Directus: Automate Directus with the CLI

Start Directus, retrieve its credentials, and change its configuration programmatically with the Stackhero CLI

👋 Benvenuti nella documentazione di Stackhero!

Stackhero offre un servizio Directus cloud, pronto per l'uso in produzione, in soli 2 minuti:

  • Collezioni, elementi, utenti, ruoli, richieste API e trasferimenti illimitati
  • Nome di dominio personalizzabile protetto con HTTPS (ad esempio, https://cms.tua-azienda.com)
  • Server email dedicato e illimitato incluso
  • Server cache Redis incluso per alte prestazioni
  • Prestazioni ottimali e sicurezza robusta garantite da una VM privata e dedicata.
  1. Aggiornamenti con un clic per una manutenzione senza sforzo

Risparmia tempo e semplifica la tua vita: bastano 5 minuti per provare la soluzione cloud Directus di Stackhero!

This guide shows how to create a Directus service, read its credentials, and update its configuration entirely from the command line, with no clicks in the dashboard. It is ideal for scripts, CI pipelines, and AI agents.

It uses the Stackhero CLI. Install it first:

curl -fsSL https://www.stackhero.io/install.sh | sh

The simplest way is to log in from your browser. The CLI opens a page where you approve the access (no password or 2FA code is ever handled by the CLI):

stackhero login

Your credentials are then saved locally and reused by every following command.

For scripts, CI pipelines, and AI agents, use a non-interactive access token instead. Create one from your dashboard (Account > Access tokens) and export it. The CLI (and any script) picks it up automatically:

export STACKHERO_TOKEN="usr-xxxxxx:your-token"

List your organizations to get your organization id, then find the Directus store:

# Your organization id (org-xxxxxx)
stackhero organizations-list

# The Directus service stores available to that organization
stackhero services-store-list --organization-id=org-xxxxxx --name="directus"

Pick the svs-xxxxxx id of the version you want.

# Instance sizes (ist-xxxxxx) available for that service store
stackhero instances-store-list --organization-id=org-xxxxxx --service-store-id=svs-xxxxxx

# Available regions
stackhero regions-list

The script below creates a stack, adds Directus to it, waits until it is running, reads its configuration (which contains the generated credentials), and applies a new configuration.

#!/bin/bash
set -e

export STACKHERO_TOKEN="usr-xxxxxx:your-token"

organizationId="org-xxxxxx"
serviceStoreId="svs-xxxxxx"   # a Directus service store (step 2)
instanceStoreId="ist-xxxxxx"  # an instance size (step 3)
regionId="europe"             # a region id (step 3)

# Create a stack to host the service
stackId=$(stackhero --format=script stack-create \
  --organization-id="${organizationId}" \
  --name="My Directus stack")
echo "Stack created: ${stackId}"

# Add Directus to the stack
serviceId=$(stackhero --format=script service-add \
  --stack-id="${stackId}" \
  --service-store-id="${serviceStoreId}" \
  --instance-store-id="${instanceStoreId}" \
  --region-id="${regionId}")
echo "Service added: directus"

# Wait until the service is running (a couple of minutes)
stackhero service-wait-for --service-id="directus"

# Retrieve the service configuration, including its generated credentials
stackhero service-configuration-get --service-id="directus" --format=json

service-configuration-get returns the full configuration of the service, including the generated passwords and connection details. As JSON (handy for scripts and agents):

stackhero service-configuration-get --service-id=svc-xxxxxx --format=json

Get an example of the expected configuration, then apply your own:

# See the configuration schema and an example for this service
stackhero service-configuration-example --service-id=svc-xxxxxx

# Apply a new configuration (the service restarts to apply it)
stackhero service-configuration-set \
  --service-id=svc-xxxxxx \
  --configuration='{ "...": "..." }'

# Wait until the new configuration is applied
stackhero service-wait-for --service-id=svc-xxxxxx

That is the full lifecycle: start, read credentials, reconfigure, all scriptable. See the full CLI documentation for every command and the non-interactive STACKHERO_TOKEN authentication used here.