vscode-docs/docs/editor/portable.md

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Order Area TOCTitle ContentId PageTitle DateApproved MetaDescription
editor Portable Mode A5C839C4-67E9-449C-94B8-4B310FCAAB1B Portable Mode in Visual Studio Code 10/29/2024 Visual Studio Code supports a Portable Mode.

Portable Mode

Visual Studio Code supports Portable mode. This mode enables all data created and maintained by VS Code to live near itself, so it can be moved around across environments.

This mode also provides a way to set the installation folder location for VS Code extensions, useful for corporate environments that prevent extensions from being installed in the Windows AppData folder.

Portable mode is supported on the ZIP download for Windows, and the TAR.GZ download for Linux, as well as the regular Application download for macOS. See the Download page to find the correct .zip / .tar.gz file for your platform.

Note: Do not attempt to configure portable mode on an installation from the Windows User or System installers. Portable mode is only supported on the Windows ZIP (.zip) archive. Note as well that the Windows ZIP archive does not support auto update.

Enable Portable mode

Windows, Linux

After unzipping the VS Code download, create a data folder within VS Code's folder:

|- VSCode-win32-x64-1.84.2
|   |- Code.exe (or code executable)
|   |- data
|   |- bin
|   |  |- code
|   |  |- ...
|   |- ...

From then on, the data folder will be used to contain all VS Code data, including session state, preferences, extensions, etc.

Note: The data folder will override the --user-data-dir and --extensions-dir command line options.

The data folder can be moved to other VS Code installations. This is useful for updating your portable VS Code version, in which case you can move the data folder to a newer extracted version of VS Code.

macOS

On macOS, you need to place the data folder as a sibling of the application itself. Since the folder will be alongside the application, you need to name it specifically so that VS Code can find it. The default folder name is code-portable-data:

|- Visual Studio Code.app
|- code-portable-data

Portable Mode won't work if your application is in quarantine, which happens by default if you just downloaded VS Code. Make sure you remove the quarantine attribute, if Portable Mode doesn't seem to work:

xattr -dr com.apple.quarantine Visual\ Studio\ Code.app

Note: On Insiders, the folder should be named code-insiders-portable-data.

Update Portable VS Code

On Windows and Linux, you can update VS Code by copying the data folder over to a more recent version of VS Code.

On macOS, automatic updates should work as always, no extra work needed.

Migrate to Portable mode

You can also migrate an existing installation to Portable mode.

Windows, Linux

  1. Download the VS Code (or VS Code Insiders) ZIP distribution for your platform.
  2. Create the data folder as above.
  3. Copy the user data directory Code to data and rename it to user-data:
    • Windows %APPDATA%\Code
    • Linux $HOME/.config/Code
  4. Copy the extensions directory to data:
    • Windows %USERPROFILE%\.vscode\extensions
    • Linux ~/.vscode/extensions

As an example, here's the desired outcome on Windows:

|- VSCode-win32-x64-1.84.2
|   |- Code.exe (or code executable)
|   |- data
|   |   |- user-data
|   |   |   |- ...
|   |   |- extensions
|   |   |   |- ...
|   |- ...

macOS

  1. Download VS Code (or VS Code Insiders) for macOS.
  2. Create the code-portable-data folder as above.
  3. Copy the user data directory Code to code-portable-data and rename it to user-data:
    • $HOME/Library/Application Support/Code
  4. Copy the extensions directory to code-portable-data:
    • ~/.vscode/extensions

TMP directory

By default, the default TMP directory is still the system one even in Portable Mode, since no state is kept there. If you want to also have your TMP directory within your portable directory, you can create an empty tmp directory inside the data folder. As long as a tmp directory exists, it will be used for TMP data.