-bc. ### Pasting the following lines at a shell prompt will allow Arvados SDKs
-### to authenticate to your account, youraddress@example.com
-read ARVADOS_API_TOKEN <<EOF
-2jv9346o396exampledonotuseexampledonotuseexes7j1ld
-EOF
-export ARVADOS_API_TOKEN ARVADOS_API_HOST={{ site.arvados_api_host }}
-
-* The @read@ command takes the contents of stdin and puts it into the shell variable named on the command line.
-* The @<<EOF@ notation means read each line on stdin and pipe it to the command, terminating on reading the line @EOF@.
-* The @export@ command puts a local shell variable into the environment that will be inherited by child processes (e.g. the @arv@ client).
-
-h2. Setting the environment manually
-
-Alternately, look for the column *api_token* contains the actual token string that you will use. Copy the value of *api_token* for the first row onto the clipboard.
-
-<notextile>
-<pre><code>$ <span class="userinput">export ARVADOS_API_HOST={{ site.arvados_api_host }}</span>
-$ <span class="userinput">export ARVADOS_API_TOKEN=2jv9346o3966345u7ueuim7a1zaaoueo3w90tzq3gx0es7j1ld</span>
-</code></pre>
-</notextile>
-
-* @ARVADOS_API_HOST@ tells @arv@ which host to connect to
-* @ARVADOS_API_TOKEN@ is the secret key used by the Arvados API server to authenticate access.
-
-If you are connecting to a development instance with a unverified/self-signed SSL certificate, set this variable to skip SSL validation:
-
-<notextile>
-<pre><code>$ <span class="userinput">export ARVADOS_API_HOST_INSECURE=1
-</code></pre>
-</notextile>