A CI script for publishing open-source VS Code extensions to open-vsx.org.
A goal of Open VSX is to have extension maintainers publish their extensions according to the documentation. The first step we recommend is to open an issue with the extension owner. If the extension owner is unresponsive for some time, this repo (publish-extensions) can be used as a temporary workaround to esure the extension is published to Open VSX.
In the long-run it is better for extension owners to publish their own plugins because:
- Any future issues (features/bugs) with any published extensions in Open VSX will be directed to their original repo/source-control, and not confused with this repo
publish-extensions
. - Extensions published by official authors are shown within the Open VSX marketplace as such. Whereas extensions published via publish-extensions display a warning that the publisher (this repository) is not the official author.
- Extension owners who publish their own extensions get greater flexibility on the publishing/release process, therefore ensure more accuracy/stability. For instance, in some cases publish-extensions has build steps within this repository, which can cause some uploaded plugin versions to break (e.g. if a plugin build step changes).
To add an extension to this repo, add it to the extensions.json
file. You can do this directly via GitHub using its web editor, or for a way simpler approach, which makes sure your extension also goes in the right place in the file, use the following command:
node add-extension.js ext.id https://github.com/x/y --optional arg
All of the arguments are also valid options if you add the extension manually to the JSON file directly. You can find them in the extension-schema.json file.
See Publishing options below for a quick guide.
scripts
section in the package.json file to find such steps; usually they are named build
or similar. In case the build steps are included in the vscode:prepublish script, they are executed automatically, so it's not necessary to mention them explicitly. Otherwise, please include them in the prepublish
value, e.g. "prepublish": "npm run build"
.
Click the button below to start a Gitpod workspace where you can run the scripts contained in this repository:
The best way to add an extension here is to open this repository in Gitpod and add a new entry to extensions.json
. To test, run:
EXTENSIONS=rebornix.ruby SKIP_PUBLISH=true node publish-extensions.js
Notes:
- Simply replace
$REPOSITORY_URL
with the extension's actual repository URL
// Unique Open VSX extension ID in the form "<publisher>.<name>"
"rebornix.ruby": {
// Repository URL to clone and publish from. If the extension publishes `.vsix` files as release artifacts, this will determine the repo to fetch the releases from.
"repository": "https://github.com/redhat-developer/vscode-yaml"
},
The publishing job auto infers the latest version published to MS marketplace using vsce and then tries to resolve vsix file using GitHub releases or a commit to build associated with a version using tags and commits around the last updated date.
Every night at 03:03 UTC, a GitHub workflow goes through all entries in extensions.json
, and checks if it needs to be published to https://open-vsx.org or not.
The publishing process can be summarized like this:
git clone "repository"
- (
git checkout "checkout"
if a"checkout"
value is specified) npm install
(oryarn install
if ayarn.lock
file is detected in the repository)- (
"prepublish"
) - (
ovsx create-namespace "publisher"
if it doesn't already exist) ovsx publish
(with--yarn
if ayarn.lock
file was detected earlier)
See all ovsx
CLI options here.