fioctl devices config set¶
Create a secure configuration for the device
Synopsis¶
Creates a secure configuration for device encrypting the contents each file using the device’s public key. The fioconfig daemon running on each device will then be able to grab the latest version of the device’s configuration and apply it.
Examples¶
# Basic use can be done with command line arguments:
fioctl device config set my-device npmtok="root" githubtok="1234" readme.md==./readme.md
There are several ways how to pass a file content into this command:
- with filename="filecontent" format, a file content is passed directly.
- with filename==/path/to/file format, a file content is read from a specified file path.
# The device configuration format also allows specifying what command
# to run after a configuration file is updated on the device. To take
# advantage of this, the "--raw" flag must be used.
cat >tmp.json <<EOF
{
"reason": "I want to use the on-changed attribute",
"files": [
{
"name": "npmtok",
"value": "root",
"on-changed": ["/usr/bin/touch", "/tmp/npmtok-changed"]
},
{
"name": "A-Readable-Value",
"value": "This won't be encrypted and will be visible from the API",
"unencrypted": true
},
{
"name": "githubtok",
"value": "1234"
}
]
}
> EOF
fioctl devices config set my-device --raw ./tmp.json
# fioctl will read in tmp.json, encrypt its contents, and upload it
# to the OTA server. Instead of using ./tmp.json, the command can take
# a "-" and will read the content from STDIN instead of a file.
Options¶
Options inherited from parent commands¶
SEE ALSO¶
- fioctl devices config - Device configuration