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The uv auth CLI
uv provides a high-level interface for storing and retrieving credentials from services.
Logging in to a service
To add credentials for service, use the uv auth login command:
$ uv auth login example.com
This will prompt for the credentials.
The credentials can also be provided using the --username and --password options, or the
--token option for services which use a __token__ or arbitrary username.
Once credentials are added, uv will use them for packaging operations that require fetching content from the given service. At this time, only HTTPS Basic authentication is supported. The credentials will not yet be used for Git requests.
!!! note
The credentials will not be validated, i.e., incorrect credentials will not fail.
Logging out of a service
To remove credentials, use the uv auth logout command:
$ uv auth logout example.com
!!! note
The credentials will not be invalidated with the remote server, i.e., they will only be removed
from local storage not rendered unusable.
Showing credentials for a service
To show the credential stored for a given URL, use the uv auth token command:
$ uv auth token example.com
If a username was used to log in, it will need to be provided as well, e.g.:
$ uv auth token --username foo example.com
Configuring the storage backend
By default, credentials are persisted in plain text to the uv credentials file.
If the native keyring provider is enabled, it will be used instead, and the credentials will be stored in a secure system store. The native keyring is currently experimental, but will become the default in the future.