Keptn v1 reached EOL December 22, 2023. For more information see https://bit.ly/keptn

keptn completion

keptn completion

Generate completion script

Synopsis

Installing bash completion on macOS using homebrew If running Bash 3.2 included with macOS, run brew install bash-completion If running Bash 4.1+, run brew install bash-completion@2 If you’ve installed via other means, you may need add the completion to your completion directory, run keptn completion bash > $(brew –prefix)/etc/bash_completion.d/keptn

Installing bash completion on Linux If bash-completion is not installed on Linux, please install the ‘bash-completion’ package via your distribution’s package manager. Load the keptn completion code for bash into the current shell source <(keptn completion bash) Write bash completion code to a file and source it from .bash_profile keptn completion bash > /etc/bash_completion.d/keptn If you are a ZSH User Load the keptn completion code for zsh[1] into the current shell source <(keptn completion zsh) Set the keptn completion code for zsh[1] to autoload on startup keptn completion zsh > “${fpath[1]}/_keptn

keptn completion [bash|zsh|fish|powershell]

Options inherited from parent commands

      --config-file string   Specify custom Keptn Config file path (default: ~/.keptn/config)
  -h, --help                 help
      --mock                 Disables communication to a Keptn endpoint
  -n, --namespace string     Specify the namespace where Keptn should be installed, used and uninstalled in (default "keptn")
  -q, --quiet                Suppresses debug and info messages
  -v, --verbose              Enables verbose logging to print debug messages
  -y, --yes                  Assume yes for all user prompts

SEE ALSO

  • keptn - The CLI for using Keptn
Auto generated by spf13/cobra on 11-Jul-2022