Awesome
@vscode/vsce
The Visual Studio Code Extension Manager
This tool assists in packaging and publishing Visual Studio Code extensions.
Read the Documentation on the VS Code website.
Requirements
Node.js at least 20.x.x
.
Linux
In order to save credentials safely, this project uses keytar
which uses libsecret
, which you may need to install before publishing extensions. Setting the VSCE_STORE=file
environment variable will revert back to the file credential store. Using the VSCE_PAT
environment variable will also avoid using keytar
.
Depending on your distribution, you will need to run the following command:
- Debian/Ubuntu:
sudo apt-get install libsecret-1-dev
- Alpine:
apk add libsecret
- Red Hat-based:
sudo yum install libsecret-devel
- Arch Linux:
sudo pacman -S libsecret
Usage
$ npx @vscode/vsce --version
@vscode/vsce
is meant to be mainly used as a command-line tool. It can also be used as a library since it exposes a small API. When using @vscode/vsce
as a library, be sure to sanitize any user input used in API calls to prevent security issues.
Supported package managers:
npm >=6
yarn >=1 <2
Configuration
You can configure the behavior of vsce
by using CLI flags (run vsce --help
to list them all). Example:
$ npx @vscode/vsce publish --baseImagesUrl https://my.custom/base/images/url
Or you can also set them in the package.json
, so that you avoid having to retype the common options again. Example:
// package.json
{
"vsce": {
"baseImagesUrl": "https://my.custom/base/images/url",
"dependencies": true,
"yarn": false
}
}
Development
First clone this repository, then:
$ npm install
$ npm run watch:build # or `watch:test` to also build tests
Once the watcher is up and running, you can run out of sources with:
$ node vsce
Tests can be executed with:
$ npm test
Note: Yarn is required to run the tests.