SettleMint
CLI

Overview

Choose the right DALP CLI guide for installation, command lookup, scripting, CI automation, and AI agent workflows.

The DALP CLI is the command-line control plane for the Digital Asset Lifecycle Platform. Use it for local setup, scripted operations, CI jobs, and AI agent workflows that call DALP through typed commands.

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When to use the CLI

Use the CLI when the work starts in a terminal or automation environment. Each use case below maps to a guide that covers the relevant commands and patterns:

TaskUse the CLI forStart with
First accessInstall the package, log in, verify your session, and set output preferences.Getting started
Command lookupFind the command group for tokens, users, compliance, monitoring, settings, XvP settlement, and other DALP domains.Command reference
Repeatable operationsBuild scripts that read JSON, handle errors, and run the same operational sequence safely.Scripting and automation
AI-assisted workExpose DALP operations to coding agents through shell execution, MCP, generated skills, and structured output.AI agent integration

How the CLI is organised

The CLI groups its operations by domain. Auth and config commands prepare the local session; domain commands then work against the active DALP instance and organization.

Common command families include:

  • auth, login, logout, whoami, and config for session management, API keys, organization context, and local preferences.
  • tokens, token-sales, external-tokens, and fixed-yield-schedules for asset lifecycle and token-related operations.
  • users, identities, identity-recoveries, kyc, contacts, and compliance-providers for participant onboarding, identity management, and compliance workflows.
  • settings, asset-type-templates, compliance-templates, and system for platform configuration and administration.
  • account, actions, blockchain-transactions, monitoring, and search-results for inspection and evidence collection.
  • xvp-settlements for cross-value protocol settlement operations.

Operating model

CLI operations follow the same DALP permission model as the API. Most require an authenticated session and run against the active organization. When you script anything that changes state, use explicit input values, JSON output, error handling, and a list-before-create pattern where duplicate creation would be unsafe.

You control the local CLI environment: platform URL, active organization, credentials, output format, scripts, and CI secrets. DALP enforces your permissions and org context when each request reaches the platform.

The CLI is not the runtime interface for application traffic. Use the Platform API for service integrations that require a stable programmatic interface, full request lifecycle control, and caller-owned error handling. Many production teams use both: the API for application logic and the CLI for setup tasks, operational checks, and incident follow-up.

Next steps

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