stardog-admin virtual match Manual Page
NAME
stardog-admin virtual match —Matches one or more tables from a data source with RDF classes .
SYNOPSIS
stardog-admin [ --krb5 ] [ --krb5-disable-rdns ] [ --server <server url> ] virtual match [ {-f | --format} <rdf format> ] [ --output-format <Output Format> ] [ {-p | --passwd} <password> ] [ {-P | --ask-password} ] [ --run-as <username> ] [ --token <token> ] [ {-u | --username} <username> ] [ {-v | --verbose} ] [--] <input file>
OPTIONS
-f <rdf format>, --format <rdf format>
Data format for the input file. The supported formats are NTRIPLES, RDF/XML, TURTLE, PRETTY_TURTLE, TRIG, N3, NQUADS, JSONLD. If no format is specified, the file name will be used to guess the required format.
Use the Kerberos environment.
Disable reverse DNS lookup for Kerberos clients.
--output-format <Output Format>
Output RDF Format for the output mappings. The supported formats are NTRIPLES, RDF/XML, TURTLE, PRETTY_TURTLE, TRIG, N3, NQUADS, JSONLD.
-p <password>, --passwd <password>
User to impersonate when running the command
URL of Stardog Server. If this option isn't specified, it will be read from JVM argument 'stardog.default.cli.server'. If the JVM arg isn't set, the default value 'http://localhost:5820' is used. If server URL has no explicit port value, the default port value '5820' is used. Example: 'stardog-admin --server http://12.34.56.78:5820 server stop'
-u <username>, --username <username>
Flag that can cause more detailed information to be printed such as errors and status. Exact output depends upon the command and options used.
This option can be used to separate command-line options from the list of argument, (useful when arguments might be mistaken for command-line options
EXAMPLES
Creating matching between data source tables(s) and target RDF class(es)
$ stardog-admin virtual match ...