Uniquid command line administration tool.
Project description
Uniquid Administrator Guide
The command line interface for Uniquid system administration. The Uniquid IAM (Identity and Access Management) system leverages blockchain technology so that your organization can efficiently control access to large pools of IoT devices.
Warning
The Uniquid command line interface is currently in development and undergoing test. Please do not use the tool in production as information may be lost. Contact Uniquid about organizing an evaluation or demonstration of this innovative technology.
The package currently supports Python 3.7 and later. Please upgrade to the latest version of Python if you are running an older version.
Table of Contents
- Installation Instructions
- Getting Started
- Viewing Devices
- Contracts
- Sharing Access to Devices
- Getting Help
- Contact Uniquid
Installation Instructions
Verify that Python3 is installed on your system.
$ python --version
Use the pip
tool to install the latest version of the CLI client.
$ pip install uniquid
If correctly installed with no errors, the CLI client application can be executable from the command line.
$ uniquid --version
Getting Started
The user can access a list of the available commands, using the help
option.
$ uniquid --help
Each command also provides more detailed help information. For example:
$ uniquid login --help
Some commands have a shorter alias available. You can view the list of available command aliases using the command:
$ uniquid list-aliases
In order to login to the Uniquid system, the user must provide:
- their registered organization name
- their Uniquid username
- the secret Access Key which was provided to them during registration
The login
command will keep an authenticated session open until the user uses
the logout
command to close the session or the Access Key expires.
$ uniquid login <organization> --user <username> --access-key 'abcd5678'
The organization name must always be specified for the initial login. After the
initial login
, the user does not need to specify the organisation unless they
want to login
for a different organization. They need only specify their
username and the Access key.
$ uniquid login --user <username> --access-key 'abcd5678'
At any point, the user can query the status of the tool's connection to the Uniquid servers.
$ uniquid status
When the user is finished interacting with the Uniquid system, they should then
logout
of their session.
$ uniquid logout
If the user prefers not to enter their username and Access Key every time they
use the login
command, they can use environment variables to hold the values
of the username and Access Key.
In the Bash shell, the environment variables can be set using the following commands:
$ export UNIQUID_USER=<username>
$ export UNIQUID_ACCESS_KEY=<access key>
Viewing Devices
A list of connected devices can be created using the command:
$ uniquid list-devices
This command, by default, outputs the device list in text format. If you would prefer to view the device list in JSON format:
$ uniquid list-devices --output json
The entries in the list of devices can be sorted by the values of one of the fields of the device information. The device list is sorted using the command:
$ uniquid list-devices --sort <key name>
$ uniquid list-devices --sort-desc <key name>
Detailed information on a specific device can be retrieved, using the device's public key XPUB as an identifier.
$ uniquid show-device <device xpub>
$ uniquid show-device --output json <device xpub>
Contracts
Access contracts which permit interactions between devices can be created, viewed and revoked using the client tool.
$ uniquid list-contracts
$ uniquid list-contracts --output json
More detailed information on the state of a contract can also be retrieved, using the contract's transaction identifier to identify the contract.
$ uniquid show-contract <transaction id>
$ uniquid show-contract --output json <transaction id>
New contracts can be specified in JSON format and created by the tool. The JSON contract specification can either be loaded from a file or passed directly on the command line.
$ uniquid create-contracts --input-json-file <json file name>
$ uniquid create-contracts --input-json <json contract specification>
Existing contracts can be revoked by specifying the transaction identifiers of the contracts in one of three ways:
- passing transaction identifiers as arguments.
- passing a JSON list of identifiers on the command line.
- passing the path of a file containing a list of identifiers in JSON format.
$ uniquid delete-contracts <transaction id> <transaction id>
$ uniquid delete-contracts --input-json <json list of ids>
$ uniquid delete-contracts --input-json-file <json file name>
Sharing Access to Devices
The creation of Access Contracts between devices can be shared between organizations. This sharing of the access to devices between orgainizations must be permitted by the organization which owns the devices.
The user can view all of the devices which are shared using the command:
$ uniquid list-shares
$ uniquid list-shares --output json
The user can view the devices which have been shared by another organization with their organization.
$ uniquid list-shares --direction in
The user can also view the devices which their organization has shared with other organizations.
$ uniquid list-shares --direction out
The user can retrieve the list of shared devices, filtered to only display the devices either shared with or by a specific organisation.
$ uniquid list-shares --org <organization name>
$ uniquid list-shares --org <organization name> --direction in
$ uniquid list-shares --org <organization name> --direction out
New shares can be specified in JSON format and created by the tool. The JSON share specification can either be loaded from a file or passed directly on the command line.
$ uniquid create-shares --input-json-file <json file name>
$ uniquid create-shares --input-json <json contract specification>
Existing shares can be revoked by specifying the share identifiers of the shares in one of three ways:
- passing share identifiers as arguments.
- passing a JSON list of identifiers on the command line.
- passing the path of a file containing a list of identifiers in JSON format.
$ uniquid delete-shares <share id> <share id>
$ uniquid delete-shares --input-json <json list of ids>
$ uniquid delete-shares --input-json-file <json file name>
Getting Help
Come over and join in the Uniquid community at Gitter.
Contact Uniquid
If you would like to learn more about our innovative technology, please contact us at hello@uniquid.com.
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