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dotnet nuget push

       This article applies to: ✔️ .NET Core 3.1 SDK and later versions

NAME

       dotnet-nuget-push - Pushes a package to the server and publishes it.

SYNOPSIS

              dotnet nuget push [<ROOT>] [-d|--disable-buffering] [--force-english-output]
                  [--interactive] [-k|--api-key <API_KEY>] [-n|--no-symbols]
                  [--no-service-endpoint] [-s|--source <SOURCE>] [--skip-duplicate]
                  [-sk|--symbol-api-key <API_KEY>] [-ss|--symbol-source <SOURCE>]
                  [-t|--timeout <TIMEOUT>]

              dotnet nuget push -h|--help

DESCRIPTION

       The  dotnet  nuget  push  command pushes a package to the server and publishes it.  The push command uses
       server and credential details found in the system’s NuGet config file or chain of config files.  For more
       information on config files, see Configuring NuGet Behavior.  NuGet’s default configuration  is  obtained
       by  loading %AppData%.config (Windows) or $HOME/.nuget/NuGet/NuGet.Config (Linux/macOS), then loading any
       nuget.config or .nuget.config starting from the root of drive and ending in the current directory.

       The command pushes an existing package.  It doesn’t create a package.  To create a  package,  use  dotnet
       pack.

   Hierarchical folder structure
       This command can store packages in a hierarchical folder structure, which is recommended to optimize per‐
       formance.   It  stores  packages  in  a  hierarchical  folder structure when publishing to a local folder
       (feed), like nuget add does, if there already is at least one package in the feed that is in a hierarchi‐
       cal folder structure.  If the feed has a hierarchical folder structured package  already  in  it,  dotnet
       nuget  push  respects  that structure.  So, if you want to publish to a local feed using the .NET CLI in‐
       stead of the NuGet CLI:

       • Before you publish the first package, go to your global packages folder, at  *%userprofile%.nuget,  and
         select  the  root  folder of a package id.  It can be any package that is not part of a framework, like
         .NET standard or ASP.NET.

       • Copy the selected package folder into the root folder of the local feed.

       • Use dotnet nuget push to publish your package to the local feed.

       • You can now delete the folder you previously copied in, and you can freely use  dotnet  nuget  push  to
         publish to your local feed.

       Alternatively,  use the NuGet CLI for the first package, then you can use dotnet nuget push for the rest.
       For more information, see Local feeds.

ARGUMENTS

ROOT

         Specifies the file path to the package to be pushed.

OPTIONS

-d|--disable-buffering

         Disables buffering when pushing to an HTTP(S) server to reduce memory usage.

       • --force-english-output

         Forces the application to run using an invariant, English-based culture.

       • -?|-h|--help

         Prints out a description of how to use the command.

       • --interactive

         Allows the command to stop and wait for user input or action.  For example, to complete authentication.
         Available since .NET Core 3.0 SDK.

       • -k|--api-key <API_KEY>

         The API key for the server.

       • -n|--no-symbols

         Doesn’t push symbols (even if present).

       • --no-service-endpoint

         Doesn’t append “api/v2/package” to the source URL.

       • -s|--source <SOURCE>

         Specifies the server URL.  NuGet identifies a UNC or local folder source and  simply  copies  the  file
         there  instead  of pushing it using HTTP.  > > Starting with NuGet 3.4.2, this is a mandatory parameter
         unless the NuGet config file specifies a DefaultPushSource value.  For more information, see  Configur‐
         ing NuGet behavior.

       • --skip-duplicate

         When  pushing  multiple packages to an HTTP(S) server, treats any 409 Conflict response as a warning so
         that other pushes can continue.

       • -sk|--symbol-api-key <API_KEY>

         The API key for the symbol server.

       • -ss|--symbol-source <SOURCE>

         Specifies the symbol server URL.

       • -t|--timeout <TIMEOUT>

         Specifies the timeout for pushing to a server in seconds.  Defaults to 300 seconds (5 minutes).  Speci‐
         fying 0 applies the default value.

EXAMPLES

       • Push foo.nupkg to the default push source specified in the NuGet config file, using an API key:

                dotnet nuget push foo.nupkg -k 4003d786-cc37-4004-bfdf-c4f3e8ef9b3a

       • Push foo.nupkg to the official NuGet server, specifying an API key:

                dotnet nuget push foo.nupkg -k 4003d786-cc37-4004-bfdf-c4f3e8ef9b3a -s https://api.nuget.org/v3/index.json

       • Push foo.nupkg to the custom push source https://customsource, specifying an API key:

                dotnet nuget push foo.nupkg -k 4003d786-cc37-4004-bfdf-c4f3e8ef9b3a -s https://customsource/

       • Push foo.nupkg to the default push source specified in the NuGet config file:

                dotnet nuget push foo.nupkg

       • Push foo.symbols.nupkg to the default symbols source:

                dotnet nuget push foo.symbols.nupkg

       • Push foo.nupkg to the default push source specified in the NuGet config file, with a  360-second  time‐
         out:

                dotnet nuget push foo.nupkg --timeout 360

       • Push all .nupkg files in the current directory to the default push source specified in the NuGet config
         file:

                dotnet nuget push "*.nupkg"

                If this command doesn’t work, it might be due to a bug that existed in older versions of the SDK
                (.NET Core 2.1 SDK and earlier versions).  To fix this, upgrade your SDK version or run the fol‐
                lowing command instead: dotnet nuget push "**/*.nupkg"

                The  enclosing quotes are required for shells such as bash that perform file globbing.  For more
                information,    see     NuGet/Home#4393     (https://github.com/NuGet/Home/issues/4393#issuecom‐
                ment-667618120).

       • Push all .nupkg files to the default push source specified in the NuGet config file, even if a 409 Con‐
         flict response is returned by an HTTP(S) server:

                dotnet nuget push "*.nupkg" --skip-duplicate

       • Push all .nupkg files in the current directory to a local feed directory:

                dotnet nuget push "*.nupkg" -s c:\mydir

       • For pushing to Azure Artifacts, see Azure Artifacts’ push documentation.

                                                   2024-10-02                               dotnet-nuget-push(1)