Apify command-line interface (Apify CLI) helps you create, develop, build and run Apify actors, and manage the Apify cloud platform from any computer.
Apify actors are cloud programs that can perform arbitrary web scraping, automation or data processing job. They accept input, perform their job and generate output. While you can develop actors in an online IDE directly in the Apify web application, for complex projects it is more convenient to develop actors locally on your computer using Apify SDK and only push the actors to the Apify cloud during deployment. This is where the Apify CLI comes in.
Note that actors running on the Apify platform are executed in Docker containers, so with an appropriate Dockerfile
you can build your actors in any programming language.
However, we recommend using JavaScript / Node.js, for which we provide most libraries and support.
On macOS (or Linux), you can install the Apify CLI via the Homebrew package manager.
brew install apify-cli
First, make sure you have Node.js version 16 or higher with NPM installed on your computer:
node --version
npm --version
Install or upgrade Apify CLI by running:
npm -g install apify-cli
If you receive an EACCES
error, you might need to run the command as root:
sudo npm -g install apify-cli
Alternativaly, you can use Node Version Manager (nvm) and install Apify CLI only into a selected user-level Node version without requiring root privileges:
nvm install 16
nvm use 16
npm -g install apify-cli
Finally, verify that Apify CLI was installed correctly by running:
apify --version
which should print something like:
apify-cli/0.10.0 darwin-x64 node-v16.14.2
You can also skip the manual global installation altogether and use
npx apify-cli
with all the following commands instead.
The following examples demonstrate the basic usage of Apify CLI.
apify create my-hello-world
First, you will be prompted to select a template with the boilerplate for the actor, to help you get started quickly.
The command will create a directory called my-hello-world
that contains a Node.js project
for the actor and a few configuration files.
If you decided to skip the installation and go with
npx
, the command will benpx apify-cli create my-hello-world
.
cd ./my/awesome/project
apify init
This command will only set up local actor development environment in an existing directory,
i.e. it will create the .actor/actor.json
file and apify_storage
directory.
Before you can run your project locally using apify run
, you have to set up the right start command in package.json
under scripts.start. For example:
{
...
"scripts": {
"start": "node your_main_file.js",
},
...
}
You can find more information about by running apify help run
.
If you want to run a Scrapy project on Apify platform, follow the Scrapy integration guide here.
cd my-hello-world
apify run
This command runs the actor on your local machine. Now's your chance to develop the logic - or magic 😏
apify login
Before you can interact with the Apify cloud, you need to create an Apify account
and log in to it using the above command. You will be prompted for
your Apify API token.
Note that the command will store the API token and other sensitive information to ~/.apify
.
apify push
This command uploads your project to the Apify cloud and builds an actor from it. On the platform, actor needs to be built before it can be run.
apify call
Runs the actor corresponding to the current directory on the Apify platform.
This command can also be used to run other actors, for example:
apify call apify/hello-world
This file associates your local development project with an actor on the Apify platform. It contains information such as actor name, version, build tag and environment variables. Make sure you commit this file to the Git repository.
For example, .actor/actor.json
file can look as follows:
{
"actorSpecification": 1,
"name": "name-of-my-scraper",
"version": "0.0",
"buildTag": "latest",
"environmentVariables": {
"MYSQL_USER": "my_username",
"MYSQL_PASSWORD": "@mySecretPassword"
},
"dockerfile": "./Dockerfile",
"readme": "./ACTOR.md",
"input": "./input_schema.json",
"storages": {
"dataset": "./dataset_schema.json"
}
}
Dockerfile
field
If you specify the path to your Docker file under the dockerfile
field, this file will be used for actor builds on the platform. If not specified, the system will look for Docker files at .actor/Dockerfile
and Dockerfile
in this order of preference.
Readme
field
If you specify the path to your readme file under the readme
field, the readme at this path will be used on the platform. If not specified, readme at .actor/README.md
and README.md
will be used in this order of preference.
Input
field
You can embed your input schema object directly in actor.json
under input
field. Alternatively, you can provide a path to a custom input schema. If not provided, the input schema at .actor/INPUT_SCHEMA.json
and INPUT_SCHEMA.json
is used in this order of preference.
Storages.dataset
field
You can define the schema of the items in your dataset under the storages.dataset
field. This can be either an embedded object or a path to a JSON schema file. You can read more about the schema of your actor output here.
Note on migration from deprecated config "apify.json"
Note that previously, actor config was stored in the apify.json
file that has been deprecated. You can find the (very slight) differences and migration info in migration guidelines.
There are two options how you can set up environment variables for actors.
All keys from env
will be set as environment variables into Apify platform after you push actor to Apify. Current values on Apify will be overridden.
{
"actorSpecification": 1,
"name": "dataset-to-mysql",
"version": "0.1",
"buildTag": "latest",
"environmentVariables": {
"MYSQL_USER": "my_username",
"MYSQL_PASSWORD": "@mySecretPassword"
}
}
In Apify Console select your actor, you can set up variables into Source tab.
After setting up variables in the app, remove the environmentVariables
from .actor/actor.json
. Otherwise, variables from .actor/actor.json
will override variables in the app.
{
"actorSpecification": 1,
"name": "dataset-to-mysql",
"version": "0.1",
"buildTag": "latest"
}
CLI provides commands to manage secrets environment variables. Secrets are stored to the ~/.apify
directory.
You can add a new secret using the command:
apify secrets:add mySecretPassword pwd1234
After adding a new secret you can use the secret in .actor/actor.json
.
{
"actorSpecification": 1,
"name": "dataset-to-mysql",
...
"environmentVariables": {
"MYSQL_PASSWORD": "@mySecretPassword"
},
...
}
To see all CLI commands simply run:
apify help
To get information about a specific command run:
apify help COMMAND
Still haven't found what you were looking for? Please go to Apify Help center or contact us.
This section contains printouts of apify help
for all commands.
apify actor
apify actor:get-input
apify actor:get-value KEY
apify actor:push-data [ITEM]
apify actor:set-value KEY [VALUE]
apify call [ACTID]
apify create [ACTORNAME]
apify info
apify init [ACTORNAME]
apify login
apify logout
apify pull [ACTORID]
apify push [ACTORID]
apify run
apify secrets
apify secrets:add NAME VALUE
apify secrets:rm NAME
apify vis [PATH]
Commands are designed to be used in actor runs. All commands are in PoC state, do not use in production environments.
USAGE
$ apify actor
See code: src/commands/actor/index.js
Gets the actor input value from the default key-value store associated with the actor run.
USAGE
$ apify actor:get-input
See code: src/commands/actor/get-input.js
Gets a value from the default key-value store associated with the actor run.
USAGE
$ apify actor:get-value KEY
ARGUMENTS
KEY Key of the record in key-value store
See code: src/commands/actor/get-value.js
Stores an object or an array of objects to the default dataset of the actor run.
USAGE
$ apify actor:push-data [ITEM]
ARGUMENTS
ITEM JSON string with one object or array of objects containing data to be stored in the default dataset.
DESCRIPTION
It is possible to pass data using item argument or stdin.
Passing data using argument:
$ apify actor:push-data {"foo": "bar"}
Passing data using stdin with pipe:
$ cat ./test.json | apify actor:push-data
See code: src/commands/actor/push-data.js
Sets or removes record into the default KeyValueStore associated with the actor run.
USAGE
$ apify actor:set-value KEY [VALUE]
ARGUMENTS
KEY Key of the record in key-value store.
VALUE Record data, which can be one of the following values:
- If empty, the record in the key-value store is deleted.
- If no `contentType` flag is specified, value is expected to be any JSON string value.
- If options.contentType is set, value is taken as is.
OPTIONS
-c, --contentType=contentType Specifies a custom MIME content type of the record. By default "application/json" is
used.
DESCRIPTION
It is possible to pass data using argument or stdin.
Passing data using argument:
$ apify actor:set-value KEY my-value
Passing data using stdin with pipe:
$ cat ./my-text-file.txt | apify actor:set-value KEY --contentType text/plain
See code: src/commands/actor/set-value.js
Runs a specific actor remotely on the Apify cloud platform.
USAGE
$ apify call [ACTID]
ARGUMENTS
ACTID Name or ID of the actor to run (e.g. "apify/hello-world" or "E2jjCZBezvAZnX8Rb"). If not provided, the command
runs the remote actor specified in the ".actor/actor.json" file.
OPTIONS
-b, --build=build Tag or number of the build to run (e.g. "latest" or "1.2.34").
-m, --memory=memory Amount of memory allocated for the actor run, in megabytes.
-t, --timeout=timeout Timeout for the actor run in seconds. Zero value means there is no timeout.
-w, --wait-for-finish=wait-for-finish Seconds for waiting to run to finish, if no value passed, it waits forever.
DESCRIPTION
The Actor is run under your current Apify account. Therefore you need to be logged in by calling "apify login". It
takes input for the Actor from the default local key-value store by default.
See code: src/commands/call.js
Creates a new actor project directory from a selected boilerplate template.
USAGE
$ apify create [ACTORNAME]
ARGUMENTS
ACTORNAME Name of the actor and its directory
OPTIONS
-t, --template=template Template for the actor. If not provided, the command will prompt for it.
Visit
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/apify/actor-templates/master/templates/manifest.json to
find available template names.
--skip-dependency-install Skip installing actor dependencies.
See code: src/commands/create.js
Displays information about the currently active Apify account.
USAGE
$ apify info
DESCRIPTION
The information is printed to the console.
See code: src/commands/info.js
Initializes a new actor project in an existing directory.
USAGE
$ apify init [ACTORNAME]
ARGUMENTS
ACTORNAME Name of the actor. If not provided, you will be prompted for it.
DESCRIPTION
The command only creates the ".actor/actor.json" file and the "storage" directory in the current directory, but will
not touch anything else.
WARNING: The directory at "storage" will be overwritten if it already exists.
See code: src/commands/init.js
Logs in to your Apify account using a provided API token.
USAGE
$ apify login
OPTIONS
-t, --token=token [Optional] Apify API token
DESCRIPTION
The API token and other account information is stored in the ~/.apify directory, from where it is read by all other
"apify" commands. To log out, call "apify logout".
See code: src/commands/login.js
Logs out of your Apify account.
USAGE
$ apify logout
DESCRIPTION
The command deletes the API token and all other account information stored in the ~/.apify directory. To log in again,
call "apify login".
See code: src/commands/logout.js
Pulls an Actor from the Apify platform to the current directory. If it is defined as Git repository, it will be cloned. If it is defined as Web IDE, it will fetch the files.
USAGE
$ apify pull [ACTORID]
ARGUMENTS
ACTORID Name or ID of the actor to run (e.g. "apify/hello-world" or "E2jjCZBezvAZnX8Rb"). If not provided, the
command will update the Actor in the current directory based on its name in ".actor/actor.json" file.
OPTIONS
-v, --version=version Actor version number which will be pulled, e.g. 1.2. Default: the highest version
See code: src/commands/pull.js
Uploads the actor to the Apify platform and builds it there.
USAGE
$ apify push [ACTORID]
ARGUMENTS
ACTORID Name or ID of the Actor to push (e.g. "apify/hello-world" or "E2jjCZBezvAZnX8Rb"). If not provided, the
command will create or modify the actor with the name specified in ".actor/actor.json" file.
OPTIONS
-b, --build-tag=build-tag Build tag to be applied to the successful Actor build. By default, it is taken
from the ".actor/actor.json" file
-v, --version=version Actor version number to which the files should be pushed. By default, it is
taken from the ".actor/actor.json" file.
-w, --wait-for-finish=wait-for-finish Seconds for waiting to build to finish, if no value passed, it waits forever.
--no-prompt Do not prompt for opening the actor details in a browser. This will also not
open the browser automatically.
--version-number=version-number DEPRECATED: Use flag version instead. Actor version number to which the files
should be pushed. By default, it is taken from the ".actor/actor.json" file.
DESCRIPTION
The Actor settings are read from the ".actor/actor.json" file in the current directory, but they can be overridden
using command-line options.
NOTE: If the source files are smaller than 3 MB then they are uploaded as
"Multiple source files", otherwise they are uploaded as "Zip file".
WARNING: If the target Actor already exists in your Apify account, it will be overwritten!
See code: src/commands/push.js
Runs the actor locally in the current directory.
USAGE
$ apify run
OPTIONS
-p, --purge Shortcut that combines the --purge-queue, --purge-dataset and --purge-key-value-store
options.
--purge-dataset Deletes the local directory containing the default dataset before the run starts.
--purge-key-value-store Deletes all records from the default key-value store in the local directory before the run
starts, except for the "INPUT" key.
--purge-queue Deletes the local directory containing the default request queue before the run starts.
DESCRIPTION
It sets various APIFY_XYZ environment variables in order to provide a working execution environment for the actor. For
example, this causes the actor input, as well as all other data in key-value stores, datasets or request queues to be
stored in the "storage" directory, rather than on the Apify platform.
NOTE: You can override the command's default behavior for Node.js actors by overriding the "start" script in the
package.json file. You can set up your own main file or environment variables by changing it.
See code: src/commands/run.js
Manages secret values for actor environment variables.
USAGE
$ apify secrets
DESCRIPTION
Example:
$ apify secrets:add mySecret TopSecretValue123
Now the "mySecret" value can be used in an environment variable defined in ".actor/actor.json" file by adding the "@"
prefix:
{
"actorSpecification": 1,
"name": "my_actor",
"environmentVariables": { "SECRET_ENV_VAR": "@mySecret" },
"version": "0.1
}
When the actor is pushed to Apify cloud, the "SECRET_ENV_VAR" and its value is stored as a secret environment variable
of the actor.
See code: src/commands/secrets/index.js
Adds a new secret value.
USAGE
$ apify secrets:add NAME VALUE
ARGUMENTS
NAME Name of the secret
VALUE Value of the secret
DESCRIPTION
The secrets are stored to a file at ~/.apify
See code: src/commands/secrets/add.js
Removes the secret.
USAGE
$ apify secrets:rm NAME
ARGUMENTS
NAME Name of the secret
See code: src/commands/secrets/rm.js
Validates input schema and prints errors found.
USAGE
$ apify vis [PATH]
ARGUMENTS
PATH Optional path to your INPUT_SCHEMA.json file. If not provided ./INPUT_SCHEMA.json is used.
DESCRIPTION
The input schema for the actor is used from these locations in order of preference.
The first one found is validated as it would be the one used on the Apify platform.
1. Directly embedded object in ".actor/actor.json" under 'input' key
2. Path to JSON file referenced in ".actor/actor.json" under 'input' key
3. JSON file at .actor/INPUT_SCHEMA.json
4. JSON file at INPUT_SCHEMA.json
You can also pass any custom path to your input schema to have it validated instead.
See code: src/commands/vis.js