save the imported schema files to. Defaults to the name of the imported
      schema.

  --non-interactive
      Disable all interactive prompts

DESCRIPTION
  Import a schema for a PostgreSQL data source into your GraphQL API.

  stepzen import postgresql automatically introspects a PostgreSQL database, generates a GraphQL schema for accessing
  this database through a StepZen API, and merges the generated types, queries and mutations into your GraphQL schema.

ALIASES
  $ stepzen import postgres

stepzen import singlestore [DSN]

Import a schema for a MySQL data source into your GraphQL API.

USAGE
  $ stepzen import singlestore [DSN] [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dir <value>] [--name <value>] [--db-host <value>]
    [--db-user <value>] [--db-password <value>] [--db-database <value>] [--db-link-types] [--db-include
    tables-only|views-only|tables-and-views] [--db-use-deprecated-2022-naming]

ARGUMENTS
  DSN  (optional) Data Source Name (DSN) of a MySQL database.
       Example: mysql://user:password@host:port/database

       Flags, such as --db-host, override the corresponding parts of the DSN (if both are provided).

FLAGS
  -h, --help
      Show CLI help

  --db-database=<value>
      Name of database to import

  --db-host=<value>
      Database host and optional port (as HOST[:PORT])

  --db-include=<option>
      Should the generated GraphQL schema be based only on database views, only on tables or on both
      <options: tables-only|views-only|tables-and-views>

  --db-link-types
      Automatically link types based on foreign key relationships using @materializer
      (https://stepzen.com/docs/features/linking-types)

  --db-password=<value>
      Database password

  --db-use-deprecated-2022-naming
      Use the deprecated pre-2023 naming convention in the generated GraphQL schema:
      - the generated type and property names are auto-capitalized into PascalCase
      - the generated field names use the getCustomer and getCustomerList style.

      On the other hand, when using the default naming convention:
      - the generated type and property names match exactly the DB table and column names
      - the generated field names use the customer and customerList style.

  --db-user=<value>
      Database user name

  --dir=<value>
      Working directory

  --name=<value>
      Subfolder inside the workspace folder to save the imported schema files to. Defaults to the name of the imported
      schema.

  --non-interactive
      Disable all interactive prompts

DESCRIPTION
  Import a schema for a MySQL data source into your GraphQL API.

  stepzen import mysql automatically introspects a MySQL database, generates a GraphQL schema for accessing this
  database through a StepZen API, and merges the generated types, queries and mutations into your into your GraphQL
  schema.

ALIASES
  $ stepzen import singlestore

stepzen import snowflake [DSN]

Import a schema for a Snowflake data source into your GraphQL API.

USAGE
  $ stepzen import snowflake [DSN] [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dir <value>] [--name <value>] [--db-user <value>]
    [--db-password <value>] [--db-database <value>] [--db-schema <value>] [--db-link-types] [--db-include
    tables-only|views-only|tables-and-views] [--db-use-deprecated-2022-naming] [--snowflake-account-id <value>]
    [--snowflake-warehouse <value>]

ARGUMENTS
  DSN  (optional) Data Source Name (DSN) of a Snowflake database.
       Example: snowflake://user:password@orgname-accountname/database?warehouse=warehouse&schema=schema

       Flags, such as --db-host, override the corresponding parts of the DSN (if both are provided).

FLAGS
  -h, --help
      Show CLI help

  --db-database=<value>
      Name of database to import

  --db-include=<option>
      Should the generated GraphQL schema be based only on database views, only on tables or on both
      <options: tables-only|views-only|tables-and-views>

  --db-link-types
      Automatically link types based on foreign key relationships using @materializer
      (https://stepzen.com/docs/features/linking-types)

  --db-password=<value>
      Database password

  --db-schema=<value>
      Database schema to import tables from (default: PUBLIC)

  --db-use-deprecated-2022-naming
      Use the deprecated pre-2023 naming convention in the generated GraphQL schema:
      - the generated type and property names are auto-capitalized into PascalCase
      - the generated field names use the getCustomer and getCustomerList style.

      On the other hand, when using the default naming convention:
      - the generated type and property names match exactly the DB table and column names
      - the generated field names use the customer and customerList style.

  --db-user=<value>
      Database user name

  --dir=<value>
      Working directory

  --name=<value>
      Subfolder inside the workspace folder to save the imported schema files to. Defaults to the name of the imported
      schema.

  --non-interactive
      Disable all interactive prompts

  --snowflake-account-id=<value>
      Snowflake account identifier in the orgname-accountname format. For more information, see the Snowflake
      documentation at https://docs.snowflake.com/en/user-guide/admin-account-identifier.html.

  --snowflake-warehouse=<value>
      Snowflake warehouse

DESCRIPTION
  Import a schema for a Snowflake data source into your GraphQL API.

  stepzen import snowflake automatically introspects a Snowflake database, generates a GraphQL schema for accessing this
  database through a StepZen API, and merges the generated types, queries and mutations into your GraphQL schema.

stepzen init

Initialize a StepZen workspace in the current directory.

USAGE
  $ stepzen init [DIRECTORY] [-h] [--non-interactive] [--endpoint <value>] [--yes]

FLAGS
  -h, --help          Show CLI help
  --endpoint=<value>  Endpoint name (e.g. api/myapp)
  --non-interactive   Disable all interactive prompts
  --yes               Accept default answers to interactive prompts

DESCRIPTION
  Initialize a StepZen workspace in the current directory.

stepzen list [TYPE]

List endpoints, schemas and configuration sets in your StepZen account.

USAGE
  $ stepzen list [TYPE] [-h] [--non-interactive]

ARGUMENTS
  TYPE
      (endpoints|configurationsets|schemas) [default: endpoints]

      The type of entities to list:
      endpoints - GraphQL API endpoints deployed with stepzen deploy (or stepzen start)
      schemas [DEPRECATED] - StepZen schemas uploaded with stepzen upload (or stepzen start)
      configurationsets [DEPRECATED] - StepZen configuration sets uploaded with stepzen upload (or stepzen start)

FLAGS
  -h, --help         Show CLI help
  --non-interactive  Disable all interactive prompts

DESCRIPTION
  List endpoints, schemas and configuration sets in your StepZen account.
  All timestamps displayed by stepzen list endpoints are in your local time zone.

stepzen login [DOMAIN]

Log in to StepZen.

USAGE
  $ stepzen login [DOMAIN] [-h] [--non-interactive] [-a <value> |  | --public] [-k <value> |  | ]
    [--introspection <value>]

ARGUMENTS
  DOMAIN  Domain of the StepZen service to login to (e.g. stepzen.acme.com). If no domain is provided, stepzen.net is
          used by default.

FLAGS
  -a, --account=<value>    StepZen account name (copy from https://stepzen.com/account). If not provided, the CLI
                           prompts the users to enter one.
  -h, --help               Show CLI help
  -k, --adminkey=<value>   Admin key (copy from https://stepzen.com/account) If not provided, the CLI prompts the users
                           to enter one.
  --introspection=<value>  Override the default StepZen introspection service URL for all stepzen import commands. If
                           not provided, use the default introspection URL.

                           Example:
                           stepzen login --introspection stepzen-introspection.mydomain.com
  --non-interactive        Disable all interactive prompts
  --public                 Create a public anonymous StepZen account and use it. This is handy for trying StepZen out,
                           but it not suitable for handling private data as all endpoints created with a public account
                           will be public.

DESCRIPTION
  Log in to StepZen.

stepzen logout

Log out of StepZen.

USAGE
  $ stepzen logout [-h] [--non-interactive]

FLAGS
  -h, --help         Show CLI help
  --non-interactive  Disable all interactive prompts

DESCRIPTION
  Log out of StepZen.

stepzen request [QUERY]

Send a GraphQL request to a StepZen endpoint and print the response, using the API key and the target endpoint from the current StepZen workspace.

USAGE
  $ stepzen request [QUERY] [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dir <value> | --endpoint <value>] [-H <value>]
    [--operation-name <value>] [--var <value>] [--var-file <value>] [-f <value>]

ARGUMENTS
  QUERY  GraphQL query (could include a query, a mutation or a subscription).
         This argument is required unless you provide the query as a file with --file=file.

FLAGS
  -H, --header=<value>...
      Add an additional HTTP header to the request. This is useful for schemas where @rest or @graphql directives enable
      header forwarding with forwardheaders.

      Example:
      stepzen request '{ user(id: "u123") { email } }' \
      -H "X-API-Token: SecretAPIToken"

      Use the -H "Header-Name:" syntax to drop a default header, and the -H "Header-Name;" syntax to send a header with an
      empty value.

  -f, --file=<value>
      Read the query text from a file instead of the command line.

      Example:
      stepzen request -f query.graphql

  -h, --help
      Show CLI help

  --dir=<value>
      StepZen workspace directory (defaults to the current directory)

  --endpoint=<value>
      StepZen endpoint to call (defaults to the endpoint in current StepZen workspace)

  --non-interactive
      Disable all interactive prompts

  --operation-name=<value>
      Specify the operation name (in case if the provided query includes multiple operations)

  --var=<value>...
      Add a request variable, in the name=value format.

      Example:
      stepzen request 'query OrdersQuery($search: String!, $limit: Int) {
      orders(search: $search, limit: $limit) { id createdAt }
      }' \
      --var 'search=space ninja' \
      --var limit=5

  --var-file=<value>
      Read request variables from a JSON file. In case when the same variable value is provided both via --var-file and
      --var, the priority is given to the latter.

      Example:
      stepzen request 'query OrdersQuery($search: String!, $limit: Int) {
      orders(search: $search, limit: $limit) { id createdAt }
      }' \
      --var-file ./vars.json

DESCRIPTION
  Send a GraphQL request to a StepZen endpoint and print the response, using the API key and the target endpoint from
  the current StepZen workspace.

stepzen service [ACTION]

Manage the local StepZen service instance (requires Docker).

USAGE
  $ stepzen service [ACTION] [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dsn <value> | --reset-auto | --prompt] [--port
    <value>]

ARGUMENTS
  ACTION
      (start|stop|upgrade)
      start	start a local StepZen service instance in a Docker container
      This command pulls the latest StepZen service instance Docker image so that the
      version of StepZen you run locally is the same as the one running on
      		stepzen.net.

      stop	stop the local StepZen service instance (if running)
      This command deletes the Docker container with the StepZen service instance,
      but all your endpoints are persistently stored in the metadata database. They
      remain available when running stepzen service start next time.

      upgrade	upgrade the local StepZen service instance if it is running
      This command checks if a newer version of the StepZen service instance Docker
      image is available, and if it is then stops and deletes the currently running
      container, pulls the latest image, and starts it. All endpoints are preserved.

      If no action is provided, print the service status and exit.

FLAGS
  -h, --help         Show CLI help
  --dsn=<value>      DSN of a StepZen metadata database, e.g. postgres://user:password@172.17.0.1:5432/zenctl
  --non-interactive  Disable all interactive prompts
  --port=<value>     Override the TCP port on which the local StepZen service instance will listen for connections (port
                     9000 by default).
  --prompt           Opens an interactive prompt to ask for database details (or fails, if running in a non-interactive
                     mode).
  --reset-auto       Create fresh empty metadata database. Note: all existing endpoints will be deleted and you will be
                     logged out.

DESCRIPTION
  Manage the local StepZen service instance (requires Docker).
  You can use a local StepZen service instance instead of the StepZen cloud to develop and test GraphQL endpoints
  locally. This way you can try StepZen out without giving the StepZen cloud access to your data sources and API
  endpoints.

  Local StepZen service instances are not suitable for production use. Please refer to the documentation at
  https://stepzen.com/docs/deployment/local-docker for more information and examples.

stepzen start

Deploy your schema to StepZen, and then redeploy on every change.

USAGE
  $ stepzen start [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dir <value>] [--endpoint <value>] [--dashboard
    web|local|none] [--port <value>]

FLAGS
  -h, --help
      Show CLI help

  --dashboard=<option>
      Which GraphiQL dashboard to use to explore the deployed endpoint.
      - web [default]: use GraphiQL at dashboard.stepzen.com
      - local: start a local GraphiQL dashboard on localhost:5001 (change the port with the --port flag)
      - none: do not use GraphiQL at all
      <options: web|local|none>

  --dir=<value>
      Working directory

  --endpoint=<value>
      Override workspace endpoint

  --non-interactive
      Disable all interactive prompts

  --port=<value>
      [default: 5001] Port for the local GraphiQL dashboard (when using --dashboard=local)

DESCRIPTION
  Deploy your schema to StepZen, and then redeploy on every change.

stepzen upload TYPE DESTINATION

[DEPRECATED] Upload a schema or a configuration set to StepZen.

USAGE
  $ stepzen upload [TYPE] [DESTINATION] [-h] [--non-interactive] [--dir <value> | --file <value>] [--silent]

ARGUMENTS
  TYPE         (configurationset|schema) type
  DESTINATION  destination

FLAGS
  -h, --help         Show CLI help
  --dir=<value>      A directory to upload
  --file=<value>     A file to upload
  --non-interactive  Disable all interactive prompts
  --silent

DESCRIPTION
  [DEPRECATED] Upload a schema or a configuration set to StepZen.
  stepzen upload is deprecated in favor of stepzen deploy
  StepZen CLI is moving away from a two-step "upload" + "deploy" flow to a single-step "deploy" flow.

stepzen version

USAGE
  $ stepzen version [--json] [--verbose]

FLAGS
  --verbose  Show additional information about the CLI.

GLOBAL FLAGS
  --json  Format output as json.

FLAG DESCRIPTIONS
  --verbose  Show additional information about the CLI.

    Additionally shows the architecture, node version, operating system, and versions of plugins that the CLI is using.

See code: @oclif/plugin-version

stepzen whoami

View your StepZen credentials.

USAGE
  $ stepzen whoami [-h] [--non-interactive] [--showkeys | --account | --adminkey | --apikey | --domain]

FLAGS
  -h, --help         Show CLI help
  --account
  --adminkey
  --apikey
  --domain
  --non-interactive  Disable all interactive prompts
  --showkeys

DESCRIPTION
  View your StepZen credentials.

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Package last updated on 13 Mar 2024

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