The official CLI for the Warp REST API.
It is generated with Stainless.
brew install TeamWarp/tap/warp-hrTo test or install the CLI locally, you need Go version 1.22 or later installed.
go install 'github.com/TeamWarp/warp-cli/cmd/warp-hr@latest'Once you have run go install, the binary is placed in your Go bin directory:
- Default location:
$HOME/go/bin(or$GOPATH/binif GOPATH is set) - Check your path: Run
go env GOPATHto see the base directory
If commands aren't found after installation, add the Go bin directory to your PATH:
# Add to your shell profile (.zshrc, .bashrc, etc.)
export PATH="$PATH:$(go env GOPATH)/bin"After cloning the git repository for this project, you can use the
scripts/run script to run the tool locally:
./scripts/run args...The CLI follows a resource-based command structure:
warp-hr [resource] <command> [flags...]warp-hr time-off:policies list \
--api-key 'My API Key'For details about specific commands, use the --help flag.
| Environment variable | Required |
|---|---|
WARP_API_KEY |
yes |
--api-key(can also be set withWARP_API_KEYenv var)--help- Show command line usage--debug- Enable debug logging (includes HTTP request/response details)--version,-v- Show the CLI version--base-url- Use a custom API backend URL--format- Change the output format (auto,explore,json,jsonl,pretty,raw,yaml)--format-error- Change the output format for errors (auto,explore,json,jsonl,pretty,raw,yaml)--transform- Transform the data output using GJSON syntax--transform-error- Transform the error output using GJSON syntax
To pass files to your API, you can use the @myfile.ext syntax:
warp-hr <command> --arg @abe.jpgFiles can also be passed inside JSON or YAML blobs:
warp-hr <command> --arg '{image: "@abe.jpg"}'
# Equivalent:
warp-hr <command> <<YAML
arg:
image: "@abe.jpg"
YAMLIf you need to pass a string literal that begins with an @ sign, you can
escape the @ sign to avoid accidentally passing a file.
warp-hr <command> --username '\@abe'For JSON endpoints, the CLI tool does filetype sniffing to determine whether the
file contents should be sent as a string literal (for plain text files) or as a
base64-encoded string literal (for binary files). If you need to explicitly send
the file as either plain text or base64-encoded data, you can use
@file://myfile.txt (for string encoding) or @data://myfile.dat (for
base64-encoding). Note that absolute paths will begin with @file:// or
@data://, followed by a third / (for example, @file:///tmp/file.txt).
warp-hr <command> --arg @data://file.txt