I need to send all my installed extensions to my colleagues. How can I export them?
The extension manager seems to do nothing... It won't install any extension.
I need to send all my installed extensions to my colleagues. How can I export them?
The extension manager seems to do nothing... It won't install any extension.
Automatic
If you are looking forward to an easy one-stop tool to do it for you, I would suggest you to look into the Settings Sync extension.
It will allow
Manual
Make sure you have the most current version of Visual Studio Code. If you install via a company portal, you might not have the most current version.
On machine A
Unix:
code --list-extensions | xargs -L 1 echo code --install-extension
Windows (PowerShell, e. g. using Visual Studio Code's integrated Terminal):
code --list-extensions | % { "code --install-extension $_" }
Copy and paste the echo output to machine B
Sample output
code --install-extension Angular.ng-template
code --install-extension DSKWRK.vscode-generate-getter-setter
code --install-extension EditorConfig.EditorConfig
code --install-extension HookyQR.beautify
Please make sure you have the code
command line installed. For more information, please visit Command Line Interface (CLI).
code --list-extensions | % { "code --install-extension $_" }
(I also edited this into the answer)
Mar 29, 2019 at 12:57
I've needed to do this myself a few times - especially when installing on another machine.
Common questions will give you the location of your folder
Visual Studio Code looks for extensions under your extensions folder .vscode/extensions. Depending on your platform it is located:
Windows %USERPROFILE%\.vscode\extensions
Mac ~/.vscode/extensions
Linux ~/.vscode/extensions
That should show you a list of the extensions.
I've also had success using Visual Studio Code Settings Sync Extension to sync settings to GitHub gist.
In the latest release of Visual Studio Code (May 2016), it is now possible to list the installed extensions on the command line:
code --list-extensions
bin
folder of the application installation. If you look at its content you will see it calls the main executable but telling it to execute the CLI instead.
Oct 9, 2017 at 9:42
/mnt/c/Program Files/Microsoft VS Code/bin/code.cmd: 1: /mnt/c/Program Files/Microsoft VS Code/bin/code.cmd: @echo: not found
. code.exe in wsl debian starts the programme and says Ignoring option list-extensions: not supported for code
..
I have developed an extension which will synchronise your all Visual Studio Code settings across multiple instances.
Key Features
It synchronises the
Detail Documentation Source
Visual Studio Code Sync ReadMe
Download here: Visual Studio Code Settings Sync
Machine A:
In the Visual Studio Code PowerShell terminal:
code --list-extensions > extensions.list
Machine B:
Copy extension.list to the machine B
In the Visual Studio Code PowerShell terminal:
cat extensions.list |% { code --install-extension $_}
code.cmd
instead of code
if you are getting a new window. code.cmd
is in the bin/
subdirectory of your vscode install folder. On Linux, run bin/code
(which is a shell script)
May 29 at 20:48
I used the following command to copy my extensions from Visual Studio Code to Visual Studio Code insiders:
code --list-extensions | xargs -L 1 code-insiders --install-extension
The argument -L 1
allows us to execute the command code-insiders --install-extension
once for each input line generated by code --list-extensions
.
init.sh
in my dotfiles repo. I first install extensions from a file and then write all currently installed extensions to the file. Only downside is I would have to delete the file if I want to remove an extension but it should work if I add one.
For Linux
On the old machine:
code --list-extensions > vscode-extensions.list
On the new machine:
cat vscode-extensions.list | xargs -L 1 code --install-extension
vscode-extensions.list
file must be copied from the old machine to the new machine.
Sep 25, 2019 at 8:41
If using bash, you can use the following commands:
Export extensions
code --list-extensions |
xargs -L 1 echo code --install-extension |
sed 's/$/ --force/' |
sed '$!s/$/ \&/' > install-extensions.sh
With bash alias:
# eve - export vscode extensions
alias eve="code --list-extensions |
xargs -L 1 echo code --install-extension |
sed 's/$/ --force/' |
sed '\$!s/$/ \&/' > install-extensions.sh"
Just run eve
.
Install extensions
sh install-extensions.sh
Dump extensions:
code --list-extensions > extensions.txt
Install extensions with Bash (Linux, OS X and WSL):
cat extensions.txt | xargs code --list-extensions {}
Install extensions on Windows with PowerShell:
cat extensions.txt |% { code --install-extension $_}
--list-extensions
, which doesn't install, so it should be something line --install-extension
but when changed to that it still doesn't work
Jan 29, 2020 at 13:39
Generate a Windows command file (batch) for installing extensions:
for /F "tokens=*" %i in ('code --list-extensions')
do @echo call code --install-extension %i >> install.cmd
https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/editor/extension-gallery#_workspace-recommended-extensions
A better way to share extension list is to create workspace-based extension set for your colleagues.
After generating a list of extensions via code --list-extensions | xargs -L 1 echo code --install-extension
(check your $PATH
contains Visual Studio Code entry C:\Program Files\Microsoft VS Code\bin\
before running code commands), run Extensions: Configure Recommended Extensions (Workspace Folder)
Visual Studio Code command (Ctrl + Shift + P) and put extensions into the generated .vscode/extensions.json
file:
{
"recommendations": [
"eg2.tslint",
"dbaeumer.vscode-eslint",
"msjsdiag.debugger-for-chrome"
]
}
Open the Visual Studio Code console and write:
code --list-extensions
(or code-insiders --list-extensions
if Visual Studio Code insider is installed)
Then share the command line with colleagues:
code --install-extension {ext1} --install-extension {ext2} --install-extension {extN}
replacing {ext1}
, {ext2}
, ... , {extN}
with the extension you listed
For Visual Studio Code insider: code-insiders --install-extension {ext1} ...
If they copy/paste it in Visual Studio Code command-line terminal, they'll install the shared extensions.
More information on command-line-extension-management.
How to export your Visual Studio Code extensions from the terminal. Here is git for that. Maybe this helps somebody.
Note: Unix-like systems only.
code --list-extensions | sed -e 's/^/code --install-extension /' > my_vscode_extensions.sh
less my_vscode_extesions.sh
Run your my_vscode_extensions.sh
using a Bash command:
bash my_vscode_extensions.sh
Benny's answer on Windows with the Linux subsystem:
code --list-extensions | wsl xargs -L 1 echo code --install-extension
There is an Extension Manager extension, that may help. It seems to allow to install a set of extensions specified in the settings.json
.
code --list-extensions > list
sed -i 's/.*/\"&\",/' list
Copy contents of file list
and add to file .vscode/extensions.json
in the "recommendations"
section.
If extensions.json
doesn't exist then create a file with the following contents
{
"recommendations": [
// Add content of file list here
]
}
Share the extensions.json
file and ask another user to add to the .vscode
folder. Visual Studio Code will prompt for installation of extensions.
Under windows typically I need to run
cd C:\Program Files\Microsoft VS Code\bin
code.cmd --list-extensions
What you don't do is run the code.exe directly under C:\Program Files\Microsoft VS Code\
Now there's a feature still in preview that allows you to sign in with a Microsoft or GitHub account and have your settings synced without any additional extension. It's pretty simple and straigh-forward. You can learn more here.
I opened the Visual Studio Code extensions folder and executed:
find * -maxdepth 2 -name "package.json" | xargs grep "name"
That gives you a list from which you can extract the extension names.
For those that are wondering how to copy your extensions from Visual Studio Code to Visual Studio Code insiders, use this modification of Benny's answer:
code --list-extensions | xargs -L 1 echo code-insiders --install-extension
If you intend to share workspace extensions configuration across a team, you should look into the Recommended Extensions feature of Visual Studio Code.
To generate this file, open the command pallet > Configure Recommended Extensions (Workspace Folder)
. From there, if you wanted to get all of your current extensions and put them in here, you could use the --list-extensions
stuff mentioned in other answers, but add some AWK script to make it paste-able into a JSON array (you can get more or less advanced with this as you please - this is just a quick example):
code --list-extensions | awk '{ print "\""$0"\"\,"}'
The advantage of this method is that your team-wide workspace configuration can be checked into source control. With this file present in a project, when the project is opened Visual Studio Code will notify the user that there are recommended extensions to install (if they don't already have them) and can install them all with a single button press.
If you would like to transfer all the extensions from code
to code-insiders
or vice versa, here is what worked for me from Git Bash.
code --list-extensions | xargs -L 1 code-insiders --install-extension
This will install all the missing extensions and skip the installed ones. After that, you will need to close and reopen Visual Studio Code.
Similarly, you can transfer extensions from code-insiders
to code
with the following:
code-insiders --list-extensions | xargs -L 1 code --install-extension
On Windows, using a powershell script. This returns a "FriendlyName" which better reflects the name as it will appear in the Visual Studio Code UI (which code --list-extensions
doesn't do):
<#
.SYNOPSIS
Lists installed Visual Studio Code Extensions in a friendly format.
.DESCRIPTION
Lists installed Visual Studio Code Extensions in a friendly format.
.INPUTS
None. You cannot pipe objects to this.
.OUTPUTS
A list of installed Visual Studio Code Extensions in a friendly format.
.EXAMPLE
PS> .\List-Extensions.ps1
.NOTES
Author: John Bentley
Version: 2022-07-11 18:55
Latest at: [How can you export the Visual Studio Code extension list?
> John Bentley's Answer]
(https://stackoverflow.com/a/72929878/872154)
#>
# Change to your directory
$packages = Get-ChildItem C:/Users/John/.vscode/extensions/*/package.json
Function Out-JsonItem($File) {
$json = Get-Content $File | ConvertFrom-Json
$extensionMetaData = [PSCustomObject]@{
# This is the name that appears in the Visual Studio Code UI,
# Extensions Tab
FriendlyName =
if ($json.displayName) { $json.displayName } else { $json.name }
# Name = $json.name
PublisherAndName = $json.publisher + '.' + $json.name
}
return $extensionMetaData
}
$extensions = ($packages | ForEach-Object { Out-JsonItem -File $_ })
$extensions.GetEnumerator() | Sort-Object {$_.FriendlyName}
# Alternate sorting (Same order as `code --list-extensions`).
# $extensions.GetEnumerator() | Sort-Object {$_.PublisherAndName}
Example output:
FriendlyName PublisherAndName
------------ ----------------
[Deprecated] Debugger for Chrome msjsdiag.debugger-for-chrome
%displayName% ms-vscode-remote.remote-wsl
Apache Conf mrmlnc.vscode-apache
Apache Conf Snippets eiminsasete.apacheconf-snippets
Auto Close Tag formulahendry.auto-close-tag
Beautify HookyQR.beautify
Blank Line Organizer rintoj.blank-line-organizer
change-case wmaurer.change-case
Character Count stevensona.character-count
...
Word Count ms-vscode.wordcount
Word Count OliverKovacs.word-count
XML redhat.vscode-xml
XML Tools DotJoshJohnson.xml
XML Tools qub.qub-xml-vscode
XPath Notebook for Visual Studio Code deltaxml.xpath-notebook
XSLT/XPath for Visual Studio Code deltaxml.xslt-xpath
Instructions:
List-Extensions.ps1
somewhere (Windows only).$packages = Get-ChildItem C:/Users/John/.vscode/extensions/*/package.json
to point to your directory (change the user name).List-Extensions.ps1
(the Set-Location
command might help here)..\List-Extensions.ps1
For Linux/Mac only, export the installed Visual Studio Code extensions in the form of an installation script. It's a Z shell (Zsh) script, but it may run in Bash as well.
https://gist.github.com/jvlad/6c92178bbfd1906b7d83c69780ee4630
.vsix file
and distribute this file. How to do this is described here stackoverflow.com/questions/58513266/…