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cloud-login

Create a Fauna endpoint in the configuration file based on your Fauna credentials.

Syntax

fauna cloud-login [OPTIONS]

Description

The cloud-login command prompts you for your Fauna credentials, and if you authenticate successfully, creates a cloud endpoint in the configuration file that you can use to query your top-level Fauna database.

There are several prompts that help you to create endpoints that work with region groups, GitHub and Netlify authentication, or secrets for existing databases:

  • Endpoint alias prefix: Since the introduction of region groups, you might need to access databases in multiple Region Groups. This prompt asks you for a prefix that can be applied to multiple Region Group endpoints.

  • How do you prefer to authenticate?: This prompt asks you for your authentication preference:

    • Email and Password: You can use your Fauna Dashboard credentials to authenticate.

      When you choose this option, you are then asked for your email address and password.

    • Secret: You can use a secret for an existing database, similar to how your client applications would authenticate.

      When you choose this option, you are then asked for a secret, which is the authentication bearer token acquired by creating a key or token.

      You are then asked which Region Group to connect to, EU, or US. The secret is associated with a database in a region: if you choose incorrectly, a "could not connect" error displays and you are prompted for your secret again.

  • Multi-factor authentication: When multi-factor authentication (MFA) is enabled for your account in the Dashboard, the cloud-login function prompts you for the current (time-based) multi-factor authentication code — you can see the current code in your authenticator app. If you do not enter the correct code, cloud-login exits with an error. Note that this does not occur when you authenticate using a secret.

  • Default endpoint: When your fauna-shell configuration file has an existing endpoint, you are asked whether the new endpoint that cloud-login creates should be made the default.

Options

Option Description

--domain=<domain>

Optional Fauna server domain, that is, the hostname where Fauna is running. Defaults to db.fauna.com.

--endpoint=<name>

Optional name of the endpoint to use for the command.

--port=<number>

Optional connection port. Defaults to 8443.

--scheme=<scheme>

Optional connection scheme. Must be one of https or http. Defaults to https.

--secret=<secret>

Optional secret to use. A secret authenticates your connection to Fauna, and connects you to a database.

--timeout=<integer>

Optional connection timeout, an integer number of milliseconds. When the interval has elapsed, fauna-shell stops waiting for a response and displays an error.

The default is zero, which means that fauna-shell waits until a response is received.

Examples

The following example demonstrates the use of cloud-login, and the prompts for email/secret and password:

$ fauna cloud-login
? The endpoint alias prefix (to combine with a region): cloud
? How do you prefer to authenticate? Email and Password
? Email address: docs@fauna.com
? Password: [hidden]
? Enter your multi-factor authentication code 377277
? Endpoints created. Would you like to set one of them as default? Keep 'cloud'
endpoint as default
Endpoint 'cloud' set as default endpoint.

After a successful login, your configuration file now has a cloud endpoint that includes the secret to access your top-level database. The configuration file should resemble:

default=cloud

[cloud]
domain=db.fauna.com
scheme=https
secret=fnADS@PxN@2CE@n7z@kDa4_p6Z@fIBaZm@Qt@bYT

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