Using Meshery CLI
Meshery’s command line interface is mesheryctl
. Use mesheryctl
to both manage the lifecyle of Meshery itself and to access and invoke any of Meshery’s application and cloud native management functions. mesheryctl
commands can be categorized as follows:
mesheryctl
- Global overrides and flagsmesheryctl app
- Cloud Native Application Managementmesheryctl filter
- Cloud Native Filter Managementmesheryctl mesh
- Cloud Native Lifecycle & Configuration Managementmesheryctl perf
- Cloud Native Performance Managementmesheryctl pattern
- Cloud Native Pattern Configuration & Managementmesheryctl system
- Meshery Lifecycle and Troubleshooting
Configuring Meshery Deployments with meshconfig
Meshconfig refers to a configuration file found at ~/.meshery/config.yaml
. Your meshconfig file must contain one or more contexts
in order for any mesheryctl system
command to work. Each context represents a Meshery deployment.
Each of the system
commands are used to control Meshery’s lifecycle like system start
, stop
, status
, reset
and so on.
Meshery CLI FAQ
Question: What is the meshconfig?
Like kubeconfig for kubectl
, meshconfig is the name of your mesheryctl
config file. You can find your meshconfig file in its default location of ~/.meshery/config.yaml
. By default, mesheryctl
will look to this location for your meshconfig. You can override the default location at anytime with the use of the global parameter, --config <my-other-meshconfig>
.
Question: What is a context?
A meshconfig context
represents a single Meshery deployment. Using context
s, you can configure different Meshery deployments with environment-specific settings and you can easily switching between your individual Meshery deployments by updating your current-context.
Question: Why are contexts necessary?
Many Meshery users have more than one Meshery deployment. Contexts allow you to deploy different versions of Meshery, update your release channel subscription settings, selectively install one or more Meshery Adapters, and so on. Contexts allow you to configure your invididual Meshery deployments.
Question: What is current-context
?
current-context
identifies the Meshery deployment that when any mesheryctl
command is invoked will use the environment described in the current-context
. You can switch between contexts. Only one context can be the current-context
.
Question: What’s the difference between contexts and environments?
Contexts configure Meshery deployments (server, adapters, operator and so on), while environments define a collection of Kubernetes clusters and cloud native infrastructure under management in Meshery.
Question: What does the default meshconfig look like?
The following template is used to create a config file from scratch. Not all of the following variables are required to be included. Some of the variables may have a null value or may be excluded (e.g. “adapters”).
contexts:
<context1-name>:
endpoint: <url to meshery server rest api>
token: <name of token variable in this config file>
platform: <type of platform: ”docker” or “kubernetes”>
# Future: specify type of kubernetes (e.g. eks)
adapters: <collection of names of Meshery adapters:
“istio”,“linkerd”,”consul”,”nginx-sm”,”octarine”,”tanzu-sm”,”citrix-sm”,”kuma”,”osm”,”nsm”>
<context2-name>:
endpoint: <url to meshery server rest api>
token: <name of token variable in this config file>
platform: <type of platform: ”docker” or “kubernetes”>
current-context: <context name>
tokens:
- name: <token1-name>
location: <token-location>
- name: <token2-name>
value: <token-value>
# Future: allow embedding of token certificate
Try it out and see for yourself. Run mesheryctl system context create test
and mesheryctl system context view test
.
Question: How do endpoints work in meshconfig?
Endpoints specify the access URL for the Meshery UI, for a deployment. Endpoints are developed based on platform:
- Docker: Docker users can specify the endpoint in the meshconfig. The port specified in this will be used to generate the endpoint. The endpoint is of the form
http://localhost:port
, whereport
is taken from the meshconfig. - Kubernetes: Deployments with kubernetes as the platform have an endpoint generated by service discovery using the Kubernetes API. This endpoint overwrites the endpoint specified in the meshconfig.
Advanced Installation
Users can control the specific container image and tag (version) of Meshery that they would like to run by editing their local ~/.meshery/meshery.yaml (a docker compose file). Aligned with the Meshery container image, instead of leaving the implicit :stable-latest tag behind image: layer5/meshery, users will instead identify a specific image tag like so:
bash version: '3' services: meshery: image: layer5/meshery:v0.5.0 labels: - "com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable=true"
Suggested Reading
For an exhaustive list of mesheryctl
commands and syntax:
Guides to using Meshery’s various features and components.
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Discussion Forum
Don't find an answer to your question here? Ask on the Discussion Forum.Suggested Reading
- Authenticating with Meshery via CLI - Get your authentication token from Meshery CLI.
- Configuring Autocompletion for `mesheryctl` - Bash, Zsh, Oh My Zsh, and fish autocompletion for `mesheryctl` commands.
- Running system checks using Meshery CLI - Run pre-flight and post-deployment system health checks using Meshery's CLI, mesheryctl.
- Mesheryctl system commands - Mesheryctl system commands for managing Meshery deployments.