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app init command
$ copilot app init [name] [flags]
copilot app init
creates a new application within the directory that will contain your service(s).
After you answer the questions, the CLI creates AWS Identity and Access Management roles to manage the release infrastructure for your services. You'll also see a new sub-directory created under your working directory: copilot/
. The copilot
directory will hold the manifest files and additional infrastructure for your services.
Typically, you don't need to run app init
(init
does all the same work) unless you want to use a custom domain name or AWS tags.
Like all commands in the Copilot CLI, if you don't provide required flags, we'll prompt you for all the information we need to get you going. You can skip the prompts by providing information via flags:
--domain string Optional. Your existing custom domain name.
-h, --help help for init
--resource-tags stringToString Optional. Labels with a key and value separated with commas.
Allows you to categorize resources. (default [])
The --domain
flag allows you to specify a domain name registered with Amazon Route 53 in your app's account. This will allow all the services in your app to share the same domain name. You'll be able to access your services at: https://{svcName}.{envName}.{appName}.{domain}
The --resource-tags
flags allows you to add your custom tags to all the resources in your app.
For example: $ copilot app init --resource-tags department=MyDept,team=MyTeam
Create a new application named "my-app".
$ copilot app init my-app
``
Create a new application with an existing domain name in Amazon Route53.
```bash
$ copilot app init --domain example.com
Create a new application with resource tags.
$ copilot app init --resource-tags department=MyDept,team=MyTeam