As you might know, msiexec is a command line application that you can use to install an MSI file. As you might know, you can run it in silent or invisible mode.
If the installer requires the user to answer specific questions about what parts to install, is there some way that I can put in the msiexec command line a series of options to do this?
I figure there must be some sort of way of setting the MSI file's default settings to make this happen. How are MSI files made? Are they developed through tools from Microsoft? Can they be opened and edited?
The MSI file extension is used to install software on Windows operating systems. It can be used to install, uninstall, configure, and update programs on the computer. Vendors can offer their software packages in both . msi and .exe format, and you will most likely see both options on software download pages.
The main difference between MSI and EXE is that the MSI is an Installer database that comprises a collection of installer files and all the data needed to install, update, modify or get rid of certain software on your computer whereas EXE files can be used to install and run application software and also has the ...
It's used by some versions of Windows when installing updates from Windows Update, as well as by other installer tools. An MSI file holds all the information necessary for installing the software, including the files that should be installed and where on the computer those files should be installed to.
The Orca MSI Editor, which is part of the Microsoft Windows SDK for Windows 7, allows you to edit an MSI file to change various settings and disable features. Customizing MSI packages has gotten much easier over the years with the help of vendor-provided packaging and deployment guides.
MSI files are designed specifically to support silent installation as a built-in feature - you can always skip the GUI. However, some MSI files have design flaws that render the install incomplete in silent mode - which is a serious design error. This problem is described here:
: Uninstall from Control Panel is different from Remove from .msi (Silent vs Interactive Installation - technicalities and practicalities)
There is also a section on it in this general description of common MSI problems seen in the real world (Common MSI Problems - general problems and anti-patterns)
Short Version: How to parameterize msi file from electron builder - using PUBLIC PROPERTIES and transforms to customize an installation of an MSI package.
When it comes to installing an MSI silently, what you need to do is to configure the setup either from the msiexec.exe command line, or by applying what is referred to as a transform to the original MSI file. Both these options are described below in separate sections.
If the MSI file is well-designed you will be able to set PUBLIC PROPERTIES (they are always UPPERCASE) from the msiexec.exe command line or by using a transform file to modify the original MSI. These operations are described below. Public properties are easiest to find in the MSI file's "Property table". Use the MSI tool of your choice to open the *.msi file and navigate to the Property table. There are also some free MSI tools you can use to generate transforms and view (and edit) MSI files: How can I compare the content of two (or more) MSI files? (links towards bottom).
Well-designed MSI setups are fully configurable via these public properties. Badly designed MSI files are not. Badly designed MSI files are best to tweak using transform files (which can make substantial changes to the whole MSI file to apply at install time). Setting public properties can only change whatever is configurable by public properties - as designed by the setup creator. Transforms can change almost anything in the whole MSI file.
In general, all corporate, silent deployment is done using transforms to "beat MSI files into shape" for the corporate standard. It is a very effective tool for corporate deployment and is extensively used.
A couple of links for safe-keeping:
MSI is often counterintuitive and somewhat complicated under the hood. However, to over-simplify an MSI file contains one or more "Features" - and these features collectively constitute the "bits of the application" as you put it. Features, in turn, consist of "Components" - which are the atomic units of installation for the whole software - but this is a very technical detail - this answer is about the user-exposed bits of MSI - the features.
Screen Shots: What Features look like in a real MSI package (screen shots).
You can generally find a list of these features by running the setup interactively, and navigate to the customize install dialog (not always present). Features that show up here are the "user configurable" parts of the application that can be chosen for exclusion or inclusion (some are mandatory). You can also find these features by opening an MSI with a capable tool as mentioned above (you can also see links in section 2 below).
Typical features are: Core or Program, Dictionaries, Samples, Plug-Ins, Spell Checker, SDK & Developer Tools (for dev tools), etc... Some features are mandatory (must be installed) - examples above would be Core and Program, others are optional and are not needed for the application to launch (like the dev tools features above). It is possible to make the application install features "on demand" - for example spell checkers when the user initiates a spell check.
In my experience most users want the whole application installed. Many users are very annoyed if Windows Installer pops up unexpectedly and starts installing spell checker components. Frankly very understandable. However, rarely used modular components interesting only to a few users could be made into optional components - especially if system administrators may not want the feature available on their network. This is certainly the case for developer tools - these should not be available to regular users. They tend to be all the rope people need to shoot themselves in the foot.
As mentioned above, there are generally two ways to customize an MSI installation: (1) using msiexec.exe custom command lines, or using (2) transform files.
The simplest and light-weight way of controlling what features are installed during an installation, is to specify your feature selection using the msiexec.exe
command line. There is a whole family of properties used for feature configuration. But, in most cases it is sufficient to specify ADDLOCAL
:
msiexec.exe /i myinstaller.msi ADDLOCAL="Program,Dictionaries" /qn
The above command line specifies that the features "Program" and "Dictionaries" should be installed locally (feature names are cases-sensitive!). This is generally enough, but you can also specify any features that you want to remove using the REMOVE property in a similar fashion. A special switch is ADDLOCAL=ALL
which will install all features in the MSI on the local disk (provided there is not additional logic in the MSI to override this). ADDLOCAL property on MSDN.
A very common thing to define by public properties is the license key for the application. The following command line specifies to install the features "Program" and "Dictionaries" and to apply the serial key "1234-1234":
msiexec.exe /i myinstaller.msi ADDLOCAL="Program,Dictionaries" SERIALKEY="1234-1234" /qn
As is implied in the description above, the list of customizable properties for each setup is always different. You can find most properties listed in the MSI file's Property table, but it is also possible that some properties can be set that are not defined in the Property table. In most cases this relates to properties being set only from the setup GUI (indicates a setup design error in most cases). All properties should be defined in the property table in a properly authored package.
Look for documentation on the vendor's download page and ask their support for any documents relating to silent installation or large scale deployment. It is quick to do, and answers can be quick if they have standard answer templates. Companies with control of their deployment will always be able to provide this. In my view the ideal way is a one-page PDF which describes different deployment settings. Frankly, give them some heat if they can't provide this ;-).
MSI files are essentially SQL-databases wrapped in COM structured storage files (file system within a file). Transform files are "partial databases" constructed via installation tools such as Orca (SDK link), Installshield or Wise, Advanced Installer, etc... (link to descriptions of the different tools). These transforms can customize or override almost all settings or database fields in an MSI - including what "parts of the application" (features) are installed. After creating a transform you specify its application to the MSI at the msiexec.exe command line:
msiexec.exe /i myinstaller.msi TRANSFORMS="mytransform.mst" /qn
Windows Installer will then merge the MSI and the transform before installation starts. This is the approach used by large organizations who want full control of how the MSI gets installed. TRANSFORMS property on MSDN.
As mentioned above this is the option that allows all settings in an MSI to be modified. Substantial fixes can be applied to badly designed MSI files to allow reliable deployment. This is done by "application packagers". Their job is to tune all setups to work within the corporate standard. They can be among the most knowledgeable MSI specialists around - they see a lot of weird stuff in MSI files.
Many tools can be used to create a transform, here is a description of such tools inside the more technical context of comparing MSI files. Just jump straight to the list of free tools at the bottom: How can I compare the content of two (or more) MSI files?
Windows Installer has many design quirks and may be particularly annoying for developers. Admittedly there are some issues that border on anti-patterns.
The issue of high complexity of implementing custom actions (custom installation logic), could be argued to be unavoidable and the act of writing a custom action should be powerful and capable once needed - and hence complicated. Rarely should custom actions be needed if the technology itself offers what is commonly used for deployment. In other words you should use built-in MSI features rather than custom actions if they are available, or WiX or third party deployment software extension when available.
The WiX framework (open source) and commercial tools alike (Installshield, Advanced Installer, etc...) have implemented features to extend Windows Installer to deal with missing features such as the lack of an upgrade mechanism for XML files, share creation and management, creation of users and groups, advanced IIS configuration, COM+ installations, changing ACL permissions, setting firewall rules, persisting installation properties, etc... There should be less and less need to implement your own custom actions. Always use the features that are already tested by thousands of other users if you can (millions of users even - and these extensions have been written by the best deployment experts available - do you think you can do it better on your own?).
It requires a specific mindset to approach Windows Installer. However, it provides a number of crucial corporate benefits that were almost entirely lacking in previous installation technologies. The corporate benefits of using MSI files is recommended reading. Particularly for those who think Windows Installer is more trouble than it is worth.
To summarize the linked article in brief, the core corporate benefits of MSI over previous deployment technologies are (in my opinion):
That's just to cherry pick the most important ones (after many years doing corporate deployment). In all honesty these features make all the difference in the world (for corporate deployment) and truly makes MSI great to use despite all its flaws.
As Windows Installer hits its twilight years, we can only hope that the deployment technologies of the future will preserve these great corporate deployment benefits and deal with the mentioned anti-patterns in a way that benefits everyone, and developers in particular.
Deployment is a crucial part of development. Failing to get your great software successfully installed for your potential end users may be the most expensive mistake to make in software development overall. How can you succeed if the user never sees your software fully functional?
Windows Installer's complexity must be handled better (reduced), and its crucial benefits must be preserved properly in whatever paradigm comes next.
A reasonably good: summary of Windows Installer.
With all this said; as computing in general moves to cloud-platforms, the world of deployment is likely to change considerable in unpredictable ways. However, as the famous saying goes: the more things change, the more they stay the same. Deployment needs to deal with all legacy technology that will be in use in companies for decades to come. Here is a piece on why deployment seems to get more complicated and not less complicated - despite all the marketing: What is the benefit and real purpose of program installation?.
It will be interesting to see what the future of deployment will be - in the years to come. Perhaps we will see simplified deployment for home computers, and corporate deployment will become more complicated than ever? In the future most deployment will probably be a database deployment task more than a file and folder deployment task. Server deployment can be extremely complicated as of now with database scripts, user and group creation, share setup and ACL permissioning, performance counters, firewall rules updates, AD queries and updates, COM+ and message queue configuration, service installation, etc... - the whole nine yards.
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