If you are new to the Windows Package Manager, you might want to Explore the Windows Package Manager tool. The client has access to packages from two default sources. The first is "msstore" the Microsoft Store (free Apps rated "e" for everyone). The second is "winget" the WinGet community repository.
[!NOTE] Group policy may be configured and modify configured sources. Run
winget --info
to see any configured policies.
[!NOTE] The client requires Windows 10 1809 (build 17763) or later at this time. Windows Server 2019 is not supported as the Microsoft Store is not available nor are updated dependencies. It may be possible to install on Windows Server 2022, this should be considered experimental (not supported) and requires dependencies to be manually installed as well.
The client is distributed within the App Installer package.
There are two methods to get development releases:
[!NOTE] It may take a few days to get the updated App Installer after you receive e-mail confirmation from joining the Windows Package Manager Insider program. If you decide to install the latest release from GitHub, and you have successfully joined the insider program, you will receive updates when the next development release has been published in the Microsoft Store.
Once you have received the updated App Installer from the Microsoft Store you should be able to execute winget features
to see experimental features. Some users have reported issues with the client not being on their PATH.
The same Microsoft Store package will be made available via our Releases. Note that installing this package will give you the WinGet client, but it will not enable automatic updates from the Microsoft Store if you have not joined the Windows Package Manager Insider program.
[!NOTE] You may need to install the VC++ v14 Desktop Framework Package. This should only be necessary on older builds of Windows 10 and only if you get an error about missing framework packages.
Please read our troubleshooting guide.
Installer behavior can be different depending on whether you are running WinGet with administrator privileges.
When running WinGet without administrator privileges, some applications may require elevation to install. When the installer runs, Windows will prompt you to elevate. If you choose not to elevate, the application will fail to install.
When running WinGet in an Administrator Command Prompt, you will not see elevation prompts if the application requires it. Always use caution when running your command prompt as an administrator, and only install applications you trust.
You can also build the client yourself. While the client should be perfectly functional, we are not ready to provide full support for clients running outside of the official distribution mechanisms yet. Feel free to file an Issue, but know that it may get lower prioritization.
The plan for delivering the next Windows Package Manager release is described and included in our discussions, and will be updated as the project proceeds.
The Windows Package Manager is a tool designed to help you quickly and easily discover and install those packages that make your PC environment special. By using the Windows Package Manager, from one command, you can install your favorite packages:
winget install <package>
This winget-cli repository includes the source code designed to build the client. You are encouraged to participate in the development of this client. We have plenty of backlog features in our Issues. You can upvote the ones you want, add more, or even get started on one.
The client is built around the concept of sources; a set of packages effectively. Sources provide the ability to discover and retrieve the metadata about the packages so that the client can act on it.
winget configure .configurations/configuration.dsc.yaml
from the project root so relative paths resolve correctly.vcpkg integrate install
from the Developer Command Prompt for VS 2022. This is a one-time setup step until the configuration file in step 2 is updated to work with vcpkg setup.[!NOTE] You can also get it through
winget install Microsoft.WindowsSDK --version 10.0.22000.832
(use --force if you have a newer version installed) or via Visual Studio > Get Tools and Features > Individual Components > Windows 10 SDK (10.0.22000.0)
Open winget-cli\src\AppInstallerCLI.sln
in Visual Studio and build. We currently only build using the solution; command-line methods of building a VS solution should work as well. After the build finishes, deploy the solution from Build > Deploy Solution. You can then run the client from the command line using wingetdev
.
We would like to thank Keivan Beigi (@kayone) for his work on AppGet which helped us with the initial project direction for Windows Package Manager.
This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and do, actually grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com. More information is available in our CONTRIBUTING.md file.
When you submit a pull request, a CLA bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., status check, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information, please refer to the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
The winget.exe client is instrumented to collect usage and diagnostic (error) data and sends it to Microsoft to help improve the product.
If you build the client yourself the instrumentation will not be enabled and no data will be sent to Microsoft.
The winget.exe client respects machine-wide privacy settings and users can opt out on their device, as documented in the Microsoft Windows privacy statement here. In addition, you may also explicitly block telemetry using settings
In short, to opt out, do one of the following:
Windows 11: Go to Start
, then select Settings
> Privacy & Security
> Diagnostics & feedback
> Diagnostic data
and unselect Send optional diagnostic data
.
Windows 10: Go to Start
, then select Settings
> Privacy
> Diagnostics & feedback
, and select Required diagnostic data
.
See the privacy statement for more details.