dotnet-install scripts reference
Name
dotnet-install.ps1
| dotnet-install.sh
- Script used to install the .NET SDK and the shared runtime.
Synopsis
Windows:
dotnet-install.ps1 [-Architecture <ARCHITECTURE>] [-AzureFeed]
[-Channel <CHANNEL>] [-DryRun] [-FeedCredential]
[-InstallDir <DIRECTORY>] [-JSonFile <JSONFILE>]
[-NoCdn] [-NoPath] [-ProxyAddress] [-ProxyBypassList <LIST_OF_URLS>]
[-ProxyUseDefaultCredentials] [-Quality <QUALITY>] [-Runtime <RUNTIME>]
[-SkipNonVersionedFiles] [-UncachedFeed] [-KeepZip] [-ZipPath <PATH>] [-Verbose]
[-Version <VERSION>]
Get-Help ./dotnet-install.ps1
Linux/macOS:
dotnet-install.sh [--architecture <ARCHITECTURE>] [--azure-feed]
[--channel <CHANNEL>] [--dry-run] [--feed-credential]
[--install-dir <DIRECTORY>] [--jsonfile <JSONFILE>]
[--no-cdn] [--no-path] [--quality <QUALITY>]
[--runtime <RUNTIME>] [--runtime-id <RID>]
[--skip-non-versioned-files] [--uncached-feed] [--keep-zip] [--zip-path <PATH>] [--verbose]
[--version <VERSION>]
dotnet-install.sh --help
The bash script also reads PowerShell switches, so you can use PowerShell switches with the script on Linux/macOS systems.
Description
The dotnet-install
scripts perform a non-admin installation of the .NET SDK, which includes the .NET CLI and the shared runtime. There are two scripts:
- A PowerShell script that works on Windows. For installation instructions, see Install on Windows.
- A bash script that works on Linux/macOS. For installation instructions, see Install on Linux and Install on macOS.
Note
.NET collects telemetry data. To learn more and how to opt out, see .NET SDK telemetry.
Purpose
The intended use of the scripts is for Continuous Integration (CI) scenarios, where:
The SDK needs to be installed without user interaction and without admin rights.
The SDK installation doesn't need to persist across multiple CI runs.
The typical sequence of events:
- CI is triggered.
- CI installs the SDK using one of these scripts.
- CI finishes its work and clears temporary data including the SDK installation.
To set up a development environment or to run apps, use the installers rather than these scripts.
Recommended version
We recommend that you use the stable version of the scripts:
- Bash (Linux/macOS): https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.sh
- PowerShell (Windows): https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.ps1
The source for the scripts is in the dotnet/install-scripts GitHub repository.
Script behavior
Both scripts have the same behavior. They download the ZIP/tarball file from the CLI build drops and proceed to install it in either the default location or in a location specified by -InstallDir|--install-dir
.
By default, the installation scripts download the SDK and install it. If you wish to only obtain the shared runtime, specify the -Runtime|--runtime
argument.
By default, the script adds the install location to the $PATH for the current session. Override this default behavior by specifying the -NoPath|--no-path
argument. The script doesn't set the DOTNET_ROOT
environment variable.
Important
The script doesn't add the install location to the user's PATH
environment variable, you must manually add it.
Before running the script, make sure that your operating system is supported. For more information, see Install .NET on Windows, Linux, and macOS.
You can install a specific version using the -Version|--version
argument. The version must be specified as a three-part version number, such as 2.1.0
. If the version isn't specified, the script installs the latest
version.
The install scripts do not update the registry on Windows. They just download the zipped binaries and copy them to a folder. If you want registry key values to be updated, use the .NET installers.
Options
-Architecture|--architecture <ARCHITECTURE>
Architecture of the .NET binaries to install. Possible values are
<auto>
,amd64
,x64
,x86
,arm64
,arm
,s390x
,ppc64le
, andriscv64
. The default value is<auto>
, which represents the currently running OS architecture.-AzureFeed|--azure-feed
For internal use only. Allows using a different storage to download SDK archives from. This parameter is only used if --no-cdn is false. The default is
https://dotnetcli.azureedge.net/dotnet
.-Channel|--channel <CHANNEL>
Specifies the source channel for the installation. The possible values are:
STS
: The most recent Standard Term Support release.LTS
: The most recent Long Term Support release.- Two-part version in A.B format, representing a specific release (for example,
3.1
or8.0
). - Three-part version in A.B.Cxx format, representing a specific SDK release (for example, 8.0.1xx or 8.0.2xx). Available since the 5.0 release.
The
version
parameter overrides thechannel
parameter when any version other thanlatest
is used.The default value is
LTS
. For more information on .NET support channels, see the .NET Support Policy page.-DryRun|--dry-run
If set, the script won't perform the installation. Instead, it displays what command line to use to consistently install the currently requested version of the .NET CLI. For example, if you specify version
latest
, it displays a link with the specific version so that this command can be used deterministically in a build script. It also displays the binary's location if you prefer to install or download it yourself.-FeedCredential|--feed-credential
Used as a query string to append to the Azure feed. It allows changing the URL to use non-public blob storage accounts.
--help
Prints out help for the script. Applies only to bash script. For PowerShell, use
Get-Help ./dotnet-install.ps1
.-InstallDir|--install-dir <DIRECTORY>
Specifies the installation path. The directory is created if it doesn't exist. The default value is %LocalAppData%\Microsoft\dotnet on Windows and $HOME/.dotnet on Linux/macOS. Binaries are placed directly in this directory.
-JSonFile|--jsonfile <JSONFILE>
Specifies a path to a global.json file that will be used to determine the SDK version. The global.json file must have a value for
sdk:version
.-NoCdn|--no-cdn
Disables downloading from the Azure Content Delivery Network (CDN) and uses the uncached feed directly.
-NoPath|--no-path
If set, the installation folder isn't exported to the path for the current session. By default, the script modifies the PATH, which makes the .NET CLI available immediately after install.
-ProxyAddress
If set, the installer uses the proxy when making web requests. (Only valid for Windows.)
-ProxyBypassList <LIST_OF_URLS>
If set with
ProxyAddress
, provides a list of comma-separated urls that will bypass the proxy. (Only valid for Windows.)-ProxyUseDefaultCredentials
If set, the installer uses the credentials of the current user when using proxy address. (Only valid for Windows.)
-Quality|--quality <QUALITY>
Downloads the latest build of the specified quality in the channel. The possible values are:
daily
,signed
,validated
,preview
, andGA
. Most users should usedaily
,preview
, orGA
qualities.The different quality values signal different stages of the release process of the SDK or Runtime installed.
daily
: The latest builds of the SDK or Runtime. They're built every day and aren't tested. They aren't recommended for production use but can often be used to test specific features or fixes immediately after they are merged into the product. These builds are from thedotnet/installer
repo, and so if you're looking for fixes fromdotnet/sdk
you must wait for code to flow and be merged from SDK to Installer before it appears in a daily build.signed
: Microsoft-signed builds that aren't validated or publicly released. Signed builds are candidates for validation, preview, and GA release. This quality level is not intended for public use.validated
: Builds that have had some internal testing done on them but are not yet released as preview or GA. This quality level is not intended for public use.preview
: The monthly public releases of the next version of .NET, intended for public use. Not recommended for production use. Intended to allow users to experiment and test the new major version before release.GA
: The final stable releases of the .NET SDK and Runtime. Intended for public use as well as production support.
The
--quality
option works only in combination with--channel
, but is not applicable for theSTS
andLTS
channels and will be ignored if one of those channels is used.For an SDK installation, use a
channel
value that is inA.B
orA.B.Cxx
format. For a runtime installation, usechannel
inA.B
format.Don't use both
version
andquality
parameters. Whenquality
is specified, the script determines the proper version on its own.Available since the 5.0 release.
-Runtime|--runtime <RUNTIME>
Installs just the shared runtime, not the entire SDK. The possible values are:
dotnet
: TheMicrosoft.NETCore.App
shared runtime.aspnetcore
: TheMicrosoft.AspNetCore.App
shared runtime.windowsdesktop
TheMicrosoft.WindowsDesktop.App
shared runtime.
--os <OPERATING_SYSTEM>
Specifies the operating system for which the tools are being installed. Possible values are:
osx
,macos
,linux
,linux-musl
,freebsd
.The parameter is optional and should only be used when it's required to override the operating system that is detected by the script.
-SharedRuntime|--shared-runtime
Note
This parameter is obsolete and may be removed in a future version of the script. The recommended alternative is the
-Runtime|--runtime
option.Installs just the shared runtime bits, not the entire SDK. This option is equivalent to specifying
-Runtime|--runtime dotnet
.-SkipNonVersionedFiles|--skip-non-versioned-files
Skips installing non-versioned files, such as dotnet.exe, if they already exist.
-UncachedFeed|--uncached-feed
For internal use only. Allows using a different storage to download SDK archives from. This parameter is only used if --no-cdn is true.
-KeepZip|--keep-zip
If set, the downloaded SDK archive is kept after installation.
-ZipPath|--zip-path <PATH>
If set, the downloaded SDK archive is stored at the specified path.
-Verbose|--verbose
Displays diagnostics information.
-Version|--version <VERSION>
Represents a specific build version. The possible values are:
latest
: Latest build on the channel (used with the-Channel
option).- Three-part version in X.Y.Z format representing a specific build version; supersedes the
-Channel
option. For example:2.0.0-preview2-006120
.
If not specified,
-Version
defaults tolatest
.
Examples
Install the latest long-term supported (LTS) version to the default location:
Windows:
./dotnet-install.ps1 -Channel LTS
macOS/Linux:
./dotnet-install.sh --channel LTS
Install the latest preview version of the 6.0.1xx SDK to the specified location:
Windows:
./dotnet-install.ps1 -Channel 6.0.1xx -Quality preview -InstallDir C:\cli
macOS/Linux:
./dotnet-install.sh --channel 6.0.1xx --quality preview --install-dir ~/cli
Install the 6.0.0 version of the shared runtime:
Windows:
./dotnet-install.ps1 -Runtime dotnet -Version 6.0.0
macOS/Linux:
./dotnet-install.sh --runtime dotnet --version 6.0.0
Obtain script and install the 6.0.2 version behind a corporate proxy (Windows only):
Invoke-WebRequest 'https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.ps1' -Proxy $env:HTTP_PROXY -ProxyUseDefaultCredentials -OutFile 'dotnet-install.ps1'; ./dotnet-install.ps1 -InstallDir '~/.dotnet' -Version '6.0.2' -Runtime 'dotnet' -ProxyAddress $env:HTTP_PROXY -ProxyUseDefaultCredentials;
Obtain script and install .NET CLI one-liner examples:
Windows:
# Run a separate PowerShell process because the script calls exit, so it will end the current PowerShell session. &powershell -NoProfile -ExecutionPolicy unrestricted -Command "[Net.ServicePointManager]::SecurityProtocol = [Net.SecurityProtocolType]::Tls12; &([scriptblock]::Create((Invoke-WebRequest -UseBasicParsing 'https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.ps1'))) <additional install-script args>"
macOS/Linux:
curl -sSL https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.sh | bash /dev/stdin <additional install-script args>
Set environment variables
Manually installing .NET doesn't add the environment variables system-wide, and generally only works for the session in which .NET was installed. There are two environment variables you should set for your operating system:
DOTNET_ROOT
This variable is set to the folder .NET was installed to, such as
$HOME/.dotnet
for Linux and macOS, and$HOME\.dotnet
in PowerShell for Windows.PATH
This variable should include both the
DOTNET_ROOT
folder and the user's .dotnet/tools folder. Generally this is$HOME/.dotnet/tools
on Linux and macOS, and$HOME\.dotnet\tools
in PowerShell on Windows.
Tip
For Linux and macOS, use the echo
command to set the variables in your shell profile, such as .bashrc:
echo 'export DOTNET_ROOT=$HOME/.dotnet' >> ~/.bashrc
echo 'export PATH=$PATH:$DOTNET_ROOT:$DOTNET_ROOT/tools' >> ~/.bashrc
Uninstall
There is no uninstall script. For information about manually uninstalling .NET, see How to remove the .NET Runtime and SDK.
Signature validation of dotnet-install.sh
Signature validation is an important security measure that helps ensure the authenticity and integrity of a script. By verifying the signature of a script, you can be sure that it has not been tampered with and that it comes from a trusted source.
Here is a step-by-step guide on how to verify the authenticity of the dotnet-install.sh
script using GPG:
- Install GPG: GPG (GNU Privacy Guard) is a free and open-source tool for encrypting and signing data. You can install it by following the instructions on the GPG website.
- Import our public key: Download the install-scripts public key file, and then import it into your GPG keyring by running the command
gpg --import dotnet-install.asc
. - Download the signature file: The signature file for our bash script is available at
https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.sig
. You can download it using a tool likewget
orcurl
. - Verify the signature: To verify the signature of our bash script, run the command
gpg --verify dotnet-install.sig dotnet-install.sh
. This will check the signature of thedotnet-install.sh
file against the signature in thedotnet-install.sig
file. - Check the result: If the signature is valid, you will see a message containing
Good signature from "Microsoft DevUXTeamPrague <[email protected]>"
. This means that the script has not been tampered with and can be trusted.
Preparing environment
Installing GPG and importing our public key is a one time operation.
sudo apt install gpg
wget https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.asc
gpg --import dotnet-install.asc
When successful, you should see output like the following:
gpg: directory '/home/<user>/.gnupg' created
gpg: keybox '/home/<user>/.gnupg/pubring.kbx' created
gpg: /home/<user>/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg: trustdb created
gpg: key B9CF1A51FC7D3ACF: public key "Microsoft DevUXTeamPrague <[email protected]>" imported
gpg: Total number processed: 1
gpg: imported: 1
Download and verification
With the key imported, you can now download the script and the signature, then verify the script matches the signature:
wget https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.sh
wget https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.sig
gpg --verify dotnet-install.sig dotnet-install.sh
When successful, you should see output like the following:
gpg: Signature made <datetime>
gpg: using RSA key B9CF1A51FC7D3ACF
gpg: Good signature from "Microsoft DevUXTeamPrague <[email protected]>" [unknown]
gpg: WARNING: This key is not certified with a trusted signature!
gpg: There is no indication that the signature belongs to the owner.
Primary key fingerprint: 2B93 0AB1 228D 11D5 D7F6 B6AC B9CF 1A51 FC7D 3ACF
The warning means that you don't trust the public key in the keyring, but the script is still verified. The exit code returned by the verification command should be 0
, indicating success.