The knife client subcommand is used to manage an API client list and their associated RSA public key-pairs. This allows authentication requests to be made to the Chef server by any entity that uses the Chef server API, such as the chef-client and knife.
Note
Review the list of common options available to this (and all) knife subcommands and plugins.
The bulk delete argument is used to delete any API client that matches a pattern defined by a regular expression. The regular expression must be within quotes and not be surrounded by forward slashes (/).
This command does not have any specific options.
None.
The create argument is used to create a new API client. This process will generate an RSA key pair for the named API client. The public key will be stored on the Chef server and the private key will be displayed on STDOUT or written to a named file.
This argument has the following options:
The following examples show how to use this knife subcommand:
Create an admin client
To create a chef-client that can access the Chef server API as an administrator—sometimes referred to as an “API chef-client”—with the name “exampleorg” and save its private key to a file, enter:
$ knife client create exampleorg -a -f "/etc/chef/client.pem"
Create an admin client for Enterprise Chef
When running the create argument on Enterprise Chef, be sure to omit the -a option:
$ knife client create exampleorg -f "/etc/chef/client.pem"
The delete argument is used to delete a registered API client.
This command does not have any specific options.
The following examples show how to use this knife subcommand:
Delete a client
To delete a client with the name “client_foo”, enter:
$ knife client delete client_foo
Type Y to confirm a deletion.
The edit argument is used to edit the details of a registered API client. When this argument is run, knife will open $EDITOR to enable editing of the admin attribute. (None of the other attributes should be changed using this argument.) When finished, knife will update the Chef server with those changes.
This command does not have any specific options.
The following examples show how to use this knife subcommand:
Edit a client
To edit a client with the name “exampleorg”, enter:
$ knife client edit exampleorg
The list argument is used to view a list of registered API client.
This argument has the following options:
The following examples show how to use this knife subcommand:
View a list of clients
To verify the API client list for the Chef server, enter:
$ knife client list
to return something similar to:
exampleorg
i-12345678
rs-123456
To verify that an API client can authenticate to the Chef server correctly, try getting a list of clients using -u and -k options to specify its name and private key:
$ knife client list -u ORGNAME -k .chef/ORGNAME.pem
The reregister argument is used to regenerate an RSA key pair for an API client. The public key will be stored on the Chef server and the private key will be displayed on STDOUT or written to a named file.
Note
Running this argument will invalidate the previous RSA key pair, making it unusable during authentication to the Chef server.
This argument has the following options:
The following examples show how to use this knife subcommand:
Reregister clients
To regenerate the RSA key pair for a client named “testclient” and save it to a file named “rsa_key”, enter:
$ knife client regenerate testclient -f rsa_key
The show argument is used to show the details of an API client.
This argument has the following options:
The following examples show how to use this knife subcommand:
Show clients
To view a client named “testclient”, enter:
$ knife client show testclient
to return something like:
admin: false
chef_type: client
json_class: Chef::ApiClient
name: testclient
public_key:
To view information in JSON format, use the -F common option as part of the command like this:
$ knife role show devops -F json
Other formats available include text, yaml, and pp.