Installation
You can install the CLI with a curl
utility script, brew
or by downloading the binary from the releases page. Once installed you'll get the faas-cli
command and faas
alias.
Linux or macOS
Utility script with curl
:
- $ curl -sSL https://cli.openfaas.com | sudo -E sh
The flag
-E
allows for anyhttp_proxy
environmental variables to be passed through to the installation bash script.
Non-root with curl downloads the binary into your current directory and will then print installation instructions:
- $ curl -sSL https://cli.openfaas.com | sh
Via brew:
- $ brew install faas-cli
Note
The brew
release may not run the latest minor release but is updated regularly.
Windows
In PowerShell:
- $version = (Invoke-WebRequest "https://api.github.com/repos/openfaas/faas-cli/releases/latest" | ConvertFrom-Json)[0].tag_name
- (New-Object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadFile("https://github.com/openfaas/faas-cli/releases/download/$version/faas-cli.exe", "faas-cli.exe")
Environment variable overrides
Several overrides exist which will be used by default if set and no other command-line flag has been set.
OPENFAAS_TEMPLATE_URL
- to set the default URL to pull templates fromOPENFAAS_PREFIX
- for use withfaas-cli new
- this can act in place of—prefix
OPENFAAS_URL
- to override the default gateway URL
Running faas-cli with sudo
If you're running the faas-cli with sudo
we recommend using sudo -E
to pass through any environmental variables you may have configured such as a http_proxy
, https_proxy
or no_proxy
entry.
Docker image
The faas-cli
is also available as a Docker image making it convenient for use in CI jobs such as with a Jenkins pipeline or a task in cron.
https://hub.docker.com/r/openfaas/faas-cli/tags/
There is no "latest" tag, so find the version of the CLI you want to use from the tags page on the Docker Hub. These correspond to the release from GitHub.
Note: the Docker image cannot be used to perform a build directly, but you can use it to generate a build context which can be used with a container builder such as Docker, buildkit or Kaniko in another part of your build pipeline.
Use-cases for the Docker image:
- Generate the build context without running
docker build
-faas-cli —shrinkwrap
- Deploy an existing image to a remote server
faas-cli deploy
- Manage secrets with
faas-cli secret
- Invoke functions via cron with
faas-cli invoke
- Check the health of your remote gateway with
faas-cli info
Building from source
The contributing guide has instructions for building from source and for configuring a Golang development environment.
- Star/fork on GitHub: faas-cli