--- title: 'Using the CLI' description: 'How to start a bknd instance using the CLI.' --- The bknd package includes a command-line interface (CLI) that allows you to run a bknd instance and perform various tasks. ``` npx bknd ``` Here is the output: ``` $ npx bknd Usage: bknd [options] [command] ⚡ bknd cli v0.10.3-rc.1 Options: -V, --version output the version number -h, --help display help for command Commands: config [options] get default config copy-assets [options] copy static assets create [options] create a new project debug debug bknd run [options] run an instance schema [options] get schema user create and update user (auth) help [command] display help for command ``` ## Starting an instance (`run`) To see all available `run` options, execute `npx bknd run --help`. ``` $ npx bknd run --help Usage: bknd run [options] Options: -p, --port port to run on (default: 1337, env: PORT) -m, --memory use in-memory database -c, --config config file --db-url database url, can be any valid libsql url --db-token database token --server server type (choices: "node", "bun", default: "bun") --no-open don't open browser window on start -h, --help display help for command ``` To order in which the connection is determined is as follows: 1. `--db-url` 2. `--config` or reading the filesystem looking for `bknd.config.[js|ts|mjs|cjs|json]` 3. `--memory` 4. Environment variables `DB_URL` and `DB_TOKEN` in `.env` or `.dev.vars` 5. Fallback to file-based database `data.db` ### File-based database By default, a file-based database `data.db` is used when running without any arguments. You can specify a different file name or path using the `--db-url` option. The database file will be created in the current working directory if it does not exist. ``` npx bknd run --db-url file:data.db ``` ### Using configuration file (`bknd.config.*`) You can create a configuration file on the working directory that automatically gets picked up: `bknd.config.[js|ts|mjs|cjs|json]` Here is an example of a `bknd.config.ts` file: ```ts import type { BkndConfig } from "bknd/adapter"; export default { // you can either specify the connection directly connection: { url: "file:data.db", }, // or use the `app` function which passes the environment variables app: ({ env }) => ({ connection: { url: env.DB_URL, } }) } satisfies BkndConfig; ``` The `app` function is useful if you need a cross-platform way to access the environment variables. For example, on Cloudflare Workers, you can only access environment variables inside a request handler. If you're exclusively using a node-like environment, it's safe to access the environment variables directly from `process.env`. If you're using `npx bknd run`, make sure to create a file in a file format that `node` can load, otherwise you may run into an error that the file couldn't be found: ```sh [INF] 2025-03-28 18:02:21 Using config from bknd.config.ts [ERR] 2025-03-28 18:02:21 Failed to load config: Error [ERR_MODULE_NOT_FOUND]: Cannot find package 'bknd.config.ts' imported from [...] at packageResolve (node:internal/modules/esm/resolve:857:9) at [...] { code: 'ERR_MODULE_NOT_FOUND' } ``` If you still want to use a `.ts` extension, you can start the CLI e.g. using `tsx`: ```sh npx tsx node_modules/.bin/bknd run ``` ### Turso/LibSQL database To start an instance with a Turso/LibSQL database, run the following: ``` npx bknd run --db-url libsql://your-db.turso.io --db-token ``` The `--db-token` option is optional and only required if the database is protected. ### In-memory database To start an instance with an ephemeral in-memory database, run the following: ``` npx bknd run --memory ``` Keep in mind that the database is not persisted and will be lost when the process is terminated.