The tctl
CLI is now deprecated in favor of Temporal CLI.
This repository is no longer maintained.
Please use the new utility for all future development.
tctl is a command-line tool that you can use to interact with a Temporal Cluster. It can perform Namespace operations (such as register, update, and describe) and Workflow operations (such as start Workflow, show Workflow History, and Signal Workflow).
Documentation for tctl is located at the Temporal main site.
Run make
from the project root. You should see an executable file called tctl
. Try a few example commands to
get started:
./tctl
for help on top level commands and global options
./tctl namespace
for help on namespace operations
./tctl workflow
for help on workflow operations
./tctl task-queue
for help on tasklist operations
(./tctl help
, ./tctl help [namespace|workflow]
will also print help messages)
Note: Make sure you have a Temporal server running before using the CLI.
Note Switching to tctl next
is not recommended on production environments.
The package contains both tctl v1
and the updated tctl next
. Version next
brings updated UX, new commands and flags semantics, new features (see details). Please expect more of upcoming changes in tctl next
By default, executing tctl commands will execute commands from tctl v1. In order to switch to experimental tctl next
run
tctl config set version next
This will create a configuration file (~/.config/temporalio/tctl.yaml
) and set tctl to next
.
To switch back to the stable v1, run
tctl config set version current
Running tctl completion SHELL
will output the related completion SHELL code. See the following
sections for more details for each specific shell / OS and how to enable it.
Add the following to your ~/.zshrc
file:
source <(tctl completion zsh)
or from your terminal run:
echo 'source <(tctl completion zsh)' >> ~/.zshrc
Then run source ~/.zshrc
.
Bash auto-completion relies on bash-completion. Make sure
you follow the instruction here and install the software or
use a package manager to install it like apt-get install bash-completion
or yum install bash-completion
, etc. For example
on alpine linux:
- apk update
- apk add bash-completion
- source /etc/profile.d/bash_completion.sh
Verify that bash-completion is installed by running type _init_completion
add the following to your .bashrc
file to enable completion for tctl
echo 'source <(tctl completion bash)' >>~/.bashrc
source ~/.bashrc
For macos you can install it via brew brew install bash-completion@2
and add the following line to
your ~/.bashrc
:
[[ -r "/usr/local/etc/profile.d/bash_completion.sh" ]] && . "/usr/local/etc/profile.d/bash_completion.sh"
Verify that bash-completion is installed by running type _init_completion
and add the following to your .bashrc
file to enable completion for tctl
echo 'source <(tctl completion bash)' >> ~/.bashrc
source ~/.bashrc
MIT License, please see LICENSE for details.