How to silent install an exe file without the /s switch - c#

I’m trying to automate an installation for an exe file, I can’t use any tools. Already tried /s, extracting the files, and using visual studio.
My company developed two install shield apps that I’m trying to make an automated installation to, I’m having trouble with one.
Neither apps have switches, I tried /s /qn /silent /verysilent , none worked.
I found a solution for the first app, I used - filepath.exe /s/x /b”C:/NewLocation” /v”/qn” , which transformed the exe file into an msi and then I used the msi to silent install, but this doesn’t work on the second exe file.
I tried these:
-looking for switches (filepath.exe /?), it has none.
-extracting the files in the exe w 7zip, there’s two Msi’s in it but both of them don’t include the whole installation.
-using visual studio (c#) and starting a process, with createNoWindow=true n
The main issue is that my company works on a separate network which is not connected to the internet, so I can’t use any tools from it.
Is there any command/code or any way to automate this installation?

Related

How to release a project with dlls and packages used in it in Visual Studio C# to use it on another PC?

I've just finished my Windows Forms App project in Visual Studio using C#. I know I need to release it. To do so I need to go from Debug mode to Release above in VS and then just click on F6. After that I have a folder with an exe file in it. But in my project I use a dll library which was copied on my PC and registered by regsvr32.exe in cmd. Next in VS I went to Solution Explorer and added the library in References by writing the path to it. I also use two packages which were installed by NuGet Package Manager.
My program is developed to use it by my coworkers so I have to distribute it to them. The problem is that I don't know how to prepare my app for it.
I'm reading lots of different articles about the release step but I'm getting more confused. People usually write that I can just copy the exe file in the release folder and use it in another PC after installing .Net there. But in my project there are also the three libraries and without them my program won't work in another PC. I can copy and register the first library on other computers but what about the last two? How to set up them correctly?
About the first library, I put it in a folder created by me manually in the C directory of my computer. The release folder is in another place. And when registering this library in cmd and then adding it to References, I specified the path to it. It means if the path has been changed, it won't be possible to use the library in the project. I tried some times. It's not convenient and when placing the app in another PC without VS where I can specify the path, my program won't probably work. So it would be very convenient to place this library next to the release folder and after putting it in another PC, the path to the library wouldn't cause any problems.
To sum up, I'm looking for the way to easily and conveniently distribute my program to users. Of course, I want to put my app and the libraries together in a PC, not to set up them separately and then tune them separately to make the program work there. Might there a way to release it as an app with all the libraries connected to it?
I feel it must be easy but I'm not so experienced. I'm sorry for that.
It is recommended that you use ClickOnce deployment:
ClickOnce deployment is a Microsoft technology that allows you to easily deploy your Windows Forms App along with all its dependencies. With ClickOnce deployment, you can publish your application to a web server or a file share and users can install it by simply clicking on a link. ClickOnce will automatically download and install all the required DLLs and packages on the user's computer.
Of course, there are some third-party packaging software that I can't recommend. If ClickOnce doesn't help you, I'll think of other ways.

MSI installer automatically starting after application already installed when using "Everyone" option?

I have an application that was created using Visual Studio which contains an installation project. When I run the MSI that is built, 3 Windows Services are created. Everything installs fine, the services are there and I can start them, when I choose the option to install for "Just Me".
When I choose the option to install for "Everyone", all users on this machine, the services are still installed fine and I can start them while I am logged in as the same user who installed them BUT when I log in as a different user and try starting the application using a shortcut, the installer starts up and tries to uninstall the services. Weird thing is that it only uninstalls 2 of the 3 services.
Again, if I install using "Just Me" I am having no issues at all, it seems to be linked to the "Everyone" option. I am not sure how to even begin looking into this as I am new to setup projects (this project was created by someone else) so any help would be great.
I'm thinking in one of the installation folders a file must be missing for the second user and that is why the installation folder opens up again?
Thanks for any help.
SOLUTION:
The issue was with the DISABLEADVTSHORTCUTS property of the MSI because the shortcut that was installed for everyone was an Advertised Shortcut as far as I understand. There are a few ways to get around this using a post build event or using ORCA...we ended up using ORCA and adding the DISABLEADVTSHORTCUTS = 1 property to the MSI.
Solution and better explanation:
https://jcrawfor74.wordpress.com/2011/08/17/setup-app-config-during-msi-install-msi-re-installing/
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/255905
Try to find the called schema.msi under
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio
This prototype is used in the consecutive generation of your deployment msi file. Then, you can use orca to add DISABLEADVTSHORTCUTS=1 to the Property table. So, from then on, all of your msi files will create the standard shortcut.

Install Shield msi file installing to the wrong directory (error 1309)

I am using Visual Studio 2013/ISLE to create a C# program with a .msi install image. When I run install from VS the program is installed in the expected location, e.g. c:/Program Files (x86)/...
I'm sure that this is something simple but I can't figure it out. A pointers would be greatly appreciated.
When you run a 32-bit installer in x 64-bit system Windows will always redirect your installer writing to c:\Program Files to c:\program files (x86). If you want to install to the non-x86 folder you will need to provide a 64-bit installer for your application.
This blog post explains why Windows does this.
It looks like InstallShield LE will allow you to write to the correct folder when your project is set to AnyCPU, but for more advanced scenario's you'll need to use the Pro version or the free Wix installer.
I assume the question is why the installation MSI fails when you run it outside of Visual Studio, but works when VS launches it?
If yes, you should first check if your ISLE project is creating an MSI or an EXE bootstrapper (that also contains the MSI). If an EXE is created this is what you should launch manually, not the MSI. In theory, a bootstrapper can act like an initialization support for the MSI and specify default values for certain properties, like an installation folder, etc...
I say in theory because I am not very familiar with ISLE, I work with other setup authoring tools, thus cannot say for sure if this stands for ISE projects too.

Process of ClickOnce and prerequisites

I have an application I want to build and deploy via ClickOnce. But we want this to be a process that can be run outside of VS through scripts, for either test, business UAT or production environment.
Each separate environment requires a different .config file to be used and a different web server to be deployed on and for update location.
The application also has prerequisites of .NET runtime 3.5 and Crystal reports.
I have looked into using MAGE to create application and deployment manifests, and if I do a code BUILD, then use MAGE afterwards as per each environment, as well as having the script copy over the correct .config file, this creates what I think are the correct manifests for each environment at the time of running the script.
But what I'm struggling to do is include the prerequisites. If done through VS, you can specify a setup.exe package which gets built with the pre-reqs and deployed alongside the application and when you click on the download link, it installs the pre-reqs from setup.exe and then the application.
But how can I do this manually outside VS? I can build the setup.exe through VS with the right URl location but then how do I link the setup.exe to the application as a pre-req using MAGE to generate the manifests?
The problems we have are 1) The users do not have admin rights to download and install packages, only to install things via clickonce so the pre-reqs have to be installed under the click once security umbrella.
Thanks
ClickOnce and prereqs cause lots of confusion. The setup.exe that Visual Studio generates has nothing to do with ClickOnce. The only minor link between the two is that the setup.exe will launch the ClickOnce application once it finishes. That's it. So thinking users will be able to install your prereqs "under the clickonce security umbrella" is a mistake. If they are not an admin and a prereq install requires admin privileges, they won't be able to install it.
My advice would be to generate your setup.exe one time. You shouldn't need to keep doing it unless your prereqs keep changing. Use Visual Studio, generate the setup one time, then use Mage for the rest.
Edit
In general you make the setup.exe available and depend on the user to know if they need to run it or not. If they already have the prereqs and run the setup.exe, nothing bad happens. It sees that everything is installed then launches the app.
Usually you're going to direct users to run the setup.exe. The next time they want to launch the app they should use the start menu shortcut (assuming you didn't go with "Online Only"). I've found this to be the least confusing set of instructions for users.
Remember how Visual Studio does extra, non-ClickOnce stuff when you publish (like the setup.exe)? It also creates a simple html page that has links to both the ClickOnce manifest and the setup.exe and an explanation. It also has some javascript that checks the UserAgent string to determine if they have the .NET Framework installed. Again, this isn't ClickOnce. It's just something nice Visual Studio does for you. If you like it, use it. I kind of like skipping it and going with the run setup.exe to install then launch from the start menu.
codeConcussion is right, you can't ever actually have the prerequisites instill directly from ClickOnce. You should just generate it once and then you have it ready for your external ClickOnce tool.
There is an option other than Mage. You could use my companies tool, ClickOnceMore, as your ClickOnce build software. It's been designed for people who want to use ClickOnce but don't want to build with Visual Studio.
It can hook into the setup.exe generated from Visual Studio (details here) so should satisfy all your needs.
Why do you want to build setup manually if everything can be done via clickonce ?
You can select "Download pre-requisites from same location" option from prerequisites form if you want to include .netfx or crystalreports, download bootstrap packages for .netfx3.5 & crystalreports and add to folder (for windows 7) "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.0A\Bootstrapper\Packages" . The deployment project will automatically include netfx & other packages along with setup.exe.
hope this helps.

Delete specific files after installation using visual studio setup project

I have this problem. I want to build an installer for my c# solution, that will be placed in a folder with other installation folders and files that are needed to be copied to the installed folder. So that is easy, I just copy them to the folder I create using the folder structure I want.
Now, I want also to install another program and run a .exe file I've created to unzip some files for me. For that I need to copy 2 .exe files and 2 dlls (for the exes) to the folder to which I am installing and create 2 custom actions that will use them. That I've managed to do.
After that I want to delete those 4 extra files, as the user does not need them and shouldn't even be aware they are there. How to do so? I couldn't find a way in the built in setup project preferences + I do not know how to make a custom installer class.
A bonus question, is how to make the other installer (one of the .exe files is just a plain installer) install quietly to any path? I do not want the user to see an installer pop out of my program installer.
Thanks!
Some commercial setup authoring tools support temporary files. They are extracted when the installation starts and automatically removed when the installation ends. They are never registered with Windows Installer.
You can find a list of setup tools here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_installation_software
Regarding the prerequisite, it depends on its setup package. You can install it silently only if it supports this through its command line.
Don't. You will get a ton of problems with Windows Installer trying to automatically repair your applications and such things. You might be able to solve the problem with a more advanced installer creator, such as WiX.

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