The Home repository is the starting point for people to learn about NuGet, the project. If you're new to NuGet, and want to add packages to your own projects, check our docs. This repo contains pointers to the various GitHub repositories used by NuGet and allows folks to learn more about what's coming in NuGet.
NuGet is being actively developed by the .NET Foundation. NuGet is the package manager for the Microsoft development platform including .NET. The NuGet client tools provide the ability to produce and consume packages. The NuGet Gallery is the central package repository used by all package authors and consumers and has a live deployment at www.nuget.org.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
This repo contains design proposals for NuGet. It focuses on designs for the NuGet client tooling, NuGet.org public repository, and NuGet Package Manager inside Visual Studio.
The NuGet Docs are the ideal place to start if you are new to NuGet. They are categorized in 3 broader topics:
- Consume NuGet packages in your projects;
- Create NuGet packages to learn about packaging and publishing your own NuGet Packages;
- Contribute to NuGet gives an overview of how you can contribute to the various NuGet projects.
The NuGet Blog is where we announce new features, write engineering blog posts, demonstrate proof-of-concepts and features under development.
There are many ways in which you can participate in the project, for example:
- Submit bugs and feature requests, and help us verify as they are checked in
- Review NuGet proposals
- Review the documentation and make pull requests for anything from typos to new content
If you are interested in fixing issues and contributing directly to the code base, please see the document Contribute To NuGet, which covers the following:
- How to build and run from source
- The development workflow, including debugging and running tests
- Coding guidelines
- Submitting pull requests
- Finding an issue to work on
- And much more!
Note: Not all of our repositories are open for contribution yet. Ping us if unsure.
- Ask a question on Stack Overflow
- Request a new feature
- Upvote popular feature requests
- File an issue
- Follow @nuget and let us know what you think!
If you're having trouble with the NuGet.org Website, file a bug on the NuGet Gallery Issue Tracker.
If you're having trouble with the NuGet client tools (the Visual Studio extension, NuGet.exe command line tool, etc.), file a bug on NuGet Home.
- NuGet client tools - this repo contains the following clients:
- NuGet command-line tool 4.0 and higher
- Visual Studio Extension (2017 and later)
- PowerShell CmdLets
NuGet.org is backed by several core services:
- NuGetGallery - the current NuGet Gallery
- NuGet.Jobs - NuGet's back-end jobs and services
- ServerCommon - shared libraries for running NuGet.org
NuGet.Server is a lightweight standalone NuGet server.
NuGet Documentation contains NuGet's documentation.
A full list of all the repos is available as well.
We dogfood all of our stuff. NuGet uses NuGet to build NuGet, so to speak. All of our NuGet packages, which you can use in your own projects as well, are available from our NuGet.org profile page.