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stardog-admin sensitive-property remove

Description

Remove sensitive properties.

Usage

stardog-admin [ --krb5 ] [ --krb5-disable-rdns ] sensitive-property remove [ --all ] [ {-g | --group} <group> ] [ {-p | --passwd} <password> ] [ {-P | --ask-password} ] [ --run-as <username> ] [ {-u | --username} <username> ] [ {-v | --verbose} ] [--] <database name> <properties>...

Options

Name, shorthand Description
--all Remove all the sensitive properties..
-g <group>, --group <group> Name of the sensitive property group. If not provided the properties will be removed from the default group.
--krb5 Use the Kerberos environment.
--krb5-disable-rdns Disable reverse DNS lookup for Kerberos clients.
-p <password>, --passwd <password> Password.
-P, --ask-password Prompt for password.
--run-as <username> User to impersonate when running the command
-u <username>, --username <username> User name.
-v, --verbose Flag that can cause more detailed information to be printed such as errors and status. Exact output depends upon the command and options used.
-- This option can be used to separate command-line options from the list of argument(s). (Useful when an argument might be mistaken for a command-line option)
<database name> <properties> The name of the database or the full connection string of the database to connect to. If only the name is provided, the default server URL will be prepended to the name of the database in order to construct the connection string. Connection parameters such as ‘;reasoning=true’ can be included in the provided database name. Connection parameters specified like this can be overridden by specific options on the command. The default server URL will be read from the JVM argument ‘stardog.default.cli.server’. If the JVM argument is not set, the default value ‘http://localhost:5820’ is used. If the server URL has no explicit port value, the default port value ‘5820’ is used. To use a secure connection, you should specify the full connection string and postfix ‘s’ to the protocol, e.g. https. Subsequent arguments are the sensitive properties to remove. The properties can be specified as full IRIs (no angle brackets needed) or as prefixed names using database namespaces.

Examples

Define a sensitive property in the default group:

    $ stardog sensitive-property remove myDB ex:prop1

Remove all the default sensitive properties:

    $ stardog sensitive-property remove --all myDB 

Remove a sensitive property from a named group:

    $ stardog sensitive-property remove --group myGroup myDB ex:myProp