Version: 2023.1
Language : English
Submit a license request from a command line and browser (Windows)
License Troubleshooting

Submit a license request from a command line and browser (macOS, Linux)

Submit a license request from the command line to manually activate your license if you’re unable to use the other activation methods.

Note: The manual activation method isn’t supported for Unity licenses under a Personal plan.

Before you begin

  • See Manual license activation to make sure you understand the scenario for using this procedure, its limitations, and its internet connectivity requirements.
  • Make sure you know the path where you installed the Unity Editor. Use the Unity Hub to determine the path. Open the Unity Hub and select Installs from the side menu. The list shows the path for each installed Editor. For more information, see Locate the Editor.

The default installation paths for the Unity Editor are:

  • macOS: /Applications/Unity/Hub/Editor/<version>/Unity.app
  • Linux: /Applications/Unity/Hub/Editor/<version>/Unity.app

Procedure

To manually activate your Unity license, follow these steps:

  1. Create a license request file (.alf) from the command line.
  2. Use that .alf file to generate a Unity license file (.ulf) from Unity.
  3. Use that .ulf file to activate your license from the command line.

Create a license request file from the command line

You must run this command from the computer where you installed Unity, but the computer doesn’t need internet access for this step to work.

  1. Make sure you know the installation location of your Unity Editor (ending with Unity.app), described earlier. On macOS, you’ll add /Contents/MacOS/Unity to this path for this procedure.

    Note: On macOS, although you don’t need Finder for this step, this latter subdirectory structure isn’t visible in Finder, unless you right-click the Unity application (Unity.app) and select Show Package Contents.

    For example, for a 2022.2.0b4 Editor, the complete path to the Unity command on macOS is:

    /Applications/Unity/Hub/Editor/2022.2.0b4/Unity.app/Contents/MacOS/Unity
    
  2. Open a Terminal session (macOS) or the command line (Linux), and make sure you’re aware which directory you’re in. The directory you run the command from is the same directory where the .alf file is output. You can use the pwd command to determine your directory.

  3. Run the following command, replacing <editor-command-location> with the complete path to the Unity command from Step 1:

    <editor-command-location> -batchmode -createManualActivationFile -logfile
    

    Note: This command doesn’t return output to the Terminal or command line window. When the command completes, it returns control to the command prompt.

  4. When the command completes, check the directory where you ran the command to make sure it created an activation license file, such as Unity_v2022.2.0b4.alf. If you experience issues, see Troubleshooting.

Now you are ready to generate a Unity license file.

Example (macOS)

Assuming you installed a 2022.2.0b4 Editor at /Applications/Unity/Hub/Editor/2022.2.0b4/Unity.app, the command for this step is:

/Applications/Unity/Hub/Editor/2022.2.0b4/Unity.app/Contents/MacOS/Unity -batchmode -createManualActivationFile -logfile


Generate a Unity license file

The next step is to use the license activation file (.alf) that you just created to request a Unity license file (.ulf).

Important: You can generate a Unity license file from any computer; it doesn’t necessarily need to be the same computer where you installed Unity. However, the computer you use in this step must have an internet connection.

  1. Go to id.unity.com and make sure you’re signed in to your Unity ID. You need a valid login to request a Unity license file.

  2. Use the same browser session to go to license.unity3d.com/manual. The Manual activation page appears.

    Note: If you experience issues accessing this page, try pasting https://license.unity3d.com/manual into your browser’s address bar.

  3. Select the Browse button and use your computer’s file browser to select the license activation (.alf) file from the create a license request file step.

    If the upload was successful and Unity detected that the file you chose was a license activation file, the filename appears in the text box with a green check mark. If you see a red X instead, try again.

  4. Select the Next button. The Activate your license page appears.

  5. Select which license type you are activating:

    • If you select the Unity Plus or Pro option, enter the Serial Number you received in an email when you purchased a single license. You need to enter the key in the exact format that it appears in the email. For example, PS/SC/E3-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX.
    • If you select the Unity Personal option, you must select the option which best describes your current situation.
  6. Select the Next button. The Download license file page appears.

  7. Select the Download license file button. If prompted, allow downloads for the license.unity3d.com/manual page.

  8. Open your browser’s downloads location and confirm the new Unity license file, which has a .ulf extension. For example, Unity_v2017.x.ulf.

Now you are ready to activate your Unity license from the command line.

Activate your license from the command line

You must run this command from the computer where you installed Unity, but the computer doesn’t need internet access for this step to work.

  1. Make sure you know the following paths:

  2. Open a Terminal session (macOS) or the command line (Linux), and run the following command, replacing <editor-command-location> and <yourUlfFile> with the actual full paths:

    <editor-command-location> -batchmode -manualLicenseFile <yourUlfFile> -logfile
    

    Note: This command doesn’t return output to the Terminal or command line window. When the command completes, it returns control to the command prompt.

  3. When the command completes, you can view your active license in the Hub by opening the Preferences menu () and selecting Licenses. If you experience issues, see Troubleshooting.

Example (macOS)

This example assumes that you:

  • Installed a 2022.2.0b4 Editor at /Applications/Unity/Hub/Editor/2022.2.0b4/Unity.app
  • Generated a .ulf file and stored it at /Users/myAccount/Downloads/Unity_v2017.x.ulf
/Applications/Unity/Hub/Editor/2022.2.0b4/Unity.app/Contents/MacOS/Unity -batchmode -manualLicenseFile /Users/myAccount/Downloads/Unity_v2017.x.ulf -logfile


Troubleshooting

If the command line operations don’t yield the expected results, view the Editor.log file. Check the location of this file in Log Files.

Additional resources

Submit a license request from a command line and browser (Windows)
License Troubleshooting