List available EE aliases.
Aliases are shorthand references to WordPress installs. For instance, @dev could refer to a development install and @prod could refer to a production install. This command gives you visibility in what registered aliases you have available.
[–format=<format>]
: Render output in a particular format.
—
default: yaml
options:
# List all available aliases.
$ ee cli alias
---
| Name | Description |
|---|---|
| ee cli check-update | Check to see if there is a newer version of EE available. |
| ee cli cmd-dump | Dump the list of installed commands, as JSON. |
| ee cli completions | Generate tab completion strings. |
| ee cli has-command | Detects if a command exists |
| ee cli info | Print various details about the EE environment. |
| ee cli param-dump | Dump the list of global parameters, as JSON or in var_export format. |
| ee cli self-uninstall | Uninstalls easyengine completely along with all sites |
| ee cli update | Update EE to the latest release. |
| ee cli version | Print EE version. |
| Argument | Description |
|---|---|
| –sites_path=<path> | Absolute path to where all sites will be stored. |
| –locale=<locale> | Locale for WordPress. |
| –le-mail=<le-mail> | Mail-id to be used for letsencrypt. |
| –wp-mail=<wp-mail> | Default Mail-id to be used for WordPress site installation. |
| –sysctl=<true/false> | Whether to add sysctl config in docker-compose. |
| –[no-]color | Whether to colorize the output. |
| –debug[=<group>] | Show all PHP errors; add verbosity to EE bootstrap. |
| –quiet | Suppress informational messages. |