How to Create Extensions#

Creating an extension takes only a few steps:

  1. Create a directory for your extension and populate it with the add-on code or theme file.

  2. Add a blender_manifest.toml file with all the required meta-data (name, maintainer, ...).

  3. Compress the directory as a .zip file.

  4. Install from Disk to test if everything is working well.

  5. Upload the zip file (this step requires Blender ID).

The extension will be held for review, and published once the moderation team approves it.

Extension files#

An extension is shared as a .zip archive containing a manifest file and other files. The expected files depend on the extension type.

Add-on extension#

Add-ons need at least the manifest and an __init__.py file, while more complex add-ons have a few different .py files or wheels together.

my_extension-0.0.1.zip
├─ __init__.py
├─ blender_manifest.toml
└─ (...)

Theme extension#

A theme extension only needs the manifest and the .xml theme file.

my_extension-0.0.1.zip
├─ blender_manifest.toml
└─ theme.xml

Note

Extensions can optionally have all its files inside a folder (inside the archive). This is a common behaviour when saving a repository as ZIP from version-control platforms.

Manifest#

A manifest is a file with all the meta-data required for an extension to be processed. This example is a good starting point to the blender_manifest.toml that should be inside the .zip.

schema_version = "1.0.0"

# Example of manifest file for a Blender extension
# Change the values according to your extension
id = "my_example_extension"
version = "1.0.0"
name = "Test Extension"
tagline = "This is another extension"
maintainer = "Developer name <[email protected]>"
# Supported types: "add-on", "theme"
type = "add-on"

# Optional: add-ons can list which resources they will require:
# * "files" (for access of any filesystem operations)
# * "network" (for internet access)
# * "clipboard" (to read and/or write the system clipboard)
# * "camera" (to capture photos and videos)
# * "microphone" (to capture audio)
# permissions = ["files", "network"]

# Optional link to documentation, support, source files, etc
# website = "http://extensions.blender.org/add-ons/my-example-package/"

# Optional list defined by Blender and server, see:
# https://docs.blender.org/manual/en/dev/extensions/tags.html
tags = ["Animation", "Sequencer"]

blender_version_min = "4.2.0"
# Optional: maximum supported Blender version
# blender_version_max = "5.1.0"

# License conforming to https://spdx.org/licenses/ (use "SPDX: prefix)
# https://docs.blender.org/manual/en/dev/extensions/licenses.html
license = [
  "SPDX:GPL-2.0-or-later",
]
# Optional: required by some licenses.
# copyright = [
#   "2002-2024 Developer Name",
#   "1998 Company Name",
# ]

# Optional list of supported platforms. If omitted, the extension will be available in all operating systems.
# platforms = ["windows-amd64", "macos-arm64", "linux-x86_64"]
# Other supported platforms: "windows-arm64", "macos-x86_64"

# Optional: bundle 3rd party Python modules.
# https://docs.blender.org/manual/en/dev/extensions/python_wheels.html
# wheels = [
#   "./wheels/hexdump-3.3-py3-none-any.whl",
#   "./wheels/jsmin-3.0.1-py3-none-any.whl"
# ]

# Optional: build setting.
# https://docs.blender.org/manual/en/dev/extensions/command_line_arguments.html#command-line-args-extension-build
# [build]
# paths_exclude_pattern = [
#   "/.git/"
#   "__pycache__/"
# ]

Required values:

blender_version_min:

Minimum supported Blender version - use at least 4.2.0.

id:

Unique identifier for the extension.

license:

List of licenses, use SPDX license identifier.

maintainer:

Maintainer of the extension.

name:

Complete name of the extension.

schema_version:

Internal version of the file format - use 1.0.0.

tagline:

One-line short description - cannot end with punctuation.

type:

“add-on”, “theme”.

version:

Version of the extension - must follow semantic versioning.

Optional values:

blender_version_max:

Maximum version of Blender that can run this.

website:

Website for the extension.

copyright:

Some licenses require a copyright, copyrights must be “Year Name” or “Year-Year Name”.

permissions:

Add-ons can list which resources they require. The available options are [“files”, “network”, “clipboard”, “camera”, “microphone”].

tags:

List of tags. See the list of available tags.

platforms:

List of supported platforms. If omitted, the extension will be available in all operating systems. The available options are [“windows-amd64”, “windows-arm64”, “macos-x86_64”, “macos-arm64”, “linux-x86_64”]

wheels:

List of relative file-paths Python Wheels.

Optional values for “build”:

These values are only used by the build sub-command.

paths:

A list of file-paths relative to the manifest to include when building the package.

paths_exclude_pattern:

A list of file-path patterns to exclude include when building the package.

The pattern matching is compatible with gitignore.

Note that setting this value isn’t supported when paths is also declared.

If the [build] table isn’t declared the following default is used:

[build]
paths_exclude_pattern = [
  "__pycache__/",
  ".*",
]

Note

All the values present in the manifest file must be filled (i.e., cannot be empty, nor text "", nor list []).

If you don’t want to set one of the optional values just exclude it from the manifest altogether.

Command-line#

Extensions can be built, validated & installed via command-line.

Note

Extension commands currently require a daily build of Blender with extensions enabled in the preferences.

To build the package defined in the current directory use the following commands:

blender --command extension build

See build docs.

To validate the manifest without building the package:

blender --command extension validate

You may also validate a package without having to extract it first.

blender --command extension validate add-on-package.zip

See validate docs.

Third party extension sites#

Third party sites that wish to support extensions in Blender can do so in two ways:

  1. Fork the entire Extensions Website as a start point; or

  2. Host a JSON file listing all the packages of your repository.

To generate a valid JSON file you can use the command-line tool:

blender --command extension server-generate --repo-dir=/path/to/packages

This creates a listing from all the packages found in the specified location.

See server-generate docs.

Example of what the JSON is expected to look like:

 {
   "version": "v1",
   "blocklist": [],
   "data": [
    {
       "id": "blender_kitsu",
       "name": "Blender Kitsu",
       "tagline": "Pipeline management for projects collaboration",
       "version": "0.1.5-alpha+f52258de",
       "type": "add-on",
       "archive_size": 856650,
       "archive_hash": "sha256:3d2972a6f6482e3c502273434ca53eec0c5ab3dae628b55c101c95a4bc4e15b2",
       "archive_url": "https://extensions.blender.org/add-ons/blender-kitsu/0.1.0/download/",
       "blender_version_min": "4.2.0",
       "maintainer": "Blender Studio",
       "tags": ["Pipeline"],
       "license": ["SPDX:GPL-3.0-or-later"],
       "website": "http://extensions.blender.org/add-ons/blender-kitsu/",
       "schema_version": "1.0.0"
    }
    ]
}

Just like for the manifest file, the optional fields (e.g., blender_version_max) are either to have a value or should be omitted from the entries.

For the official Extensions Platform, the website value is the page of the extension in the online platform. Even if the manifest points to the project specific website.

Note

Any remote repository is expected to follow the latest API.