A configuration is a named set of Google Cloud CLI properties. These properties are key-value pairs, organized in sections, that govern the behavior of the gcloud CLI.
Properties that are commonly stored in configurations include default Compute Engine zone, verbosity level, usage reporting, project ID, and an active user or service account. Configurations allow you to define and enable these and other settings together as a group.
Configurations are stored in your user config directory (typically
~/.config/gcloud
on MacOS and Linux, or %APPDATA%\gcloud
on Windows); you
can find the location of your config directory by running
gcloud info --format='value(config.paths.global_config_dir)'
. The config
directory can be changed by setting the environment variable CLOUDSDK_CONFIG
.
Also, note that the config directory must be write-enabled. However, if you're
using Cloud Shell, your gcloud CLI preferences are stored
in a temporary tmp
folder, set for your current Cloud Shell tab
only, and do not persist across sessions.
If you have multiple configurations, you can choose to switch between
them or run commands using a specific configuration (with the help
of the --configuration
flag). For more about switching configurations, refer
to the section below on Activating configurations.
To read about configurations from the command-line (along with a complete list
of available properties and the sections they are in), run
gcloud topic configurations
.
Default configuration
The gcloud CLI starts you off with a single configuration named
default
. You can set properties in your configuration by running the
gcloud init
command or by running
gcloud config set
directly.
For example, to disable prompting for scripting, run:
gcloud config set disable_prompts true
Multiple configurations
The single default
configuration is suitable for many use cases. However, you
can also
create additional configurations
and switch between them as required using
gcloud config configurations activate
.
There is nothing special about the initial default
configuration; it is
created as a convenience. You can name this and any additional configurations
however you'd like.
Multiple configurations are useful if you want to:
- Use multiple projects: You can create a separate configuration for each project and switch between them as required.
- Use multiple authorization accounts
- Perform generally independent tasks: For example, you can use one configuration to work on a App Engine application in one project and manage an unrelated Compute Engine instances in another project.
Creating a configuration
To create a configuration, run
gcloud config configurations create
:
gcloud config configurations create [NAME]
You must activate the new configuration after creation in order to use it.
Activating a configuration
Only one of your multiple configurations can be active at a given time. The active configuration is the configuration whose properties will govern the behavior of the gcloud CLI.
To activate a new configuration or switch to a new active configuration, run:
gcloud config configurations activate
:
gcloud config configurations activate [NAME]
gcloud config list
will always show you
the properties in your active configuration.
To change the active configuration for a single command invocation, you can use
the --configuration
flag on any gcloud CLI command:
gcloud auth list --configuration=[CONFIGURATION_NAME]
To change the active configuration for all commands in your current terminal,
you can set the environment variable CLOUDSDK_ACTIVE_CONFIG_NAME
to the name
of the configuration you'd like to use.
Automating configuration switching
To help make changing configurations seamless, you can leverage tools such as
direnv and
ondir to automatically switch
between configurations when you switch working directories. One way to
accomplish this is to set the necessary environment variables (like
CLOUDSDK_ACTIVE_CONFIG_NAME
) in the .envrc file in the root directory of your
project.
Listing configurations
To list the configurations in your gcloud CLI installation, run
gcloud config configurations list
:
gcloud config configurations list
The gcloud CLI lists the configurations and shows which configuration is active:
NAME IS_ACTIVE ACCOUNT PROJECT DEFAULT_ZONE DEFAULT_REGION default False [email protected] example-project-1 us-east1-b us-east1 project-1 False [email protected] example-project-2 us-east1-c us-east1 project-2 True [email protected] example-project-3 us-east1-b us-east1
Setting configuration properties
To set and unset the properties in the active configuration, run
gcloud config set
and
gcloud config unset
:
gcloud config set project [PROJECT]
gcloud config unset project
Properties can also be set via environment variables named
CLOUDSDK_SECTION_NAME_PROPERTY_NAME
. For example, you can set the
core/project
and compute/zone
properties as follows:
CLOUDSDK_CORE_PROJECT=[YOUR_PROJECT_NAME]
CLOUDSDK_COMPUTE_ZONE=[YOUR_ZONE_NAME]
Viewing configuration properties
To view the properties in a configuration, run:
gcloud config configurations describe
:
gcloud config configurations describe [NAME]
Or, to view properties in the active configuration:
gcloud config list
The gcloud CLI prints the configuration properties:
is_active: false name: default properties: compute: region: us-east1 zone: us-east1-b core: account: [email protected] project: example-project
Deleting a configuration
To delete a configuration, run:
gcloud config configurations delete
:
gcloud config configurations delete [NAME]
You can't delete the active configuration. Use
gcloud config configurations activate
if required to switch to another
configuration before deleting.
What's next
- Read gcloud CLI properties to learn more about properties.