Std AddonMgr

Description
The Std AddonMgr command opens the Addon manager. With the Addon manager you can install and manage external workbenches and macros provided by the FreeCAD community. The available workbenches and macros are taken from two repositories, FreeCAD-addons and FreeCAD-macros, and from the Macros recipes page.

Addons that are marked as will not work in FreeCAD version 0.19 or higher.

Due to changes to the GitHub platform in the year 2020 the Addon manager no longer works if you use FreeCAD version 0.17 or earlier. You need to upgrade to version 0.18.5 or a recent 0.19 version. Alternatively you can install addons manually, see Notes below.



Usage

 * 1) Select the  option from the menu.
 * 2) If you are using the Addon manager for the first time, a dialog box will open warning you that the addons in the Addon manager are not officially part of FreeCAD. Press the  button to confirm and continue.
 * 3) The Addon manager dialog box opens. For more information see Options.
 * 4) The  button does not work at this time.
 * 5) Press the  button to close the dialog box.
 * 6) If you have installed or updated a workbench a new dialog box will open informing you that you have to restart FreeCAD for the changes to take effect.

Options
The Addon manager dialog box has two tabs on the left, one listing the available workbenches and the other listing the available macros. The information panel on the right will display the homepage of the selected addon.

Uninstall

 * 1) Select an installed addon on the [[Image:Folder.svg|16px]] Workbenches tab or the [[Image:Applications-python.svg|16px]] Macros tab.
 * 2) Press the  button.

Install/update

 * 1) Select an addon on the [[Image:Folder.svg|16px]] Workbenches tab or the [[Image:Applications-python.svg|16px]] Macros tab.
 * 2) Press the  button.
 * 3) If you want to add a macro to a custom toolbar then don't forget to manually download the icon image file, if available, by clicking on the link on the homepage in the information panel. See Interface Customization.
 * 4) To change the position of an addon workbench in the Workbench selector list see Interface Customization.

Configuration

 * 1) Press the  button.
 * 2) The Addon manager options dialog box opens.
 * 3) Optionally check the  checkbox.
 * 4) Optionally add repositories to the Custom repositories list. Addons from these repositories will be added on the [[Image:Folder.svg|16px]] Workbenches tab or the [[Image:Applications-python.svg|16px]] Macros tab.
 * 5) Optionally choose proxy settings.
 * 6) Press the  button or the  button to close the dialog box.

Information for developers
If you have developed a workbench or macro, and want to see it included in the Addon manager, read how to do so on the repository pages: (FreeCAD-addons and FreeCAD-macros). If you add your macro to the Macros recipes page, there is nothing else to do, it will automatically be picked up by the Addon manager.

Python workbenches
For Python workbenches, you don't need any specific approval to have your workbench added to the Addon Manager. In addition, because your Addon is outside the FreeCAD source code, you can choose the license you want. If you request for your workbench to be added to the Addon Manager's default list (we will not add any new workbench without a request from its authors), either by asking so on the forum or by opening an issue on the FreeCAD-addons repository, your code will stay on your own git repository, we will just add it as a submodule to the FreeCAD-addons repository. Of course, before adding your workbench, we will take a look at it and make sure there is nothing potentially problematic with it. For more details about structuring your Addon, including information about metadata used by the Addon Manager, see Workbench creation.

C++ workbenches
If you develop a workbench in C++, it cannot be run directly by users and must be compiled first. You then have two options, either you provide precompiled versions of your workbench yourself, for the different operating systems, or you should request to have your code merged into the FreeCAD source code. For that, you should use the LGPL license (or a fully compatible license like MIT or BSD), and you must present your new tools to the community in the FreeCAD forum for review. Once your code has been tested and approved, you should fork the FreeCAD repository, if not done yet, create a new branch, push your code to it, and open a pull request so that your branch is merged into the main repository.