**awsAccessKeyId**: Enter your secure access key ID for your Glue connection. The specified key ID should be
authorized to read all databases you want to include in the metadata ingestion workflow.
{% /codeInfo %}
{% codeInfo srNumber=2 %}
**awsSecretAccessKey**: Enter the Secret Access Key (the passcode key pair to the key ID from above).
{% /codeInfo %}
{% codeInfo srNumber=3 %}
**awsRegion**: Enter the location of the amazon cluster that your data and account are associated with.
{% /codeInfo %}
{% codeInfo srNumber=4 %}
**awsSessionToken**: The AWS session token is an optional parameter. If you want, enter the details of your temporary
session token.
{% /codeInfo %}
{% codeInfo srNumber=5 %}
**endPointURL**: Your Glue connector will automatically determine the AWS Glue endpoint URL based on the region. You
may override this behavior by entering a value to the endpoint URL.
{% /codeInfo %}
#### Source Configuration - Source Config
{% codeInfo srNumber=6 %}
The `sourceConfig` is defined [here](https://github.com/open-metadata/OpenMetadata/blob/main/openmetadata-spec/src/main/resources/json/schema/metadataIngestion/pipelineServiceMetadataPipeline.json):
**dbServiceNames**: Database Service Name for the creation of lineage, if the source supports it.
**includeTags**: Set the Include tags toggle to control whether or not to include tags as part of metadata ingestion.
**markDeletedPipelines**: Set the Mark Deleted Pipelines toggle to flag pipelines as soft-deleted if they are not present anymore in the source system.
**pipelineFilterPattern** and **chartFilterPattern**: Note that the `pipelineFilterPattern` and `chartFilterPattern` both support regex as include or exclude.
{% /codeInfo %}
#### Sink Configuration
{% codeInfo srNumber=7 %}
To send the metadata to OpenMetadata, it needs to be specified as `type: metadata-rest`.
{% /codeInfo %}
#### Workflow Configuration
{% codeInfo srNumber=8 %}
The main property here is the `openMetadataServerConfig`, where you can define the host and security provider of your OpenMetadata installation.
For a simple, local installation using our docker containers, this looks like:
We support different security providers. You can find their definitions [here](https://github.com/open-metadata/OpenMetadata/tree/main/openmetadata-spec/src/main/resources/json/schema/security/client).
## Openmetadata JWT Auth
- JWT tokens will allow your clients to authenticate against the OpenMetadata server. To enable JWT Tokens, you will get more details [here](/deployment/security/enable-jwt-tokens).
```yaml
workflowConfig:
openMetadataServerConfig:
hostPort: "http://localhost:8585/api"
authProvider: openmetadata
securityConfig:
jwtToken: "{bot_jwt_token}"
```
- You can refer to the JWT Troubleshooting section [link](/deployment/security/jwt-troubleshooting) for any issues in your JWT configuration. If you need information on configuring the ingestion with other security providers in your bots, you can follow this doc [link](/deployment/security/workflow-config-auth).
### 2. Run with the CLI
First, we will need to save the YAML file. Afterward, and with all requirements installed, we can run:
```bash
metadata ingest -c <path-to-yaml>
```
Note that from connector to connector, this recipe will always be the same. By updating the YAML configuration,
you will be able to extract metadata from different sources.