Manage multiple runtime versions with a single CLI tool, extendable via plugins - docs at asdf-vm.com
asdf is a CLI tool that can manage multiple language runtime versions on a per-project basis. It is like gvm
, nvm
, rbenv
& pyenv
(and more) all in one! Simply install your language's plugin!
- single CLI for multiple languages
- consistent commands to manage all your languages
- single global config keeping defaults in one place
- single
.tool-versions
config file per project - support for existing config files
.node-version
,.nvmrc
,.ruby-version
for easy migration - automatically switches runtime versions as you traverse your directories
- simple plugin system to add support for your language of choice
- shell completion available for common shells (Bash, Zsh, Fish, Elvish)
Please head over to the documentation site for more information!
- Getting Started
- All Commands
- All Plugins
- Create a Plugin with our asdf-plugin-template
- asdf GitHub Actions
See CONTRIBUTING.md in the repo or the Contributing section on the docs site.
- FAQ
-
GitHub Issues: report a bug or raise a feature request to the
asdf
core team -
StackOverflow Tag: see existing Q&A for
asdf
. Some of the core team watch this tag in addition to our helpful community
Once upon a time there was a programming language
There were many versions of it
So people wrote a version manager for it
To switch between versions for projects
Different, old, new.Then there came more programming languages
So there came more version managers
And many commands for themI installed a lot of them
I learnt a lot of commandsThen I said, just one more version manager
Which I will write insteadSo, there came another version manager
asdf version manager - https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdfA version manager so extendable
for which anyone can create a plugin
To support their favourite language
No more installing more version managers
Or learning more commands
This was the mail I wrote to a few friends to tell them about the project. Thanks to @roshanvid for suggesting that this go into the readme@HashNuke