Chocolatey is a package manager for Windows (like apt-get but for Windows). It was designed to be a decentralized framework for quickly installing applications and tools that you need. It is built on the NuGet infrastructure currently using PowerShell as its focus for delivering packages from the distros to your door, err computer. Chocolatey is brought to you by the work and inspiration of the community, the work and thankless nights of the [Chocolatey Team](https://github.com/orgs/chocolatey/people), with Rob heading up the direction. You can host your own sources and add them to Chocolatey, you can extend Chocolatey's capabilities, and folks, it's only going to get better. ### Information - [Chocolatey Website and Community Package Repository](https://community.chocolatey.org) - [Mailing List](http://groups.google.com/group/chocolatey) / [Release Announcements Only Mailing List](https://groups.google.com/group/chocolatey-announce) / [Build Status Mailing List](http://groups.google.com/group/chocolatey-build-status) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/chocolateynuget) / [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/ChocolateySoftware) / [GitHub](https://github.com/chocolatey) - [Blog](https://blog.chocolatey.org/) / [Newsletter](https://chocolatey.us8.list-manage1.com/subscribe?u=86a6d80146a0da7f2223712e4&id=73b018498d) - [Documentation](https://docs.chocolatey.org/en-us/) / [Support](https://chocolatey.org/support) ### Commands There are quite a few commands you can call - you should check out the [command reference](https://docs.chocolatey.org/en-us/choco/commands). Here are the most common: - Help - choco -? or choco command -? - Search - choco search something - List - choco list -lo - Config - choco config list - Install - choco install baretail - Pin - choco pin windirstat - Outdated - choco outdated - Upgrade - choco upgrade baretail - Uninstall - choco uninstall baretail #### Alternative installation sources: - Install ruby gem - choco install compass -source ruby - Install python egg - choco install sphynx -source python - Install windows feature - choco install IIS -source windowsfeatures #### More For more advanced commands and switches, use `choco -?` or `choco command -h`. You can also look at the [command reference](https://docs.chocolatey.org/en-us/choco/commands), including how you can force a package to install the x86 version of a package. ### Create Packages? We have some great guidance on how to do that. Where? I'll give you a hint, it rhymes with socks! [Docs!](https://docs.chocolatey.org/en-us/create/create-packages) In that mess there is a link to the [PowerShell Chocolatey module reference](https://docs.chocolatey.org/en-us/create/functions).


Keywords
apt-get, chocolatey, machine, nuget, repository, c-sharp, hacktoberfest, package-management, package-manager, package-manager-tool, powershell, software, software-management, softwareautomation, windows, windows-server
License
Other
Install
Install-Package chocolatey -Version 2.2.2

Documentation

Chocolatey - like yum or apt-get, but for Windows

You can just call me choco.

Chocolatey Logo

Docker Image Version (latest semver) Project Stats Coverage Status

Build Status

GitHub Action
GitHub Workflow Status (branch)

Chat Room

Come join in the conversation about Chocolatey in our Community Chat Room.

Discord

Please make sure you've read over and agree with the etiquette regarding communication.

Support Chocolatey!

See Chocolatey In Action

Chocolatey FOSS install showing tab completion and refreshenv (a way to update environment variables without restarting your shell):

install

Chocolatey Pro showing private CDN download cache and virus scan protection:

install w/pro

Etiquette Regarding Communication

If you are an open source user requesting support, please remember that most folks in the Chocolatey community are volunteers that have lives outside of open source and are not paid to ensure things work for you, so please be considerate of others' time when you are asking for things. Many of us have families that also need time as well and only have so much time to give on a daily basis. A little consideration and patience can go a long way. After all, you are using a pretty good tool without cost. It may not be perfect (yet), and we know that.

If you are using a commercial edition of Chocolatey, you have different terms! Please see support.

Information

Documentation

Please see the docs

Give choco.exe -? a shot (or choco.exe -h). For specific commands, add the command and then the help switch e.g. choco.exe install -h.

Requirements

License / Credits

Apache 2.0 - see LICENSE and NOTICE files.

Submitting Issues

submitting issues

  1. Start with Troubleshooting and the FAQ to see if your question or issue already has an answer.
  2. If not found or resolved, please follow one of the following avenues:
    • If you are a licensed customer, please see support. You can also log an issue to Licensed Issues and we will submit issues to all other places on your behalf. Another avenue is to use email support to have us submit tickets and other avenues on your behalf (allowing you to maintain privacy).
    • If it is an enhancement request or issue with the website (the community package repository aka https://community.chocolatey.org), please submit the issue to the Chocolatey.org repo.
    • If you have found an issue with the GUI (Chocolatey GUI) or you want to submit an enhancement, please see the ChocolateyGUI repository.
    • If you have found an issue with the client (choco.exe), you are in the right place. Keep reading below.

Observe the following help for submitting an issue:

Prerequisites:

  • The issue has to do with choco itself and is not a package or website issue.
  • Please check to see if your issue already exists with a quick search of the issues. Start with one relevant term and then add if you get too many results.
  • You are not submitting an "Enhancement". Enhancements should observe CONTRIBUTING guidelines.
  • You are not submitting a question - questions are better served as emails or Community Chat questions.
  • Please make sure you've read over and agree with the etiquette regarding communication.

Submitting a ticket:

  • We'll need debug and verbose output, so please run and capture the log with -dv or --debug --verbose. You can submit that with the issue or create a gist and link it.
  • Please note that the debug/verbose output for some commands may have sensitive data (passwords or API keys) related to Chocolatey, so please remove those if they are there prior to submitting the issue.
  • choco.exe logs to a file in $env:ChocolateyInstall\log\. You can grab the specific log output from there so you don't have to capture or redirect screen output. Please limit the amount included to just the command run (the log is appended to with every command).
  • Please save the log output in a gist (save the file as log.sh) and link to the gist from the issue. Feel free to create it as secret so it doesn't fill up against your public gists. Anyone with a direct link can still get to secret gists. If you accidentally include secret information in your gist, please delete it and create a new one (gist history can be seen by anyone) and update the link in the ticket (issue history is not retained except by email - deleting the gist ensures that no one can get to it). Using gists this way also keeps accidental secrets from being shared in the ticket in the first place as well.
  • We'll need the entire log output from the run, so please don't limit it down to areas you feel are relevant. You may miss some important details we'll need to know. This will help expedite issue triage.
  • It's helpful to include the version of choco, the version of the OS, and the version of PowerShell (Posh) - the debug script should capture all of those pieces of information.
  • Include screenshots and/or animated gifs whenever possible, they help show us exactly what the problem is.

Contributing

If you would like to contribute code or help squash a bug or two, that's awesome. Please familiarize yourself with CONTRIBUTING.

Committers

Committers, you should be very familiar with COMMITTERS.

Compiling / Building Source

There is a build.bat/build.sh file that creates a necessary generated file named SolutionVersion.cs. It must be run at least once before Visual Studio will build.

Windows

Prerequisites:

  • .NET Framework 4.8+
  • Visual Studio 2019+
  • ReSharper is immensely helpful (and there is a .sln.DotSettings file to help with code conventions).

Build Process:

  • Run build.bat.

Running the build on Windows should produce an artifact that is tested and ready to be used.

Other Platforms

Prerequisites:
  • Install and configure Mono. Mono 6.6 or newer should work, see docker/Dockerfile.linux for the currently recommended version of Mono.
  • Install .NET 6.0 SDK or newer. This is used in the build scripts.
    • Linux systems; see Install .NET on Linux
    • Mac systems; see Install .NET on macOS
    • This is required for some Dotnet Global Tools used during the Cake build. The .NET Frameworks equivalent builds do not work on Mono.
  • If building from Git, then having Git 2.22+ installed is required.
  • MonoDevelop is helpful for working on source.
Before building:
  • Consider adding the following to your ~/.profile (or other relevant dot source file):
# Mono
# http://www.michaelruck.de/2010/03/solving-pkg-config-and-mono-35-profile.html
# https://cloudgen.wordpress.com/2013/03/06/configure-nant-to-run-under-mono-3-06-beta-for-mac-osx/
export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/opt/local/lib/pkgconfig:/Library/Frameworks/Mono.framework/Versions/Current/lib/pkgconfig:$PKG_CONFIG_PATH
  • Set your permissions correctly:
chmod +x build.sh
chmod +x zip.sh
Build Process:
  • Run ./build.sh.

Running the build on Mono produces an artifact similar to Windows but may have more rough edges. You may get a failure or two in the build script that can be safely ignored.

Installing on Other Platforms:

  1. Get a copy of the source code and build.
  2. Copy (or link) the contents of ./code_drop/temp/_PublishedApps/choco to your preferred install directory. On Linux, the preferred directory is /opt/chocolatey
  3. Export the ChocolateyInstall environment variable, pointing to the install directory the build output was copied too.
  4. Copy ./docker/choco_wrapper to a directory on the $PATH, rename to choco, and if the install directory is something else than /opt/chocolatey, then edit it to point to the correct path.

Credits

Chocolatey is brought to you by quite a few people and frameworks. See CREDITS (just LEGAL/Credits.md in the zip folder).