- Accordion
- Alert
- Alert Dialog
- Aspect Ratio
- Avatar
- Badge
- Breadcrumb
- Button
- Calendar
- Card
- Carousel
- Chart
- Checkbox
- Collapsible
- Combobox
- Command
- Context Menu
- Data Table
- Date Picker
- Dialog
- Drawer
- Dropdown Menu
- React Hook Form
- Hover Card
- Input
- Input OTP
- Label
- Menubar
- Navigation Menu
- Pagination
- Popover
- Progress
- Radio Group
- Resizable
- Scroll-area
- Select
- Separator
- Sheet
- Sidebar
- Skeleton
- Slider
- Sonner
- Switch
- Table
- Tabs
- Textarea
- Toast
- Toggle
- Toggle Group
- Tooltip
- Typography
This guide will walk you through the process of setting up your own component registry. It assumes you already have a project with components and would like to turn it into a registry.
If you're starting a new registry project, you can use the registry template as a starting point. We have already configured it for you.
Requirements
You are free to design and host your custom registry as you see fit. The only requirement is that your registry items must be valid JSON files that conform to the registry-item schema specification.
If you'd like to see an example of a registry, we have a template project for you to use as a starting point.
registry.json
The registry.json
is the entry point for the registry. It contains the registry's name, homepage, and defines all the items present in the registry.
Your registry must have this file (or JSON payload) present at the root of the registry endpoint. The registry endpoint is the URL where your registry is hosted.
The shadcn
CLI will automatically generate this file for you when you run the build
command.
Add a registry.json file
Create a registry.json
file in the root of your project. Your project can be a Next.js, Vite, Vue, Svelte, PHP or any other framework as long as it supports serving JSON over HTTP.
{
"$schema": "https://ui.shadcn.com/schema/registry.json",
"name": "acme",
"homepage": "https://acme.com",
"items": [
// ...
]
}
This registry.json
file must conform to the registry schema specification.
Add a registry item
Create your component
Add your first component. Here's an example of a simple <HelloWorld />
component:
import { Button } from "@/components/ui/button"
export function HelloWorld() {
return <Button>Hello World</Button>
}
Note: This example places the component in the registry/new-york
directory. You can place it anywhere in your project as long as you set the
correct path in the registry.json
file and you follow the registry/[NAME]
directory structure.
registry
└── new-york
└── hello-world
└── hello-world.tsx
Add your component to the registry
To add your component to the registry, you need to add your component definition to registry.json
.
{
"$schema": "https://ui.shadcn.com/schema/registry.json",
"name": "acme",
"homepage": "https://acme.com",
"items": [
{
"name": "hello-world",
"type": "registry:block",
"title": "Hello World",
"description": "A simple hello world component.",
"files": [
{
"path": "registry/new-york/hello-world/hello-world.tsx",
"type": "registry:component"
}
]
}
]
}
You define your registry item by adding a name
, type
, title
, description
and files
.
For every file you add, you must specify the path
and type
of the file. The path
is the relative path to the file from the root of your project. The type
is the type of the file.
You can read more about the registry item schema and file types in the registry item schema docs.
Build your registry
Install the shadcn CLI
pnpm add shadcn@canary
Add a build script
Add a registry:build
script to your package.json
file.
{
"scripts": {
"registry:build": "shadcn build"
}
}
Run the build script
Run the build script to generate the registry JSON files.
pnpm registry:build
Note: By default, the build script will generate the registry JSON files
in public/r
e.g public/r/hello-world.json
.
You can change the output directory by passing the --output
option. See the shadcn build command for more information.
Serve your registry
If you're running your registry on Next.js, you can now serve your registry by running the next
server. The command might differ for other frameworks.
pnpm dev
Your files will now be served at http://localhost:3000/r/[NAME].json
eg. http://localhost:3000/r/hello-world.json
.
Publish your registry
To make your registry available to other developers, you can publish it by deploying your project to a public URL.
Guidelines
Here are some guidelines to follow when building components for a registry.
- Place your registry item in the
registry/[STYLE]/[NAME]
directory. I'm usingnew-york
as an example. It can be anything you want as long as it's nested under theregistry
directory. - The following properties are required for the block definition:
name
,description
,type
andfiles
. - It is recommended to add a proper name and description to your registry item. This helps LLMs understand the component and its purpose.
- Make sure to list all registry dependencies in
registryDependencies
. A registry dependency is the name of the component in the registry eg.input
,button
,card
, etc or a URL to a registry item eg.http://localhost:3000/r/editor.json
. - Make sure to list all dependencies in
dependencies
. A dependency is the name of the package in the registry eg.zod
,sonner
, etc. To set a version, you can use thename@version
format eg.zod@^3.20.0
. - Imports should always use the
@/registry
path. eg.import { HelloWorld } from "@/registry/new-york/hello-world/hello-world"
- Ideally, place your files within a registry item in
components
,hooks
,lib
directories.
Install using the CLI
To install a registry item using the shadcn
CLI, use the add
command followed by the URL of the registry item.
pnpm dlx shadcn@latest add http://localhost:3000/r/hello-world.json
See the Namespaced Registries docs for more information on how to install registry items from a namespaced registry.