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hydra import oauth2-client

hydra import oauth2-client

Import OAuth 2.0 Clients from files or STDIN

Synopsis

This command reads in each listed JSON file and imports their contents as a list of OAuth 2.0 Clients.

The format for the JSON file is:

[ { "client_secret": "...", // ... all other fields of the OAuth 2.0 Client model are allowed here } ]

Please be aware that this command does not update existing clients. If the client exists already, this command will fail.

hydra import oauth2-client [file-1.json] [file-2.json] [file-3.json] [file-n.json] [flags]

Examples

Create an example OAuth2 Client:
cat > ./file.json <<EOF
[
{
"grant_types": ["implicit"],
"scope": "openid"
},
{
"grant_types": ["authorize_code"],
"scope": "openid"
}
]
EOF

hydra import client file.json

Alternatively:

cat file.json | hydra import client

To encrypt an auto-generated OAuth2 Client Secret, use flags `--pgp-key`, `--pgp-key-url` or `--keybase` flag, for example:

hydra create client -n "my app" -g client_credentials -r token -a core,foobar --keybase keybase_username

Options

  -h, --help                 help for oauth2-client
--keybase string Keybase username for encrypting client secret.
--pgp-key string Base64 encoded PGP encryption key for encrypting client secret.
--pgp-key-url string PGP encryption key URL for encrypting client secret.

Options inherited from parent commands

  -e, --endpoint string   The API URL this command should target. Alternatively set using the ORY_SDK_URL environmental variable.
--format string Set the output format. One of table, json, yaml, and json-pretty. (default "default")
-H, --http-header : A list of additional HTTP headers to set. HTTP headers is separated by a : , for example: `-H 'Authorization: bearer some-token'`.
-q, --quiet Be quiet with output printing.
--skip-tls-verify Do not verify TLS certificates. Useful when dealing with self-signed certificates. Do not use in production!

SEE ALSO