AWS Console in your terminal! well, almost. Explore AWS services like EC2, S3, IAM, VPC, etc. from your terminal. If you like k9s for Kubernetes, you'll love cloudlens.
Cloudlens is available on Linux and macOS.
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Via Homebrew for macOS or Linux
brew install one2nc/cloudlens/cloudlens
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Building from source code Cloudlens is currently in active development. We use Go 1.19. Follow these steps to build cloudlens locally:
1. Clone the repo 2. Build and run the executable
To Run:
make run
For the simple usage, just run the command without any options.
cloudlens
For knowing all the options available, use:
cloudlens help
Cloudlens supports viewing EC2 instances, S3 buckets, EBS volumes, VPCs, SQS queues, Lambda functions, Subnets, Security Groups, and IAM roles. Read the cloudlens documentation to know more.
Please refer to our cloudlens documentation to know more.
Cloudlens uses k9s like shortcuts for navigation. Listed below are few of the shortcuts:
Action | Command |
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Show active keyboard mnemonics and help | ? |
To bail out of cloudlens | :q , ctrl-c |
Bails out of view/command/filter mode | esc |
To view and switch to another AWS Service | :S3/EC2/VPC⏎ |
Cloudlens reads your ~/.aws/config file, but it does not store or send your access and secret key anywhere. The access and secret key is used only to securely connect to AWS API via AWS SDK.
Since cloudlens is in readonly mode, we recommend you create an access and secret key that only has readonly permissions to the AWS services.
We would like to express our sincere appreciation to K9s
as it has been a invaluable source of reference for this project.
All materials licensed under Apache v2.0