A CLI/TUI which makes it easy to launch Visual Studio Code (vscode) projects, with a focus on dev containers.
Read here about the journey of reverse engineering Microsoft's dev container CLI in order to make this.
- A shorthand for launching vscode projects (to be used like the
code
command but with dev container support) - Detects whether a project is a dev container project, and launches the dev container instead
- Supports multiple dev containers in the same project
- Supports the insiders version of vscode
- Tracks your projects and allows you to open them using a CLI-based UI
Install vscli using cargo on Windows or Linux:
cargo install vscli
Install vscli using homebrew on Linux or Mac:
brew install michidk/tools/vscli
Install vscli using Chocolatey on Windows:
choco install vscli
Install vscli using winget on Windows:
winget install vscli
You can set a shorthand alias for vscli
in your shell's configuration file:
alias vs="vscli open"
alias vsr="vscli recent"
After installation, the vscli
command will be available:
Usage: vscli [OPTIONS] <COMMAND>
Commands:
open Opens a dev container
recent Opens an interactive list of recently used workspaces
help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
Options:
-s, --history-path <HISTORY_PATH> Overwrite the default path to the history file [env: HISTORY_PATH=]
-d, --dry-run Whether to launch in dry-run mode (not actually open vscode) [env: DRY_RUN=]
-v, --verbose... More output per occurrence
-q, --quiet... Less output per occurrence
-h, --help Print help
-V, --version Print version
Opens a dev container.
Usage: vscli open [OPTIONS] [PATH] [ARGS]...
Arguments:
[PATH] The path of the vscode project to open [default: .]
[ARGS]... Additional arguments to pass to vscode [env: ARGS=]
Options:
-b, --behavior <BEHAVIOR> Launch behavior [default: detect] [possible values: detect, force-container, force-classic]
-s, --history-path <HISTORY_PATH> Overwrite the default path to the history file [env: HISTORY_PATH=]
-c, --config <CONFIG> Overwrites the path to the dev container config file [env: CONFIG=]
-d, --dry-run Whether to launch in dry-run mode (not actually open vscode) [env: DRY_RUN=]
-n, --insiders Whether to launch the insider's version of vscode [env: INSIDERS=]
-v, --verbose... More output per occurrence
-q, --quiet... Less output per occurrence
-h, --help Print help (see more with '--help')
Opens an interactive list of recently used workspaces.
Usage: vscli recent [OPTIONS]
Options:
-s, --history-path <HISTORY_PATH> Overwrite the default path to the history file [env: HISTORY_PATH=]
-d, --dry-run Whether to launch in dry-run mode (not actually open vscode) [env: DRY_RUN=]
-v, --verbose... More output per occurrence
-q, --quiet... Less output per occurrence
-h, --help Print help
There are three launch behaviors:
force-classic
: Launch vscode without a dev containerforce-container
: Launch vscode with a dev container, error if no dev container is founddetect
: Detect whether the project is a dev container project, and launch the dev container if it is
The detection algorithm determines which dev container config to launch.
- First, check whether a dev container config was specified via the
--config
flag -> launch it - Then loads the first dev container it finds
- If more than one exists -> show a interactive list of dev containers and let the user select one
- If one exists -> launch it
- If none exists -> launch vscode normally without a dev container
You can launch a project using the default behavior:
vscli open # open vscode in the current directory
vscli open . # open vscode in the current directory
vscli open /path/to/project # open vscode in the specified directory
The default behavior tries to detect whether the project is a dev container project. If it is, it will launch the dev container instead - if not it will launch vscode normally.
You can change the launch behavior using the --behavior
flag:
vscli open --behavior force-container . # force open vscode dev container (even if vscli did not detect a dev container)
vscli open --behavior force-classic . # force open vscode without a dev container (even if vscli did detect a dev container)
When you open a project containing more than one dev container config, you will be prompted to select one:
You can launch the insiders version of vscode using the --insiders
flag:
vscli open --insiders . # open vscode insiders in the current directory
Additional arguments can be passed to the code
executable, by specifying them after --
:
vscli open . -- --disable-gpu # open vscode in the current directory without GPU hardware acceleration
Read more about the code
flags, by executing code --help
.
You can open a CLI-based user interface to display a list of recently opened projects using the recent
command:
vscli recent # open the CLI-based UI to select a recently opened project to open
Key/Key Combination | Action | Description |
---|---|---|
Esc or Ctrl+Q |
Quit | Exits the application. |
Down or Ctrl+J |
Select Next | Moves to the next selectable item. |
Up or Ctrl+K |
Select Previous | Moves to the previous selectable item. |
KeypadBegin or Ctrl+1 |
Select First | Selects the first item. |
End or Ctrl+0 |
Select Last | Selects the last item. |
Enter or Ctrl+O |
Open Selected | Opens the currently selected item. |
Delete , Ctrl+R , or Ctrl+X |
Delete Selected Entry | Deletes the currently selected item. |
Note: If an input does not match any of the defined keybindings, it is treated as part of a search input.