/forcecmd

A command-line tool for the Salesforce metadata API

Primary LanguageJavaScript

Build Status

Command line tool for the Salesforce metadata API

This command line tool allows you to use the file based Salesforce metadata API to download and deploy your Org's configuration and code. The tool will automatically build the required package.xml file for you and work around some bugs and limitations in the metadata API.

Installation

  1. Install Node.js from http://nodejs.org/.
  2. Open a command prompt / terminal.
  3. Run npm install --global forcecmd.

Set up an org

  1. Create an empty directory for your org.

  2. Create a new file in your org's directory named forcecmd.json with content like this:

     {
       "hostname": "login.salesforce.com",
       "username": "yourname@yourcompany.com"
     }
    
  3. Create a new file in your home directory (~) named forcepw.json with content like this:

     {
       "passwords": {
         "login.salesforce.com:yourname@yourcompany.com": "YourPasswordYourSecirityToken"
       }
     }
    

Download an org

  1. Navigate your command prompt to your org's directory.
  2. Type forcecmd retrieve.

All metadata and all custom settings are downloaded by default. You can customize this in forcecmd.json like this:

{
  "apiVersion": "45.0",
  "hostname": "login.salesforce.com",
  "username": "yourname@yourcompany.com",
  "excludeDirs": ["documents"],
  "objects": {
    "MyCustomSetting__c": false,
    "Product2": true,
    "Pricebook2": ["Id", "Name", "IsActive"],
    "PricebookEntry": "select Product2Id, Pricebook2Id, UnitPrice from PricebookEntry where IsActive = true"
  }
}

Use forcecmd retrieve --verbose to see what values are available to customize, or to debug issues finding the right password.

Upon completion the tool will typically print a number of messages from the Metadata API indicating problems. This is normal. If the status is Succeeded, you can ignore the messages.

Deploy changes

  1. Navigate your command prompt to our org's directory.
  2. Type for example forcecmd deploy src/classes/MyClass.cls src/objects/Account.object.

Additional arguments:

  • --destroy: Delete all the listed files instead of updating them.
  • '--options={"rollbackOnError":true}': Specify deployment options as documented on http://www.salesforce.com/us/developer/docs/api_meta/Content/meta_deploy.htm#deploy_options
  • --save-test-result: Save test results (if tests are run) to a file named TEST-result.xml in JUnit format.
  • --ignore-deploy-errors: By default the process exits with an error code when the deployment fails. Use this argument to always exit with success no matter if the deployment was successful or not.

Use with continous integration

You can use forcecmd together with a continuous integration tool and a version control system to backup and track changes to all your Salesforce organization's customizations (metadata), and to continously run all your Salesforce organization's unit tests.

See an example of how to set this up completely in the cloud using GitHub and Travis CI.

See an example of how to set this up completely in the cloud using Azure DevOps.

Developing forcecmd

To set up development environment:

  1. Clone this repository.
  2. From the root of the cloned repository, run npm install.
  3. Replace forcecmd with node path/to/this/tool/cli.js when you use the tool.

License

MIT