Install Boundary
Boundary must first be installed on your machine. Boundary is available as source code, as a pre-compiled binary, or in packaged formats.
This tutorial will not cover how to compile Boundary from source, but compiling from source is covered in the README for those who want to be sure they're compiling source they trust into the final binary.
The macOS binary is available to be installed manually or through Homebrew.
To install Boundary, find the appropriate package for your system and download it. Boundary is packaged as a zip archive.
After downloading Boundary, unzip the package. Boundary runs as a single binary
named boundary
. Make sure that the boundary
binary is available on your
PATH
. You can check the locations available on your path by running this
command.
$ echo $PATH
Example output:
/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin
The output is a list of locations separated by colons. You can make Boundary
available by moving the binary to one of the listed locations, or by adding
Boundary's location to your PATH
.
Tip
Permanently add a new location to your path by
editing your shell's settings file (usually called something like ~/.bashrc
,
where the part of the file name after the .
and before rc
is the name of
your shell). In that file you will see a line that starts with export PATH=
,
followed by a colon-separated list of locations. Add the location of the Boundary
binary to that list and save the file. Then reload your shell's configuration
with the command source ~/.bashrc
, replacing bash
with the name of your
shell.
Verify the installation
After installing Boundary, verify the installation worked by opening a new
command prompt or console, and checking that boundary
is available.
Tip
If you receive an error that Boundary is not found, try logging out and logging back in to your system (particularly necessary sometimes for Windows).
$ boundaryUsage: boundary <command> [args]Local/Client Commands: authenticate Authenticate the local client config Manage the local client's configuration connect Connect to a target through a Boundary worker daemon Manages the client side Boundary cache daemon dev Start a Boundary dev environment logout Delete the current token within Boundary and forget it locally search Search Boundary resources using client side cache server Start a Boundary serverGeneric Commands: delete Run a generic delete command against a resource read Run a generic read command against a resource update Run a generic update command against a resourceType-Specific Commands: accounts Manage Boundary accounts aliases Manage Boundary aliases auth-methods Manage Boundary auth methods auth-tokens Manage Boundary auth tokens billing Manage Boundary billing credential-libraries Manage Boundary credential libraries credential-stores Manage Boundary credential stores credentials Manage Boundary credentials database Manage Boundary's database groups Manage Boundary groups host-catalogs Manage Boundary host catalogs host-sets Manage Boundary unknowns hosts Manage Boundary hosts managed-groups Manage Boundary managed groups policies Manage Boundary policies roles Manage Boundary roles scopes Manage Boundary scopes session-recordings Manage Boundary session recordings sessions Manage Boundary sessions storage-buckets Manage Boundary storage buckets targets Manage Boundary targets users Manage Boundary users workers Manage Boundary workers
You have successfully downloaded and installed Boundary! Continue to the next tutorial to set up your first Boundary project.
Next steps
You installed Boundary Community Edition to your local dev environment. Next you will Start a devolopment environment.