Package Manifest

The package.manifest JSON file format is used to describe one or more custom Umbraco property editors, grid editors or parameter editors. This page outlines the file format and properties found in the JSON.

Sample Manifest

This is a sample manifest, it is always stored in a folder in /App_Plugins/{YourPackageName}, with the name package.manifest

{
    "name": "Suggestions",
    "version": "1.0.0 beta",
    "allowPackageTelemetry": true,
    "bundleOptions": "Default",
    "packageView": "/App_Plugins/Suggestions/suggestion-config.html",
    "propertyEditors": [
        {
            "alias": "Suggestions",
            "name": "Suggestions",
            "editor": {
                "view": "/App_Plugins/Suggestions/suggestion.html",
                "hideLabel": true,
                "valueType": "JSON",
                "supportsReadOnly": true
            }
        }
    ],
    "javascript": [
        "/App_Plugins/Suggestions/suggestion.controller.js"
    ]
}

Sample Manifest with Csharp

You can also register your files by implementing a IManifestFilter instead of creating a package.manifest. Create a ManifestFilter.cs file and implement the IManifestFilter interface. Then define the composer using the IComposer interface.

using Umbraco.Cms.Core.Composing;
using Umbraco.Cms.Core.Manifest;
using Umbraco.Cms.Core.PropertyEditors;

namespace MyProject
{
	public class ManifestComposer : IComposer
	{
		//composer
		public void Compose(IUmbracoBuilder builder)
		{
			builder.ManifestFilters().Append<ManifestFilter>();
		}
	}
	public class ManifestFilter : IManifestFilter
	{
		private readonly IDataValueEditorFactory _dataValueEditorFactory;

		public ManifestFilter(IDataValueEditorFactory dataValueEditorFactory)
		{
			_dataValueEditorFactory = dataValueEditorFactory;
		}

		public void Filter(List<PackageManifest> manifests)
		{
			manifests.Add(new PackageManifest
			{
				PackageName = "Suggestions",
				Scripts = new[]
				{
					"/App_Plugins/Suggestions/suggestion.controller.js"
				},				
				Version = "1.0.0"
			});
		}
	}
}

For a functional example, you will need to register the editor and create the HTML, JS, and CSS files in the App_Plugins/Suggestions folder. You can find some examples of registering the editor in the Suggestions.cs file and within the files in the App_Plugins folder. For more information, see the Creating a Property Editor article.

Root elements

The manifest can contain seven root collections, none of them are mandatory:

{
    "propertyEditors": [],
    "gridEditors": [],
    "parameterEditors": [],
    "dashboards": [],
    "sections": [],
    "contentApps": [],
    "javascript": [],
    "css": []
}

Telemetry elements

From version 9.2, some additional root elements were added. Their purpose is to control and facilitate telemetry for the package but none of these are mandatory. The properties are:

  • name - Allows you to specify a friendly name for your package that will be used for telemetry, if no name is specified the name of the folder will be used instead

  • version - The version of your package, if this is not specified there will be no version specific information for your package

  • allowPackageTelemetry - Allows you to entirely disable telemetry for your package if set to false, defaults to true.

Example package.manifest

{
    "name": "My Awesome Package",
    "version": "1.0.0",
    "allowPackageTelemetry": true
}

Property Editors

propertyEditors returns an array of property editor definitions, each object specifies an editor to make available to data types as an editor component. These editors are primarily property editors for content, media and members. They can also be made available as a macro parameter editor.

The basic values on any editor are alias, name and editor. These three must be set. Furthermore the editor value is an object with additional configuration options, it must contain a view value.

{
    "alias": "my.editor.alias",
    "name": "My friendly editor name",
    "editor": {
        "view": "/App_Plugins/MyEditorName/view.html"
    },
    "prevalues": {
        "fields": []
    }
}
  • alias The alias of the editor, this must be unique, its recommended to prefix with your own "namespace".

  • name The name visible to the user in the UI, should also be unique.

  • editor Object containing editor configuration (see below).

  • isParameterEditor enables the property editor as a macro parameter editor can be true/false.

  • prevalues Configuration of editor prevalues (see below).

  • defaultConfig Default configuration values (see below).

  • icon A CSS class for the icon to be used in the 'Select Editor' dialog: e.g. icon-autofill.

  • group The group to place this editor in within the 'Select Editor' dialog. Use a new group name or alternatively use an existing one such as Pickers.

  • defaultConfig Provides a collection of default configuration values, in case the property editor is not configured or is using a parameter editor, which doesn't allow configuration. The object is a key/value collection and must match the prevalues fields keys.

Editor

editor Besides setting a view, the editor can also contain additional information.

"editor": {
    "view": "/App_Plugins/MyEditorName/view.html",
    "hideLabel": true,
    "valueType": "TEXT",
    "validation": {},
    "supportsReadOnly": true,
    "isReadOnly": false
}
  • view Path to the HTML file to use for rendering the editor.

  • hideLabel Turn the label on or off by using true or false, respectively.

  • valueType Sets the database type the value is stored as, by default it's string.

  • validation Object describing required validators on the editor.

  • supportsReadOnly Sets whether the editor supports read-only mode, if set to true, the editor is expected to have its own implementation of the read-only mode.

  • isReadOnly Disables editing the value.

valueType sets the kind of data the editor will save in the database, its default setting is string. The available options are:

  • STRING Stores the value as an nvarchar in the database

  • DATETIME Stores the value as datetime in the database

  • TEXT Stores the value as ntext in the database

  • INT Stores the value as a bigint in the database

  • JSON Stored as ntext and automatically serialized to a dynamic object

Pre Values

preValues is a collection of prevalue editors, used for configuring the property editor, the prevalues object must return an array of editors, called fields.

"prevalues": {
    "fields": [
        {
            "label": "Enable something",
            "description": "This is a description",
            "key": "enableStuff",
            "view": "boolean"
        }
    ]
}

Each field contains a number of configuration values:

  • label The label shown on the data type configuration screen

  • description Help text displayed underneath the label

  • key The key the prevalue is stored under (see below)

  • view Path to the editor used to configure this prevalue (see below)

key on a prevalue, determines where it's stored in the database. If you give your prevalue the key "wolf" then this key will be used in the prevalue table.

It also means when this property editor is used on a property the prevalue will be exposed on the models configuration object as shown below, inside the property editors controller:

// this is the property value
$scope.model.value = "hello";

// this is the configuration on the property editor
$scope.model.config

// this is our specific prevalue with the alias wolf
$scope.model.config.wolf

view config value points the prevalue editor to an editor to use. This follows the same concept as any other editor in Umbraco, but with prevalue editors there are a couple of conventions.

If you specify a name like boolean then Umbraco will look at /wwwroot/umbraco/views/prevalueeditors/boolean/boolean.html for the editor view - if you wish to use your own, you specify the path like /App_Plugins/{YourPackageName}/prevalue-editor.html.

Default Config

The defaultConfig object provides a collection of default configuration values in case the property editor is not configured or is using a parameter editor, which doesn't allow configuration. The object is a key/value collection and must match the prevalue field keys.

"defaultConfig": {
    "wolf": "nope",
    "editor": "hello",
    "random": 1234
}

Grid Editors

Similar to how the propertyEditors array defines one or more property editors, gridEditors can be used to define editors specific to the grid. Setting up the default richtext editor in the Umbraco grid could look like:

{
  "gridEditors": [
    {
      "name": "Rich text editor",
      "alias": "rte",
      "view": "rte",
      "icon": "icon-article"
    }
  ]
}

However the default grid editors are already configured. You can see the Grid Editors page for more information on grid editors.

Parameter Editors

parameterEditors returns an array of editor objects, each object specifies an editor to make available to macro parameters as an editor component. These editors work solely as parameter editors and will not show up on the property editors list.

The parameter editors array follows the same format as the property editors described above, however it cannot contain prevalues since there are no configuration options for macro parameter editors.

JavaScript

javascript returns a string[] of JavaScript files to load on application start

{
  "javascript": [
    "/App_Plugins/MyEditorName/MyEditorName.controller.js",
    "/App_Plugins/MyEditorName/MyEditorName.js"
  ]
}

CSS

css returns a string[] of css files to load on application start

{
  "css": [
    "/App_Plugins/MyEditorName/MyEditorName.css",
    "/App_Plugins/MyEditorName/hibba.css"
  ]
}

Bundling

bundleOptions is an enumerable type that expects one of the following values:

  • Default - The default bundling behavior for assets in the package folder where the assets will be bundled with the typical packages bundle.

  • None - The assets in the package will not be processed at all and will all be requested as individual assets and will essentially be a bundle that has composite processing turned off for both debug and production

  • Independent - The packages assets will be processed as its own separate bundle. (In debug, files will not be processed)

JSON Schema

The package.manifest JSON file has a hosted online JSON schema file that allows editors such as Visual Studio, Rider and Visual Studio Code to have autocomplete/intellisense support when creating and editing package.manifest files. This helps to avoid mistakes or errors when creating your package.manifest files.

Setting up Visual Studio 2015+

To associate the hosted JSON schema file to all package.manifest files you will need to perform the following inside of Visual Studio 2015.

  • Tools -> Options

  • Browse down to Text Editor -> File Extension

  • Add manifest into the Extension box

  • Select JSON Editor from the dropdown and add the mapping

  • Open a package.manifest file and ensure in the top left hand corner you see the schema with the URL set to http://json.schemastore.org/package.manifest. You can also add the schema inline in the json file (see below).

Setting up JetBrains Rider 2019+

To associate the hosted JSON schema file to all package.manifest files you will need to perform the following inside of Visual Studio 2015.

  • File -> Settings

  • Browse down to Editor -> File Types -> JSON

  • Add package.manifest to the list of file pattern names.

  • Browse down to Languages & Frameworks -> Schemas and DTDs -> JSON Schema Mappings

  • Add new by clicking the + symbol

  • Add package.manifest as Name

  • Add https://json.schemastore.org/package.manifest as the Schema File or URL, or choose package.manifest from the Remote Schema URls

  • Add package.manifest as File path pattern

  • Open a package.manifest file and ensure in the bottom tool bar you see the schema is detected as package.manifest.

Setting up Visual Studio Code

To associate the hosted JSON schema file to all package.manifest files you will need to perform the following inside of Visual Studio Code editor.

  • File -> Preferences -> Settings. The Settings window opens.

  • In the User tab, go to Extensions -> JSON -> Schemas.

  • Select Edit in settings.json from the Schemas section.

  • Add the following snippet in the settings.json file:

    {
        "json.schemas": [
            {
                "fileMatch": [
                    "manifest.json"
                ],
                "url": "http://json.schemastore.org/package.manifest"
            }
        ]
    }

Adding inline schema

Editors like Visual Studio can use the $schema notation in your file.

{
    "$schema" : "http://json.schemastore.org/package.manifest",
    "javascript": [],
    "other properties": ""
}

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