:article_outdated: True .. _doc_exporting_projects: Exporting projects ================== .. highlight:: none Why export? ----------- Originally, Godot did not have any means to export projects. The developers would compile the proper binaries and build the packages for each platform manually. When more developers (and even non-programmers) started using it, and when our company started taking more projects at the same time, it became evident that this was a bottleneck. On PC ~~~~~ Distributing a game project on PC with Godot is rather easy. Drop the Godot binary in the same directory as the ``project.godot`` file, then compress the project directory and you are done. It sounds simple, but there are probably a few reasons why the developer may not want to do this. The first one is that it may not be desirable to distribute loads of files. Some developers may not like curious users peeking at how the game was made, others may find it inelegant, and so on. Another reason is that the developer might prefer a specially-compiled binary, which is smaller in size, more optimized and does not include tools like the editor and debugger. Finally, Godot has a simple but efficient system for :ref:`creating DLCs as extra package files `. On mobile ~~~~~~~~~ The same scenario on mobile platforms is a little worse. To distribute a project on those devices, a binary for each of those platforms is built, then added to a native project together with the game data. This can be troublesome because it means that the developer must be familiarized with the SDK of each platform before even being able to export. While learning each SDK is always encouraged, it can be frustrating to be forced to do it at an undesired time. There is also another problem with this approach: different devices prefer some data in different formats to run. The main example of this is texture compression. All PC hardware uses S3TC (BC) compression and that has been standardized for more than a decade, but mobile devices use different formats for texture compression, such as ETC1 and ETC2. Export menu ----------- After many attempts at different export workflows, the current one has proven to work the best. At the time of this writing, not all platforms are supported yet, but the supported platforms continue to grow. To open the export menu, click the **Export** button: .. image:: img/export.png The export menu will open. However, it will be completely empty. This is because we need to add an export preset. .. image:: img/export_dialog.png To create an export preset, click the **Add…** button at the top of the export menu. This will open a drop-down list of platforms to choose from for an export preset. .. image:: img/export_preset.png The default options are often enough to export, so tweaking them is usually not necessary. However, many platforms require additional tools (SDKs) to be installed to be able to export. Additionally, Godot needs export templates installed to create packages. The export menu will complain when something is missing and will not allow the user to export for that platform until they resolve it: .. image:: img/export_error.png At that time, the user is expected to come back to the documentation and follow instructions on how to properly set up that platform. The buttons at the bottom of the menu allow you to export the project in a few different ways: - Export All: Export the project as a playable build (Godot executable and project data) for all the presets defined. All presets must have an **Export Path** defined for this to work. - Export Project: Export the project as a playable build (Godot executable and project data) for the selected preset. - Export PCK/ZIP: Export the project resources as a PCK or ZIP package. This is not a playable build, it only exports the project data without a Godot executable. Export templates ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Apart from setting up the platform, the export templates must be installed to be able to export projects. They can be obtained as a TPZ file (which is a renamed ZIP archive) from the `download page of the website `_. Once downloaded, they can be installed using the **Install Export Templates** option in the editor: .. image:: img/exptemp.png .. _doc_exporting_projects_export_mode: Resource options ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When exporting, Godot makes a list of all the files to export and then creates the package. There are 3 different modes for exporting: - Export all resources in the project - Export selected scenes (and dependencies) - Export selected resources (and dependencies) .. image:: img/expres.png **Export all resources in the project** will export every resource in the project. **Export selected scenes** and **Export selected resources** gives you a list of the scenes or resources in the project, and you have to select every scene or resource you want to export. .. image:: img/expselected.png .. note:: Files and folders whose name begin with a period will never be included in the exported project. This is done to prevent version control folders like ``.git`` from being included in the exported PCK file. Below the list of resources are two filters that can be setup. The first allows non resource files such as ``.txt``, ``.json`` and ``.csv`` to be exported with the project. The second filter can be used to exclude every file of a certain type without manually deselecting every one. For example, ``.png`` files. Configuration files ------------------- The export configuration is stored in two files that can both be found in the project directory: - ``export_presets.cfg``: This file contains the vast majority of the export configuration and can be safely committed to version control. There is nothing in here that you would normally have to keep secret. - ``.godot/export_credentials.cfg``: This file contains export options that are considered confidential, like passwords and encryption keys. It should generally **not** be committed to version control or shared with others unless you know exactly what you are doing. Since the credentials file is usually kept out of version control systems, some export options will be missing if you clone the project to a new machine. The easiest way to deal with this is to copy the file manually from the old location to the new one. Exporting from the command line ------------------------------- In production, it is useful to automate builds, and Godot supports this with the ``--export`` and ``--export-debug`` command line parameters. Exporting from the command line still requires an export preset to define the export parameters. A basic invocation of the command would be: .. code-block:: shell godot --export "Windows Desktop" some_name.exe This will export to ``some_name.exe``, assuming there is a preset called "Windows Desktop" and the template can be found. (The export preset name must be written within quotes if it contains spaces or special characters.) The output path is *relative to the project path* or *absolute*; **it does not respect the directory the command was invoked from**. The output file extension should match the one used by the Godot export process: - Windows: ``.exe`` - macOS: ``.zip`` (from all platforms) or ``.dmg`` (only when exporting *from* macOS). ``.app`` is not supported directly, although the generated ZIP archive contains an ``.app`` bundle. - Linux: Any extension (including none). ``.x86_64`` is typically used for 64-bit x86 binaries. - HTML5: ``.zip`` - Android: ``.apk`` - iOS: ``.zip`` You can also configure it to export *only* the PCK or ZIP file, allowing a single exported main pack file to be used with multiple Godot executables. When doing so, the export preset name must still be specified on the command line: .. code-block:: shell godot --export-pack "Windows Desktop" some_name.pck It is often useful to combine the ``--export`` flag with the ``--path`` flag, so that you do not need to ``cd`` to the project folder before running the command: .. code-block:: shell godot --path /path/to/project --export "Windows Desktop" some_name.exe .. seealso:: See :ref:`doc_command_line_tutorial` for more information about using Godot from the command line. PCK versus ZIP pack file formats -------------------------------- Each format has its upsides and downsides. PCK is the default and recommended format for most use cases, but you may want to use a ZIP archive instead depending on your needs. **PCK format:** - Uncompressed format. Larger file size, but faster to read/write. - Not readable and writable using tools normally present on the user's operating system, even though there are `third-party tools `__ to extract and create PCK files. **ZIP format:** - Compressed format. Smaller file size, but slower to read/write. - Readable and writable using tools normally present on the user's operating system. This can be useful to make modding easier (see also :ref:`doc_exporting_pcks`). .. warning:: Due to a `known bug `__, when using a ZIP file as a pack file, the exported binary will not try to use it automatically. Therefore, you have to create a *launcher script* that the player can double-click or run from a terminal to launch the project:: :: launch.bat (Windows) @echo off my_project.exe --main-pack my_project.zip # launch.sh (Linux) ./my_project.x86_64 --main-pack my_project.zip Save the launcher script and place it in the same folder as the exported binary. On Linux, make sure to give executable permissions to the launcher script using the command ``chmod +x launch.sh``.