Reputation: 8107
How is it possible to export all Visual Studio Code settings and plugins and import them to another machine?
Upvotes: 469
Views: 338405
Reputation: 89
Settings Sync is not available for VSC anymore. What I did and recommend is:
then in the other VSC environment you import the settings and extensions
This imports your sett
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 4883
VS Code provides 2 options to take care your settings. One is import/Export and other is Sync settings with github profile.
Follow below steps to Export VS code settings
To import, choose 'Profiles: Import' from Command Palette
Upvotes: 43
Reputation: 10459
There is an extension for Visual Studio Code, called Settings Sync.
It synchronises your settings by gist (Gist by GitHub). It works the same as the Atom.io extension called settings-sync.
UPDATE:
This feature is now built into VS Code, it is worth switching to the official feature. (https://stackoverflow.com/a/64035356/2029818)
You can now sync all your settings across devices with VSCode's built-in Settings Sync. It's found under Code > Preferences > Turn on Settings Sync...
Upvotes: 245
Reputation: 3423
Similar to the answer given by Big Rich you can do the following:
$ code --list-extensions | xargs -L 1 echo code --install-extension
This will list out your extensions with the command to install them so you can just copy and paste the entire output into your other machine:
Example:
code --install-extension EditorConfig.EditorConfig
code --install-extension aaron-bond.better-comments
code --install-extension christian-kohler.npm-intellisense
code --install-extension christian-kohler.path-intellisense
code --install-extension CoenraadS.bracket-pair-colorizer
It is taken from the answer given here.
Note: Make sure you have added VS Code to your path beforehand. On mac you can do the following:
Upvotes: 60
Reputation: 21
Enable Portable Mode
Portable Mode instructs Visual Studio Code to store all its configuration and plugins in a specific directory (called data/ in Windows and Linux and code-portable-data in macOS).
At any time you could copy the data directory and copy it on another installation.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 21
This is my syncing configuration repo for VSCodium (for Linux only). If you use VSCode, just replace the codium
with code
and the syncing will be fine.
https://github.com/vanvuvuong/codium_configuration
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1074295
With the current version of Visual Studio Code as of this writing (1.22.1), you can find your settings in:
~/.config/Code/User
on Linux%APPDATA%\Code\User
(C:\Users\username\AppData\Roaming\Code\User
) on Windows~/Library/Application Support/Code/User/
on Mac OS XThe files are settings.json
and keybindings.json
. Simply copy them to the target machine.
~/.vscode/extensions
on Linux and Mac OS X%USERPROFILE%\.vscode\extensions
(C:\Users\username\.vscode\extensions
) on Windows (i.e., essentially the same place as on Linux and Mac OS X)Alternately, just go to the Extensions, show installed extensions, and install those on your target installation. For me, copying the extensions worked just fine, but it may be extension-specific, particularly if moving between platforms, depending on what the extension does.
Upvotes: 536
Reputation: 2573
For those looking for an export option for Visual Studio (not Code), use Tools menu, select "Export selected environment settings"
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 884
Your user settings are in ~/Library/Application\ Support/Code/User
.
If you're not concerned about synchronising and it's a one-time thing, you can just copy the files keybindings.json
and settings.json
to the corresponding folder on your new machine.
Your extensions are in the ~/.vscode
folder. Most extensions aren't using any native bindings and they should be working properly when copied over.
You can manually reinstall those who do not.
Upvotes: 17
Reputation: 769
You can now synchronise all your settings across devices with Visual Studio Code's built-in Settings Sync. It's found under menu File → Preferences → Turn on Settings Sync...
Read more about it in the official documentation here.
Upvotes: 57
Reputation: 1388
Often there are questions about the Java settings in Visual Studio Code. This is a big question and can involve advanced user knowledge to accomplish. But there is simple way to get the existing Java settings from Visual Studio Code and copy these setting for use on another PC. This post is using recent versions of Visual Studio Code and JDK in mid-December 2020.
There are several screen shots (below) that accompany this post which should provide enough information for the visual learners.
First things first, open Visual Studio Code and either open an existing Java folder-file or create a new Java file in Visual Studio Code. Then look at the lower right corner of Visual Studio Code (on the blue command bar). The Visual Studio Code should be displaying an icon showing the version of the Java Standard Edition (Java SE) being used. The version being on this PC today is JavaSE-15. (link 1)
Click on that icon (JAVASE-15
) which then opens a new window named "java.configuration.runtimes
". There should be two tabs below this name: User
and Workspace
. Below these tabs is a link named, "Edit in settings.json
". Click on that link. (Link 2)
Two json
files should then open: Default settings
and settings.json
. This post only focuses on the "settings.json
" file.
The settings.json
file shows various settings used for coding different programming languages (Python, R, and Java). Near the bottom of the settings.json
file shows the settings this User uses in Visual Studio Code for programming Java.
These Java settings are the settings that can be "backed up" - meaning these settings get copied and pasted to another PC for creating a Java programming environment similar to the Java programming environment on this PC. (Link 3)
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 1426
I'm preferred my own way to synchronize all Visual Studio Code extensions between laptops, using .dotfiles
and small script to perform updates automatically. This way helps me every time when I want to install all extensions I have without any single mouse activity in Visual Studio Code after installing (via Homebrew).
So I just write each new added extension to .txt file stored at my .dotfiles
folder. After that I pull master branch on another laptop to get up-to-date file with all extensions.
Using the script, which Big Rich had written before, with one more change, I can totally synchronise all extensions almost automatically.
cat dart-extensions.txt | xargs -L 1 code --install-extension
And also there is one more way to automate that process. Here you can add a script which looks up a Visual Studio Code extension in realtime and each time when you take a diff between the code --list-extensions
command and your .txt file in .dotfiles
, you can easily update your file and push it to your remote repository.
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 541
I've made a Python script for exporting Visual Studio Code settings into a single ZIP file:
https://gist.github.com/wonderbeyond/661c686b64cb0cabb77a43b49b16b26e
You can upload the ZIP file to external storage.
$ vsc-settings.py export
Exporting vsc settings:
created a temporary dump dir /tmp/tmpf88wo142
generating extensions list
copying /home/wonder/.config/Code/User/settings.json
copying /home/wonder/.config/Code/User/keybindings.json
copying /home/wonder/.config/Code/User/projects.json
copying /home/wonder/.config/Code/User/snippets
adding: snippets/ (stored 0%)
adding: snippets/go.json (deflated 56%)
adding: projects.json (deflated 67%)
adding: extensions.txt (deflated 40%)
adding: keybindings.json (deflated 81%)
adding: settings.json (deflated 59%)
VSC settings exported into /home/wonder/vsc-settings-2019-02-25-171337.zip
$ unzip -l /home/wonder/vsc-settings-2019-02-25-171337.zip
Archive: /home/wonder/vsc-settings-2019-02-25-171337.zip
Length Date Time Name
--------- ---------- ----- ----
0 2019-02-25 17:13 snippets/
942 2019-02-25 17:13 snippets/go.json
519 2019-02-25 17:13 projects.json
471 2019-02-25 17:13 extensions.txt
2429 2019-02-25 17:13 keybindings.json
2224 2019-02-25 17:13 settings.json
--------- -------
6585 6 files
PS: You may implement the vsc-settings.py import
subcommand for me.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 6025
For posterity, this post mentions,
in the latest release of Visual Studio Code (May 2016) it is now possible to list the installed extension in the command line
code --list-extensions
On Mac, execute something like:
"/Applications/Visual Studio Code.app//Contents/Resources/app/bin/code" --list-extensions
To install, use:
--install-extension <ext> //see 'code --help'
Upvotes: 50