Oc login: Difference between revisions

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Sets the project (namespace) to log into.
Sets the project (namespace) to log into.


==-s --server==
==-s,--server==
 
<syntaxhighlight lang='text'>
<pre>
oc login --server="https://my-openshift-master:8443" [...]
--server="https://my-openshift-master:8443"
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


==--certificate-authority==
==--certificate-authority==

Revision as of 00:58, 20 November 2020

Internal

Overview

'oc login' configures locally a Kubernetes context by updating .kube/config. If it finds no state saved under .kube/config, or no command line options are provided, the command queries the user for OpenShift server, username and password. The command runs in the context of a project. The user must exists on server, and its identity must be correctly resolved by the OpenShift identity provider.

Example:

oc login -u <username>:<password>
oc login <api-server-url> -u <username> -p <password>

If -u is not specified, 'oc login' will query for user.

More about OpenShift authentication:

OpenShift Security Concepts | Authentication

Related

oc whoami

Options

-u,--username

Sets the user name.

-p,--password

Sets the password.

-n

Sets the project (namespace) to log into.

-s,--server

oc login --server="https://my-openshift-master:8443" [...]

--certificate-authority

Specifies the path to the certificate authority file.

--insecure-skip-tls-verify

Allows interaction with HTTPS server while bypassing server certificate checks.

Procedures