Base profile that stores values shared by multiple service profiles
Usage
zowe profiles create base-profile <profileName> [options]
Positional Arguments
profileName (string)
- Specifies the name of the new base profile. You can load this profile by using
the name on commands that support the "--base-profile" option.
Base Connection Options
--host | -H (string)
- Host name of service on the mainframe.
--port | -P (number)
- Port number of service on the mainframe.
--user | -u (string)
- User name to authenticate to service on the mainframe.
--password | --pass | --pw (string)
- Password to authenticate to service on the mainframe.
--reject-unauthorized | --ru (boolean)
--token-type | --tt (string)
- The type of token to get and use for the API. Omit this option to use the
default token type, which is provided by 'zowe auth login'.
--token-value | --tv (string)
- The value of the token to pass to the API.
Options
Examples
Create a profile called 'base1' to connect to host
example.com and port 443:
zowe profiles create base-profile base1 --host example.com --port 443 --user admin --password 123456
Create a profile called 'base2' to connect to host
example.com (default port - 443) and allow self-signed certificates:
zowe profiles create base-profile base2 --host example.com --user admin --password 123456 --reject-unauthorized false
Create a profile called 'base3' to connect to host
example.com and port 1443, not specifying a username or password so they are not
stored on disk; these will need to be specified on every command:
zowe profiles create base-profile base3 --host example.com --port 1443
Create a zosmf profile called 'base4' to connect to default
port 443 and allow self-signed certificates, not specifying a username,
password, or host so they are not stored on disk; these will need to be
specified on every command:
zowe profiles create base-profile base4 --reject-unauthorized false