We have made custom Umbraco templates that are available for use with dotnet new. The steps below will demonstrate the minimum amount of actions required to get you going and set up an Umbraco project from the command line using .NET templates.
Run dotnet new install Umbraco.Templates to install the project templates.
The solution is packaged up into the NuGet packageUmbraco.Templatesand can be installed into the dotnet CLI.
Once that is complete, you can see that Umbraco was added to the list of available projects types by running dotnet new --list:
Templates Short Name Language Tags
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Umbraco Project umbraco [C#] Web/CMS/Umbraco
Umbraco Package umbracopackage [C#] Web/CMS/Umbraco/Package/Plugin
In some cases the templates may silently fail to install (usually this is an issue with NuGet sources). If this occurs you can try specifying the NuGet source in the command by running dotnet new install Umbraco.Templates --nuget-source "https://api.nuget.org/v3/index.json".
To get help on a project template with dotnet new run the following command:
dotnet new umbraco -h
From that command's output, you will get a better understanding of what are the default template options, as well as those command-line flags specific to Umbraco that you can use (as seen below):
Umbraco Project (C#)
Author: Umbraco HQ
Description: An empty Umbraco project ready to get started.
Usage:
dotnet new umbraco [options] [template options]
Options:
-n, --name <name> The name for the output being created. If no name is specified, the name of the output directory is used.
-o, --output <output> Location to place the generated output.
--dry-run Displays a summary of what would happen if the given command line were run if it would result in a template
creation.
--force Forces content to be generated even if it would change existing files.
--no-update-check Disables checking for the template package updates when instantiating a template.
--project <project> The project that should be used for context evaluation.
-lang, --language <C#> Specifies the template language to instantiate.
--type <project> Specifies the template type to instantiate.
Template options:
-r, --release <Latest|LTS> The Umbraco release to use, either latest or latest long term supported
Type: choice
Latest The latest umbraco release
LTS The most recent long term supported version
Default: Latest
--use-https-redirect Adds code to Startup.cs to redirect HTTP to HTTPS and enables the UseHttps setting.
Type: bool
Default: false
-da, --use-delivery-api Enables the Delivery API
Type: bool
Default: false
--add-docker Adds a docker file to the project.
Type: bool
Default: false
--no-restore If specified, skips the automatic restore of the project on create.
Type: bool
Default: false
--exclude-gitignore Whether to exclude .gitignore from the generated template.
Type: bool
Default: false
--minimal-gitignore Whether to only include minimal (Umbraco specific) rules in the .gitignore.
Type: bool
Default: false
--connection-string <connection-string> Database connection string used by Umbraco.
Type: string
--connection-string-provider-name Database connection string provider name used by Umbraco.
<connection-string-provider-name> Type: string
Default: Microsoft.Data.SqlClient
--development-database-type <choice> Database type used by Umbraco for development.
Type: choice
None Do not configure a database for development.
SQLite Use embedded SQLite database.
LocalDB Use embedded LocalDB database (requires SQL Server Express with Advanced
Services).
Default: None
--friendly-name <friendly-name> Used to specify the name of the default admin user when using unattended install on
development (stored as plain text).
Type: string
--email <email> Used to specify the email of the default admin user when using unattended install on
development (stored as plain text).
Type: string
--password <password> Used to specify the password of the default admin user when using unattended install on
development (stored as plain text).
Type: string
--no-nodes-view-path <no-nodes-view-path> Path to a custom view presented with the Umbraco installation contains no published
content.
Type: string
-dm, --development-mode <choice> Choose the development mode to use for the project.
Type: choice
BackofficeDevelopment Enables backoffice development, allowing you to develop from
within the backoffice, this is the default behaviour.
IDEDevelopment Configures appsettings.Development.json to Development runtime
mode and SourceCodeAuto models builder mode, and configures appsettings.json to
Production runtime mode, Nothing models builder mode, and enables UseHttps
Default: BackofficeDevelopment
-mm, --models-mode <choice> Choose the models builder mode to use for the project. When development mode is set to
IDEDevelopment this only changes the models builder mode appsetttings.development.json
Type: choice
Default Let DevelopmentMode determine the models builder mode.
InMemoryAuto Generate models in memory, automatically updating when a content
type change, this means no need for app rebuild, however models are only available in
views.
SourceCodeManual Generate models as source code, only updating when requested
manually, this means a interaction and rebuild is required when content type(s) change,
however models are available in code.
SourceCodeAuto Generate models as source code, automatically updating when a
content type change, this means a rebuild is required when content type(s) change,
however models are available in code.
Nothing No models are generated, this is recommended for production assuming
generated models are used for development.
Default: Default
-sk, --starter-kit <choice> Choose a starter kit to install.
Type: choice
None No starter kit.
Umbraco.TheStarterKit The Umbraco starter kit.
Default: None
Create an Umbraco project
Create a new empty Umbraco solution:
dotnet new umbraco -n MyCustomUmbracoProject
You will now have a new project with the name MyCustomUmbracoProject, or the name you chose to use. The new project can be opened and run using your favorite IDE or you can continue using the CLI commands.
If you want to create a solution file as well you can run the commands below.
dotnet new slndotnet sln add MyCustomUmbracoProject
Run Umbraco
Navigate to the newly created project folder:
cd MyCustomUmbracoProject
Build and run the new Umbraco .Net Core project:
dotnet builddotnet run
The project is now running on the Kestrel server and has assigned a free available port to run it on. Look in the terminal window after the dotnet run command to see the URLs.
The next step is to run through the Umbraco CMS installation. If you chose to use MS SQL Server/Azure you will need to add your connection string during this setup process to get access to the Umbraco backoffice.