| name | wrangler-accounts |
| description | AWS-style multi-account convenience for Cloudflare Wrangler. Use when you need to run wrangler commands against a specific Cloudflare account, manage saved OAuth profiles, set or switch the persistent default profile, or open an isolated subshell for a profile. Prefer --json for machine-readable output. |
Wrangler Accounts
Overview
wrangler-accounts runs wrangler under per-invocation shadow HOME isolation, so multiple shells can use different Cloudflare accounts in parallel without any global switching. Profile resolution order: --profile / -p > positional shorthand > $WRANGLER_PROFILE > profilesDir/default > hard error.
Installation
For Claude Code users, prefer the plugin marketplace install path because it ships this skill and the raw-wrangler guard hook together:
/plugin marketplace add leeguooooo/wrangler-accounts
/plugin install wrangler-accounts@leeguoo-tools
The plugin does not replace the CLI binary. The actual wrangler-accounts executable still must be installed on PATH:
npm i -g @leeguoo/wrangler-accounts
Non-Claude-Code users can keep using the skills.sh distribution path for this same SKILL.md mirror:
npx skills add leeguooooo/wrangler-accounts -g -y
If a Claude Code user previously installed via skills.sh, removing the standalone copy avoids a duplicate /wrangler-accounts entry in the command picker:
npx skills remove wrangler-accounts
Prerequisites (check before running any recipe below)
This skill is only documentation — the actual wrangler-accounts binary must also be installed on the user's PATH. Before running any command below, verify:
command -v wrangler-accounts && wrangler-accounts --version
If the command is missing, tell the user to install the CLI first:
npm i -g @leeguoo/wrangler-accounts
wrangler itself (the Cloudflare CLI) must also be on PATH. If missing:
npm i -g wrangler
Minimum versions you should ask the user to upgrade past
If wrangler-accounts --version is below any of these, upgrade first before debugging anything else — older versions have real bugs that will misdirect you:
| Version | What it fixed | Symptom on older versions |
|---|
| ≥ 1.2.2 | per-profile WRANGLER_CACHE_DIR, fixes account-id leak across profiles | d1/r2 object commands return 7403 not authorized even though OAuth is valid; deploys silently land in the wrong account |
| ≥ 1.3.0 | STATUS column distinguishes valid / valid* / EXPIRED (refresh-token-aware) | list shows EXPIRED for healthy profiles, scaring you into running login for no reason |
| ≥ 1.4.0 | login refuses non-TTY contexts and accidental overwrites | login <name> hangs forever in non-interactive contexts; reflexive login overwrites a healthy profile |
| ≥ 1.6.0 | API token profiles (token-add) + anonymous env-var pass-through | only OAuth profiles existed; CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN in env still required a named profile to be selected |
npm i -g @leeguoo/wrangler-accounts@latest
Triage flow — when something looks wrong
Run these in order before reaching for login or any destructive command. The agent who skipped this step in a recent incident ended up overwriting a perfectly healthy profile in a sub-shell where the browser couldn't even open.
wrangler-accounts --version
wrangler-accounts list --deep
How to read list --deep output:
| You see | Meaning | What to do |
|---|
STATUS valid + VERIFIED ✓ ok | profile is fine | nothing — proceed with whatever the user actually asked |
STATUS valid* + VERIFIED ✓ ok | profile is fine; access token will auto-refresh on next use | nothing — valid* is healthy, do NOT re-login |
STATUS EXPIRED + VERIFIED ✓ ok | rare; only on < 1.3.0 binaries — STATUS is lying | upgrade the CLI; profile is fine |
STATUS EXPIRED + VERIFIED ✗ Not logged in | profile is genuinely broken | wrangler-accounts login <name> (interactive only) |
STATUS valid + VERIFIED ✗ of any kind | refresh token revoked server-side | wrangler-accounts login <name> (interactive only) |
STATUS unknown | profile file lacks expiration_time | run --deep (already did) — trust VERIFIED |
Rule: only suggest wrangler-accounts login <name> when at least one of:
list --deep showed VERIFIED ✗ for that profile, OR
- The profile doesn't exist at all yet, OR
- The user explicitly says "re-authenticate" / "log me in again"
If list --deep shows everything ✓ but a wrangler command still fails, the root cause is somewhere other than wrangler-accounts — most likely:
- Project-local
./.wrangler/state/ is sharing data across profiles (see "What is and isn't isolated")
- The project's
wrangler.toml has the wrong account_id hardcoded
- The user is on a CLI version below 1.2.2 (account-id cache leak)
- The wrangler subcommand actually needs
--remote or --local and you forgot
Quick Start
wrangler-accounts login <name> — interactive OAuth login into a new profile (never touches real ~/.wrangler)
wrangler-accounts token-add <name> <api-token> <account-id> — save an API token profile (no browser login needed)
wrangler-accounts default <name> — set the persistent default profile
wrangler-accounts deploy — run wrangler deploy under the default profile
wrangler-accounts --profile personal deploy — one-shot override
wrangler-accounts exec work -- npm run release — run a command in an isolated subshell for the work profile
💡 Reading the STATUS column: valid = healthy, valid* = healthy (will auto-refresh on next use, don't re-login), EXPIRED = truly broken (need login), unknown = run --deep to find out. Full table below in "List and inspect profiles".
Tasks
Run wrangler against a profile
Per-invocation (preferred for scripts):
wrangler-accounts --profile <name> <wrangler-args...>
Or with env var:
WRANGLER_PROFILE=<name> wrangler-accounts <wrangler-args...>
Or positional shorthand (only when <name> is a saved profile name, not a management subcommand):
wrangler-accounts <name> <wrangler-args...>
Open a subshell for a profile
wrangler-accounts exec <name> — launches $SHELL -i with isolated HOME and WRANGLER_PROFILE set. Everything inside the subshell sees the profile, including nested npm run scripts, Makefiles, and npx wrangler.
Run a single command instead:
wrangler-accounts exec <name> -- <cmd> [args]
Manage the persistent default profile
wrangler-accounts default — print current default (exit 1 if none set)
wrangler-accounts default <name> — set the default
wrangler-accounts default --unset — clear the default
wrangler-accounts default --json — JSON output
Show the resolved identity for a profile
wrangler-accounts whoami [--profile <name>] — reports the profile name, source tier (cli / positional / env / default), and identity from meta.json. Does not spawn wrangler.
Use --json for structured output.
List and inspect profiles
wrangler-accounts list — text table with NAME / STATUS / EXPIRES / IDENTITY columns
wrangler-accounts list --json — structured: array of {name, isDefault, isActive, status, expirationTime, hasRefreshToken, identity, verified, verifyError}
wrangler-accounts list --plain — one profile name per line (scriptable)
wrangler-accounts list --deep — authoritative check: spawns wrangler whoami in a shadow HOME for every profile and reports whether Cloudflare actually accepts the credentials. Slower (makes network calls), but the only way to catch revoked refresh tokens or broken profile files.
wrangler-accounts status / status --json
- Pass
--include-backups to show hidden backup profiles.
STATUS values (1.3.0+):
| value | meaning | user action |
|---|
valid | access_token is currently valid | none |
valid* / refreshable | access_token past expiry BUT refresh_token present; wrangler will auto-refresh on next use | none — this is fine, don't scare the user |
EXPIRED / expired | access_token expired AND no refresh_token saved; profile is genuinely broken | wrangler-accounts login <name> |
unknown | profile file has no expiration_time field | run list --deep to verify live |
token | API token profile (1.6.0+) — no expiration concept, always ready | none |
Cloudflare OAuth lifecycle reference: access tokens are short-lived (~1 hour) by design. Every profile with offline_access in its scopes also has a long-lived refresh_token (~30 days, silently extended on use). Wrangler refreshes access tokens automatically whenever it runs a command and the current one is past expiry. Do not tell the user to re-login just because list shows an expired access token — check hasRefreshToken first. If the profile's STATUS is valid* / refreshable, nothing is wrong.
The only time a user actually needs wrangler-accounts login <name> again is:
- STATUS is
EXPIRED (no refresh_token at all — profile was saved without offline_access scope)
- OR
list --deep returns ✗ with "Not logged in" / "refresh token may be revoked" (refresh token itself got invalidated)
Save an API token profile (no browser required)
wrangler-accounts token-add <name> <api-token> <account-id> [--force]
Saves a Cloudflare API token + account ID as a named profile. No OAuth browser flow needed. The credentials are stored in token.json (mode 0600) inside the profile directory.
wrangler-accounts token-add work CF_TOKEN_HERE ACCOUNT_ID_HERE
wrangler-accounts --profile work deploy
wrangler-accounts work r2 list
Token profiles appear in list with a [token] type indicator and STATUS: token — there is no expiration concept, so they are always ready to use. remove works the same as for OAuth profiles.
Env-var pass-through (1.6.0+): when CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN and CLOUDFLARE_ACCOUNT_ID are already set in the environment and no profile is specified, wrangler-accounts runs in anonymous-token mode (no named profile needed). Useful for CI jobs that inject credentials via secrets:
CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN=xxx CLOUDFLARE_ACCOUNT_ID=yyy wrangler-accounts deploy
Save, sync, login, remove
wrangler-accounts save <name> — snapshot current Wrangler config as a profile
wrangler-accounts sync <name> — refresh a specific profile from the current login
wrangler-accounts sync-default — refresh the default profile
wrangler-accounts login <name> — fresh isolated OAuth login
wrangler-accounts remove <name> — delete a profile (works for both OAuth and token profiles)
Clean up stale shadow HOMEs
wrangler-accounts gc [--older-than 1h] — removes wa-* directories under $TMPDIR older than the threshold (default 1h). Safe to run at any time.
Common Recipes
These are the patterns the user is most likely asking about when they mention "Cloudflare accounts", "wrangler", or "multi-account deploys". Pick the one that matches intent.
User wants: deploy a worker to a specific account
wrangler-accounts --profile work deploy
Or, when the user will be on this account for a while:
wrangler-accounts default work
wrangler-accounts deploy
wrangler-accounts deploy --env staging
User wants: tail production logs on one account while developing on another
wrangler-accounts --profile work tail my-worker --format pretty
wrangler-accounts --profile personal dev
The two shells each get their own shadow HOME, so there's no global state for the other to clobber.
User wants: run a deploy script / npm script / Makefile against a specific account
wrangler-accounts exec work -- npm run deploy
wrangler-accounts exec work -- make release
wrangler-accounts exec work -- bash scripts/deploy.sh
Anything inside the subshell that calls wrangler (directly, via npx, via pnpm, via a package.json script) automatically uses the work profile.
User wants: set up a new Cloudflare account from scratch
wrangler-accounts login new-account
wrangler-accounts whoami --profile new-account
wrangler-accounts list
The login flow runs inside an isolated shadow HOME, so the user's real ~/.wrangler/config/default.toml is never touched.
⚠️ login is destructive. It opens a browser, requires the user to click "Authorize" interactively, and OVERWRITES the named profile. As of 1.4.0, wrangler-accounts login <name> refuses to run if (a) stdin is not a TTY, or (b) the profile already exists and looks healthy — both unless you pass --force. Never run login to "verify" or "refresh" a profile — see the antipattern below.
❌ Antipattern: running login to verify a profile works
This is wrong:
wrangler-accounts login Xdreamstar2025
Reasons:
login is destructive — it overwrites the saved profile with a brand new OAuth flow.
login requires a browser and an interactive terminal — it cannot complete in a Bash sub-shell, CI runner, or sub-agent context. The command will hang waiting for the user.
- The Cloudflare access token in a healthy profile auto-refreshes via
refresh_token — there is nothing to "log in to" when the profile already works.
Use one of these instead:
wrangler-accounts whoami --profile Xdreamstar2025
wrangler-accounts list --deep
wrangler-accounts list
Only fall back to wrangler-accounts login <name> when:
- The profile does not exist yet (creating a new account profile from scratch)
- The profile shows
EXPIRED (truly expired, no refresh_token left) — see STATUS table above
list --deep returns ✗ with "Not logged in" / "refresh token may be revoked" (server-side revocation)
- The user explicitly says "re-authenticate this profile" / "log me in again"
User wants: check which account a profile is tied to, without running wrangler
wrangler-accounts whoami --profile <name>
wrangler-accounts whoami --profile <name> --json
Returns the email + account ID from the saved meta.json. No network call.
User wants: swap between many accounts quickly in one shell
Use default as a "current" setting:
wrangler-accounts default work
wrangler-accounts deploy
wrangler-accounts default personal
wrangler-accounts dev
Or use positional shorthand inline:
wrangler-accounts work deploy
wrangler-accounts personal dev
User wants: run wrangler in CI with multiple accounts
Don't use wrangler-accounts in CI. Use native env vars:
CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN=<token-with-workers-deploy-scope>
CLOUDFLARE_ACCOUNT_ID=<account-id>
wrangler deploy
wrangler-accounts is for local developer OAuth sessions. CI should use long-lived API tokens directly with plain wrangler. Recommend this even if the user asks to use wrangler-accounts in CI.
Troubleshooting
"Profile 'X' has expired Wrangler OAuth credentials and no refresh_token to renew them"
The saved OAuth access_token is past its expiration_time AND there is no refresh_token in the profile config (no offline_access scope at login time, or the token was revoked). The profile is genuinely broken; only re-authenticating fixes it:
wrangler-accounts login <name>
This overwrites the existing profile with a fresh OAuth session. Any saved metadata (identity, etc.) is re-verified.
Note: If you see this error in 1.5.0 or earlier, you may be hitting a known regression: any profile whose access_token had passed expiration was blocked even when a refresh_token was present. Upgrade to 1.5.1+ — wrangler itself silently refreshes those tokens on the next call, so wrangler-accounts no longer pre-flights against expiration_time alone.
"No profile specified. Options: ..."
The user ran wrangler-accounts <wrangler-args> without a resolvable profile. Fix one of:
wrangler-accounts --profile <name> <args>
WRANGLER_PROFILE=<name> wrangler-accounts <args>
wrangler-accounts default <name>
1.6.0+: if CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN and CLOUDFLARE_ACCOUNT_ID are both present in the environment, this error no longer fires — the tool runs in anonymous-token mode automatically.
"Profile not found: X"
The profile name doesn't exist in profilesDir. Check what's saved:
wrangler-accounts list
Create it with wrangler-accounts login <name> or copy an existing Wrangler login with wrangler-accounts save <name>.
Inside wrangler-accounts exec, cd ~ lands in a weird tmpdir
Expected. Inside an exec session, $HOME is the shadow HOME. The real home is still accessible:
cd "$WRANGLER_ACCOUNT_REAL_HOME"
Or users can add a shell alias: alias realhome='cd "$WRANGLER_ACCOUNT_REAL_HOME"'.
Unsupported use command migration
wrangler-accounts use <name> no longer switches profiles. It exits with migration guidance because the old behavior was ambiguous and rewrote Wrangler's global config. Suggest the replacement based on intent:
- "I want this account to stick for a while" →
wrangler-accounts default <name>
- "Just this one command" →
wrangler-accounts --profile <name> <wrangler-args>
- "I want an interactive shell on that account" →
wrangler-accounts exec <name>
[ERROR] A request to the Cloudflare API ... Authentication error [code: 10000] with code: 7403 ("not authorized to access this service")
The OAuth token is fine but the URL contains the wrong account ID. wrangler caches the user's selected account in wrangler-account.json. If that cache file is shared across profiles, profile A's OAuth token gets paired with profile B's cached account ID, sending API calls to the wrong account. Symptoms:
deploy and secret put succeed (they don't put account ID in the URL path)
d1 execute --remote, r2 object get/put, anything else with /accounts/<id>/... in the URL fails with 7403
Fix path (in order):
- Are you on wrangler-accounts ≥ 1.2.2? Run
wrangler-accounts --version. If < 1.2.2, upgrade — earlier versions pointed WRANGLER_CACHE_DIR at a shared global path. 1.2.2 isolates the cache per profile.
- Clear the polluted shared cache (one-time, even after upgrading):
rm -f ~/.wrangler/cache/wrangler-account.json
rm -f ~/Library/Preferences/.wrangler/cache/wrangler-account.json
- Verify with
wrangler-accounts list --deep — the VERIFIED column for each profile should be ✓ ok. If ✗, the underlying OAuth session itself is broken; run wrangler-accounts login <name>.
- Defense in depth: set
CLOUDFLARE_ACCOUNT_ID=<correct-id> in the calling environment. wrangler reads this env var directly and bypasses the cache entirely. Useful for scripts or one-off recovery commands:
CLOUDFLARE_ACCOUNT_ID=<id> wrangler-accounts <profile> r2 object put ...
What to tell the user: "wrangler returned 7403 because it cached the wrong account ID alongside your OAuth token. This was a real bug in wrangler-accounts ≤ 1.2.1 (shared cache directory across profiles). Upgrade to 1.2.2 and clear the polluted cache."
"The OAuth config seems right, but the wrong account is being used"
Same root cause as the 7403 above. Default to the same fix path.
wrangler dev (or any --local command) shows stale data after switching profiles
Project-local state at <project>/.wrangler/state/ is NOT isolated per profile — wrangler's getLocalPersistencePath (cli.js:149025) hardcodes the path next to wrangler.toml and the only override is the --persist-to CLI flag (no env var hook). So if profile A's wrangler dev populated a local D1 emulation, then you switch to profile B and run wrangler dev in the same directory, B sees A's emulated rows.
This only affects --local simulations. --remote commands hit Cloudflare directly and are unaffected — that's the common case for d1/r2 work in a multi-account setup.
Two clean fixes:
- Use git worktrees (recommended for any serious multi-profile dev workflow):
git worktree add ../my-project-work main
git worktree add ../my-project-personal main
cd ../my-project-work && wrangler-accounts exec work
cd ../my-project-personal && wrangler-accounts exec personal
- Clear state manually before switching:
rm -rf .wrangler/state
wrangler-accounts --profile <new> dev
wrangler-accounts does not auto-isolate .wrangler/state/ because the only mechanism would be argv injection of --persist-to, which has too many failure modes (different subcommands accept persistTo at different positions, can't override user-supplied flags, path selection is ambiguous between per-profile and per-profile-per-project). The honest tradeoff is documented in the "What is and isn't isolated" table above — partial isolation with hidden gotchas would be worse than honest sharing.
Shell history / .zsh_history seems to grow when running exec
Intentional. By design the shadow HOME symlinks all top-level entries of real HOME except .wrangler, so shell history writes pass through to the real file. This is a convenience bias, not a clean-room sandbox — the goal is that exec subshells feel like a normal terminal with a different Cloudflare account, not a jail.
Invariants the AI should rely on
- Real
~/.wrangler/config/default.toml is never written to by wrangler-accounts. If a user reports that it changed, something else touched it (e.g. a direct wrangler login outside wrangler-accounts).
- Two
wrangler-accounts --profile A and wrangler-accounts --profile B running in parallel never clobber each other on credentials OR account-id cache. Each gets its own mkdtemp shadow HOME, and each gets its own per-profile WRANGLER_CACHE_DIR (next to the profile's config.toml) so that wrangler's wrangler-account.json (which stores the selected Cloudflare account ID) is naturally isolated.
- OAuth token refresh inside a profile is automatic. The shadow HOME contains a symlink from
.wrangler/config/default.toml to the saved profile file, so Wrangler's in-place fs.writeFileSync during refreshToken() flows straight back to the profile.
wrangler-accounts <args> without a management subcommand forwards everything to wrangler verbatim, including --env, --dry-run, --json, and any wrangler-native flags. The only flags consumed by wrangler-accounts itself are the ones listed in "Paths and environment" below.
What is and isn't isolated
| State | Location | Isolated? |
|---|
OAuth credentials (config.toml) | shadow $HOME/.wrangler/config/default.toml → symlink to per-profile file | ✅ per profile |
Account-id cache (wrangler-account.json) | per-profile WRANGLER_CACHE_DIR (= <profilesDir>/<name>/cache/) | ✅ per profile |
Pages config cache (pages-config-cache.json) | same as above | ✅ per profile |
| Miniflare dev registry | WRANGLER_REGISTRY_PATH = $realHome/.wrangler/registry | ❌ shared on purpose (cross-profile worker discovery during local dev) |
| Wrangler debug logs | WRANGLER_LOG_PATH = $realHome/.wrangler/logs | ❌ shared (append-only, harmless) |
Project-local state (./.wrangler/state/, ./node_modules/.cache/wrangler) | inside the project directory | ❌ shared at project level (per-project, but not per-profile) |
cloudflared binary | CLOUDFLARED_PATH or ~/.wrangler/cloudflared/ | ❌ shared (binary, not account-scoped) |
| Shell history, npm cache, git config, ssh keys | symlinked through to real $HOME | ❌ shared by design (so exec subshells feel like a normal terminal) |
If a user is hitting a "wrong account" symptom and the credentials look right, the most likely culprit is project-local state in ./.wrangler/state/ — clear that and re-run.
CI guidance
For CI and deploy pipelines you have two options:
Option 1 — plain wrangler with env vars (simplest for CI):
CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN=<token>
CLOUDFLARE_ACCOUNT_ID=<account-id>
wrangler deploy
Option 2 — wrangler-accounts with a token profile (useful when you want the same CLI both locally and in CI):
wrangler-accounts token-add work "$CF_TOKEN" "$CF_ACCOUNT_ID"
wrangler-accounts --profile work deploy
Or use the anonymous pass-through (no profile needed if env vars are present):
CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN="$CF_TOKEN" CLOUDFLARE_ACCOUNT_ID="$CF_ACCOUNT_ID" wrangler-accounts deploy
wrangler-accounts is primarily a local developer convenience for juggling OAuth sessions on your workstation, but since 1.6.0 it also supports API token profiles for teams that want a consistent CLI interface across local and CI environments.
Paths and environment
--profile <name> / -p <name> — profile for this invocation (v1.0: -p means --profile)
--profiles <path> — profiles directory (long form only since v1.0)
-c, --config <path> — Wrangler config path
WRANGLER_PROFILE — profile to use when no --profile flag is given
WRANGLER_CONFIG_PATH, WRANGLER_ACCOUNTS_DIR, XDG_CONFIG_HOME — path overrides
Output conventions
Use --json when another tool needs to parse results. All v1.0 commands that produce structured data support --json.
Naming rules
Profile names: letters, numbers, dot, underscore, dash only. Names matching management subcommand names (exec, default, whoami, gc, login, token-add, list, status, save, sync, sync-default, remove, use, sync-active) cannot be reached via positional shorthand — use --profile <name> for those.
Deprecated
wrangler-accounts use <name> — unsupported compatibility entry; exits with migration guidance. Use default <name> for persistence, --profile <name> for one-shot commands, or exec <name> for an interactive shell.
wrangler-accounts sync-active — deprecated alias for sync-default.