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What is Windows App SDK?

Windows App SDK is a set of libraries, frameworks, components, and tools that you can use in your apps to access powerful Windows platform functionality from all kinds of apps on many versions of Windows. Windows App SDK combines the powers of Win32 native applications alongside modern API usage techniques, so your apps light up everywhere your users are.

Your app can use the parts of Windows App SDK that are most interesting to you without having to rewrite it into a new app model or deployment system. Windows App SDK provides a single consistent API surface for both new and existing functionality that automatically adapts to your preferred app model and deployment mechanism. Windows App SDK helps you move towards a modern API and app style without requiring you to make a hard choice to rewrite it or re-implement it across versions of Windows.

This repo contains the Windows App SDK components that are common for all applications. Look for the "Windows App SDK Family" badge in other repos showing that their code is using Windows App SDK techniques and tooling. Your own components can be part of the "Windows App SDK Family" by following the same principles and practices as Windows App SDK itself - support all forms of apps with a single API surface and meet developers where they are with the tools they need to build great apps on Windows.

Using Windows App SDK will be as simple as adding a reference to our NuGet packages in your build.

What Windows App SDK Brings

Windows App SDK functionality comes in three main categories - new APIs, converged APIs, and API subsets. Your apps can pick up each different level of functionality at your own pace.

New APIs

Whenever possible, new Windows functionality will be delivered as part of the Windows App SDK Family. APIs and functionality delivered as "New" are identity-, packaging-, and isolation- transparent to your application. New functionality will share a common interface for you to use whether your app is MSIX, MSI, setup.exe, Desktop Bridge, or AppContainer.

New APIs

Some of the APIs and functionality listed will come over time; they are listed as examples of the category rather than fully supported on day 1.

These APIs are self-consistent and solve specific application problems or help you build additional functionality into your application. Potential categories of APIs here might be:

  • Application data storage and management to keep your data in one place and the user's system tidy
  • Cloud app support for identity and connectivity management to use the power of Azure
  • Packaging and system integration so Windows understands what your app is doing
  • App-to-app inter-process communication helpers so your apps can work with other app easily
  • Privacy-aware resource access APIs for camera, microphone, location, and more

You'll start using these APIs by adding a reference to the Windows App SDK NuGet package and then adding uses of the APIs in your app code. Use as much or as little of Windows App SDK as helps your application. New Windows App SDK APIs will be available on all supported versions of Windows and for all apps. Where certain APIs behave differently (such as due to identity, isolation, or lifecycle differences) your app can detect it with clear "TheType.IsSupported" checks.

Converged APIs

Windows App SDK provides API surfaces that bridge the gap between Win32 and UWP/AppContainer functionality already within the platform. Authors of shared code (like frameworks) can use a single method and avoid their own "if (AppContainer) { x } else { y }" checks. Windows App SDK APIs provide "polyfill" implementations of APIs when necessary so your app can run on more versions of Windows without additional "is this Windows 10 Creator's Release?" checks.

Converged APIs

Converged API documentation also includes ways to find uses of the "un converged" code in your project, along with guidance on how to move from common code patterns to the new Windows App SDK converged APIs. Examples of converged APIs include:

  • Window Content Frame abstraction over Win32 and UWP windowing
  • Application lifecycle behaviors like start, logoff, restart manager integration, restart-for-update
  • Startup and Background Task support to reduce your app's power and performance footprint
  • Application resource management for strings, images, display resolutions, and locales
  • Advanced clipboard access

Once your app adds a reference to the Windows App SDK codebase your app can start migrating blocks of functionality to using these fully-supported converged APIs. You can move as much of your application to Windows App SDK functionality as necessary, keeping your existing application style and behaviors. Whenever possible these APIs will be similar to their existing Windows SDK namespaced APIs, easing the transition to Windows App SDK for your existing code. For existing "flat C" Win32 APIs, an equivalent converged API will be added and then projected to your language and runtime. If you prefer a "flat C" style - or the APIs you want already have a "flat C" expression - we're working on building out a projection of those APIs for you.

As your app migrates to Windows App SDK functionality it'll be easier to move between deployment and isolation technologies. Windows App SDK handles the brokering of resource access from a low integrity-level (low-IL) or AppContainer process so your app can reference user resources while respecting user choice & privacy controls.

Converged APIs

Subset API Family

Windows App SDK helps you stay within the set of APIs that Windows supports on all editions and all endpoints. Like the Windows Kit API partitions, Windows App SDK defines a subset of supported Windows Platform APIs that work across all versions of Windows. If your code targets this subset - and uses Windows App SDK New + Windows App SDK Converged functionality whenever possible - it'll work everywhere Windows works, without needing additional support work.

Windows App SDK Subset APIs for your apps also let you start using Windows App SDK's functionality with minimal changes to your existing code by using an updated and streamlined set of headers and implementations. Feature areas supported by the Windows App SDK Subset include subsets of:

  • Windowing, Input, Messaging, GDI, and GUI subsystem functionality
  • Filesystem and storage access
  • Networking
  • Printing
  • Process, threading, memory management, basic application services
  • DirectX, D3D, DirectML

Migrate your app to the Windows App SDK Subset API set by first removing all references to Windows Kit headers (windows.h, kernel32.lib, user32.lib, winsock.h, etc) and then adding references to the core Windows App SDK Subset header and import libraries. While many existing Windows Kit APIs are part of the Windows App SDK Subset, you may have some minimal changes to make to your application's code or behavior. Recompile & relink your application then ship it with our support packages.

Is this "subset" model interesting for you and your apps? This feature of Windows App SDK is still in planning for a future release. Let us know by filing an issue with the "subset" tag on it and list the APIs and functionality you'd like to see.

Windows App SDK Family Components

Available Now

These components are available for you to use now and adhere to the "Windows App SDK Family Promise" that they have a single API for use in all kinds of applications.

  • WinUI is the native UI layer for Windows that embodies Fluent Design and delivers modern, performant, and polished user experiences to both Win32 and UWP apps. This component is part of the Windows App SDK Family of functionality, building on the identity + packaging + deployment transparent ideas that Windows App SDK supports for your app as well.

  • C++/WinRT and C#/WinRT provide language-native projections of Windows, Windows App SDK, and your own custom types defined in metadata. Consume APIs from the Windows Kit, produce them for use by other supported projections, and create your own new language projections.

  • MSIX-Core lets you package your application for distribution to Windows Desktop machines via the store or your own delivery pipeline. MSIX-Core lets you use the reuse parts of the MSIX packaging story on older versions of Windows.

Coming Soon

While we think these are interesting for applications, you tell us! Part of working in the open is that we learn together about the needs of application developers. Below are a set of functionality that seems interesting to make available through a Converged or New model, but you tell us! Some are linked to an issue thread proposing the functionality. +1 the ones you like, comment on the detailed design & direction, and help us shape where we're going.

  • Edge/Chromium backed WebView2 brings the ease of authoring your app in HTML+JS once and reusing it on all platforms. WebView2's use of Windows App SDK technologies like WinUI3 as a hosting frame lets you run modern web-based UX on all editions of Windows.

  • Modern Lifecycle helpers help your app be power-sensitive and reactive to changes in the runtime system's power management and user state. They also help your app restart after the user reboots, register your app so it can be restarted, and reduce update-related reboots.

  • Startup Tasks make your app come alive as the user logs in to reconnect, start working while not over-using resources, or be ready for fast use. User choice and power management features let you reduce your impact on the critical logon path.

  • Update Scan Integration help keep your app up to date automatically while running at the same time as other system maintenance tasks are happening.

  • Access to user resources even from AppContainer and isolated applications. Your AppContainer apps can access powerful Win32 technologies like the clipboard, inter-process communication, and the Windows Shell Namespace with user consent through brokering.

  • Modern Resource Tooling so you can use the power of ResX/ResW in your Win32 applications instead of MUI.

Future direction

We aim to grow Windows App SDK to provide a modern, simple, and accessible version of much of the power of the Windows Application Platform. Working in the open with our development community ensures we're doing the right things first to solve problems your apps are facing on current and future versions of Windows.

Some functionality will be delivered first as Windows App SDK components. As we think about evolving the platform it's important to make sure new functionality & features are available to our developer community just as soon as they're ready to go. Where there's newer in-platform functionality to use Windows App SDK will help you adopt that as soon as it's widely available, without you having to retarget or rewrite - the same Windows App SDK API surface will continue to work.

As your app uses more Windows App SDK functionality it'll be ready for additional targets such as packaging, identity, AppContainer, and other future Windows Editions. Depending on Windows App SDK APIs means we take on the work to keep these APIs working as Windows evolves forward. Staying within the Windows App SDK API surface ensures your app can address the widest range of Windows editions and releases while using up-to-date functionality.

How we are doing this

Working in the open

Windows App SDK relies on the power of open-source and the features of GitHub to deliver code to you as fast as we can dream it up. You should feel free to fork, create pull requests, open issues, and propose resolutions to issues. You can see and influence all our features via the issue tracker. You should expect that we listen and provide constructive feedback.

Build & Artifacts

Code within the Windows App SDK GitHub repo builds on a CI/CD loop and produces freshly built DLLs and metadata on each pull request. The output includes a NuGet package containing metadata for Windows App SDK and a ready-to-deliver MSIX for inclusion in your application as a redistributable or as a package reference. Add a reference to the Windows App SDK package and start building. To help deploy your apps we'll include both a Framework Package MSIX as well as instructions on how to deploy that MSIX from your existing installer.

Versioning

Windows App SDK will use strongly-typed metadata-based API definitions on which your apps can take a long-term dependency following our published support lifecycle. We'll use SemVer 2 to clearly identify breaking API shape levels that let those APIs evolve forward towards new functionality while not compromising existing apps. Windows App SDK helps keep apps up to date through Framework Packages that are updated with non-breaking changes as appropriate.

Extending APIs

Some of what Windows App SDK provides is access to functionality that is inside Windows, but for which there is no public API. We're working on the details, but our plan is to deliver a secondary package of code that provides a public API over those previously unexposed components. While those components will be implemented as closed-source they'll come with a metadata-based publicly callable & supported API surface and be included in the Windows App SDK framework packages for use by apps.

Brokering

UWPs (AppContainer, Low-IL) processes are meant to protect both the user and the application itself from other applications. Access to user & system resources is limited to the supported set of brokers for those resources. Windows App SDK also includes a main package that runs at the user's integrity level (medium-IL, sometimes called "full trust") and can provide user-approved access to resources previously unavailable to AppContainer and low-IL processes. This pattern is available to AppContainer apps today as a "full trust component" - Windows App SDK aims to provide a common pattern & platform for these custom components.

What Windows App SDK isn't

Windows App SDK isn't a new application model or platform from Windows. There won't be a "new Windows App SDK App" template for Visual Studio, VSCode, or other development environments. You'll still have full access to the Windows SDK and associated kits. Over time the features that Windows App SDK provides will grow beyond just merging the existing Win32 and UWP models and provide additional functionality for all apps to use.

Windows App SDK isn't a new packaging or isolation model for applications. There won't be required changes to your application in order to access Windows App SDK functionality other than using the new functionality itself. If the APIs you use need identity or packaging these requirements will be indicated.

Windows App SDK isn't a new security or privacy model for applications. Your app's existing security, privacy, reliability, and identity stories continue to work with Windows App SDK. There may be places that Windows App SDK helps your app be more aware of customer security or privacy concerns. Windows App SDK helps you use modern security & privacy functionality that evolves alongside your application's needs.

Windows App SDK isn't a way to run your app in the cloud. Using Windows App SDK technology will help get your app on modern API families that are cloud ready. Key components like modern lifecycle and state isolation help get your app ready to run wherever your customers are.

More documentation