Awesome
flyctl
flyctl is a command-line interface for fly.io
Note: Most installations of flyctl
also alias flyctl
to fly
as a command name and this will become the default name in the future.
During the transition, note that where you see flyctl
as a command it can be replaced with fly
.
Installation
Using a Package Manager
Homebrew (macOS, Linux, WSL)
brew install flyctl
To upgrade to the latest version:
brew upgrade flyctl
Install Script
Download flyctl
and install into a local bin directory.
MacOS, Linux, WSL
Installing the latest version:
curl -L https://fly.io/install.sh | sh
Installing the latest pre-release version:
curl -L https://fly.io/install.sh | sh -s pre
Installing a specific version:
curl -L https://fly.io/install.sh | sh -s 0.0.200
Windows
Run the Powershell install script:
iwr https://fly.io/install.ps1 -useb | iex
Downloading from GitHub
Download the appropriate version from the Releases page of the flyctl
GitHub repository.
Getting Started
- Sign into your fly account
fly auth login
- List your apps
fly apps list
- View app status
fly status -a {app-name}
App Settings
flyctl
will attempt to use the app name from a fly.toml
file in the current directory. For example, if the current directory contains this file:
$ cat fly.toml
app: banana
flyctl
will operate against the banana
app unless overridden by the -a flag or other app name setting in the command line.
Releases
flyctl
is automatically released at 3 PM Eastern Standard Time Monday - Thursday. If needed, you can bump a release by running ./scripts/bump_version.sh
.
Building on Windows
There is a simple Powershell script, winbuild.ps1
, which will run the code generation for the help files, format them, and run a full build, leaving a new binary in the bin directory.
Running from branches on your local machine
Run scripts/build-dfly
to build a Docker image from the current branch. Then, use scripts/dfly
to run it. This assumes you are already
authenticated to Fly in your local environment.
Contributing guide
See CONTRIBUTING.md