Add a menu action
TFS 2017
In this example, we add an action to the query context menu in the work item queries hub.
Tip
Check out our newest documentation on extension development using the Azure DevOps Extension SDK.
Prerequisites for this article
- You need to create a web app for your action, which can be found in the hub example.
- If you haven't, take a look at the write your first extension tutorial to learn about the basics.
Update extension manifest file
Below is the code snippet that adds your action to the contributions section of your extension manifest.
...
"contributions": [
{
"id": "myAction",
"type": "ms.vss-web.action",
"description": "Run in Hello hub action",
"targets": [
"ms.vss-work-web.work-item-query-menu"
],
"properties": {
"text": "Run in Hello hub",
"title": "Run in Hello hub",
"icon": "images/icon.png",
"groupId": "actions",
"uri": "action.html"
}
}
]
...
Properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
text | Text that appears on the menu item. |
title | Tooltip text that appears on the menu item. |
icon | URL to an icon that appears on the menu item. Relative URLs are resolved using baseUri. |
groupId | Determines where this menu item appears in relation to the others. |
uri | URI to a page that registers the menu action handler (see below). |
registeredObjectId | (Optional) Name of the registered menu action handler. Defaults to the contributor id. |
Learn about all of the places where you can add actions in Extensibility points.
Your HTML page
Your menu action is represented by a JavaScript script embedded in an HTML file. Save the following contents in a file and location that matches the reference to it in your extension's manifest file.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<title>Action Sample</title>
</head>
<body>
<div>
The end user doesn't see the content on this page.
It is only in the background to handle the contributed menu item being selected.
</div>
</body>
</html>
Your JavaScript
The script below registers the handler object to handle the action, place it in the head
section of the previous HTML page.
We aliased
lib
to benode_modules/vss-web-extension-sdk/lib
in ourvss-extension.json
manifest file.
<script src="lib/VSS.SDK.min.js"></script>
<script>
VSS.init();
// Use an IIFE to create an object that satisfies the IContributedMenuSource contract
var menuContributionHandler = (function () {
"use strict";
return {
// This is a callback that gets invoked when a user selects the newly contributed menu item
// The actionContext parameter contains context data surrounding the circumstances of this
// action getting invoked.
execute: function (actionContext) {
alert("Hello, world");
}
};
}());
// Associate the menuContributionHandler object with the "myAction" menu contribution from the manifest.
VSS.register("myAction", menuContributionHandler);
</script>
Tip
For more information, see Extensibility points, menus and toolbars, the Contribution model the Formula Design System, REST API reference, Extension samples, and resources in the Developer Community.
Next steps
Now that you've written your extension, the next steps are to Package, Publish, and Install your extension. You can also check out the documentation for Testing and Debugging your extension.