Boundary
targets update
Command: targets update
The targets update
command lets you update a target.
Example
This example updates a TCP target with the ID ttcp_1234567890
to add the name devops
and the description For DevOps usage
:
$ boundary targets update tcp -id ttcp_1234567890 -name devops -description "For DevOps usage"
Usage
$ boundary targets update [type] [sub command] [options] [args]
Please see the typed subcommand help for detailed usage information.
Subcommands:
ssh Update a ssh-type target (HCP only)
tcp Update a tcp-type target
Usages by type
You can update SSH or TCP targets.
The targets update ssh
command lets you update SSH targets.
Example
This example updates an SSH target with the ID tssh_1234567890
to add the name devops
and the description SSH target for DevOps
:
$ boundary targets update ssh -id tssh_1234567890 -name "devops" -description "SSH target for DevOps"
Usage
$ boundary targets update ssh [options] [args]
SSH target options
-address=<string>
- An optional valid network address for the target to connect to. You cannot use an address alongside host sources.-default-client-port=<string>
- The default client port on the target, if set.-default-port=<string>
- The default port on the target, if set. If you do not specify a default port, Boundary uses port 22.-egress-worker-filter=<string>
- A Boolean expression that filters which egress workers can process sessions for the target.-enable-session-recording=<string>
- A Boolean expression you can use to enable session recording for the target.-ingress-worker-filter=<string>
- A Boolean expression that filters which ingress workers can process sessions for the target.-session-connection-limit=<string>
- The maximum number of connections allowed for a session. A value of-1
means the connections are unlimited.-session-max-seconds=<string>
- The maximum lifetime of the session, including all connections. You can specify an integer number of seconds or a duration string.-storage-bucket-id=<string>
- The public ID of the storage bucket you want to associate with the target.
CLI options
In addition to the command specific options, there are options common to all CLI commands and subcommands: