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Sleet

Sleet is a cross platform command line tool to generate NuGet v3 static feeds.

Build Status

AppVeyor Travis
AppVeyor Travis

Getting Sleet

CI builds

CI builds are located on the following NuGet feed:

https://nuget.blob.core.windows.net/packages/index.json

The list of packages on this feed is here.

Features

  • Add and remove packages from a feed.
  • Fast and stable - Sleet uses compressed static files.
  • Azure storage support - Feeds can work directly with an azure storage account.
  • Local folder support - Feeds can be written to disk and hosted with a web server to support authentication.

License

MIT License

Related projects

  • Sleet.Azure provides MSBuild props/targets for running Sleet.

Quick start

Download the latest release from github.

Windows

On Windows use Sleet.exe

Cross platform

OSX, Linux, and other OSes download and extract Sleet.tar.gz. To use Sleet run dotnet Sleet.dll

Creating an azure feed

This guide is used to setup a new feed hosted on azure storage.

Creating a config for azure feed

Create a sleet.json config file to define a new package feed hosted on azure storage.

sleet createconfig --azure

Edit sleet.json using your editor of choice to set the url of your storage account and the connection string.

notepad sleet.json

{
  "sources": [
    {
      "name": "feed",
      "type": "azure",
      "path": "https://yourStorageAccount.blob.core.windows.net/feed/",
      "container": "feed",
      "connectionString": "DefaultEndpointsProtocol=https;AccountName=;AccountKey=;BlobEndpoint="
    }
  ]
}

Initialize the feed

Now initialize the feed, this creates the basic files needed to get started. The source value here corresponds to the name property used in sleet.json.

sleet init --source feed

Adding packages

Add packages to the feed with the push command, this can be used with either a path to a single nupkg or a folder of nupkgs.

sleet push d:\nupkgsToPush --source feed

Using the feed

Add the feed as a source to your NuGet.Config file. In the example above the package source URL is https://yourStorageAccount.blob.core.windows.net/feed/index.json

Creating an Amazon S3 feed

This guide is used to setup a new feed hosted on Amazon S3 storage.

Creating a config for Amazon S3 feed

Create a sleet.json config file to define a new package feed hosted on azure storage.

sleet createconfig --s3

Edit sleet.json using your editor of choice to set the url of your storage account and the connection string.

notepad sleet.json

{
  "sources": [
    {
      "name": "feed",
      "type": "s3",
      "path": "https://s3.amazonaws.com/my-bucket-feed/",
      "bucketName": "my-bucket-feed",
      "region": "us-east-1",
      "accessKeyId": "IAM_ACCESS_KEY_ID",
      "secretAccessKey": "IAM_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY"
    }
  ]
}

Initialize the feed

Now initialize the feed, this creates the basic files needed to get started. The source value here corresponds to the name property used in sleet.json.

sleet init --source feed

Adding packages

Add packages to the feed with the push command, this can be used with either a path to a single nupkg or a folder of nupkgs.

sleet push d:\nupkgsToPush --source feed

Using the feed

Add the feed as a source to your NuGet.Config file. In the example above the package source URL is https://s3.amazonaws.com/my-bucket-feed/index.json

Creating a locally hosted feed

This guide is used to setup a new feed hosted on a local IIS Webserver.

Creating a config for local feed

Create a sleet.json config file to define a new package feed hosted on IIS.

sleet createconfig --local

Open sleet.json using your editor of choice, the file will look like similar to this

notepad sleet.json

{
  "username": "",
  "useremail": "",
  "sources": [
    {
      "name": "myLocalFeed",
      "type": "local",
      "path": "C:\\myFeed"
    }
  ]
}

Edit the file so that path contains the address of your webserver and the URI users will map to use the feed.

For example, if you want the mapped feed address to be https://example.com/feed/index.json change path to:

    "path": "https://example.com/feed"

Initialize the feed

Now initialize the feed, this creates the basic files needed to get started.

  • The config value here corresponds to the filesystem path to the sleet.json file.
  • the source value here corresponds to the name property used in sleet.json

sleet init --config C:\sleet.json --source myLocalFeed

Sleet will create files for the feed in a new directory corresponding to the URI set in path, so if you changed path to https://example.com/feed, the files will be created in a directory named feed on you C:\ drive.

Adding packages

Add packages to the feed with the push command, this can be used with either a path to a single nupkg or a folder of nupkgs.

sleet push --config C:\sleet.json -s myLocalFeed C:\PackagesFolder

Creating the feed's ASP.NET project

Create an empty ASP.NET Website project.

In the projects' web.config file add the following lines:

<configuration>
   <system.webServer>
      <staticContent>
          <mimeMap fileExtensions=".nupkg" mimeType="application/zip"/>
          <mimeMap fileExtension="." mimeType="application/json"/>
      </staticContent>
   </system.webServer>
</configuration>

Uploading the feed to IIS

Publish your ASP.NET website to your IIS server.

Copy the entire C:\feed directory to a path on your IIS server (including all subfolders).

Exposing the feed with IIS

In Internet Information Services Manager open your website, right click and choose Add Virtual Directory

  • In Alias enter the URI you want to expose - in our example it's feed
  • In Physical Path enter the path on the server you copied your C:\feed directory to.

Using the feed

Add the feed as a source to your NuGet.Config file. In the example above the package source URL is https://example.com/feed/index.json

Full guide

Check out the full getting started guide here.