I'm getting an error 1721 on Windows 8 when my basic MSI installation tries to run a custom action executable, while on Windows XP and Windows 7 it is run as I have set it to from InstallShield. The executable is stored in the binary table. Why is this happening?
Change In-Script Execution to "Deferred Execution in System Context" in your custom action
Run as administrator. It will do. I had the same problem, and it got resolved by doing the same.
This would appear to initially be architecture related. Ensure for all parts of the custom action, programs, paths and file names, etc. are valid. Also as mentioned, always apply installers via the administrator account.
If you're calling an EXE stored in the binary table, ensure you're referencing it correctly as well. Often the Windows installer unpacks an MSI to '%temp%' folder so confirm access and path is correct. MSIEXEC extracts temporary files, for example, 'MSID974.tmp' there which then carries out a pre-configured MSI function, but falls over.
Lastly, try generating a verbose MSI log file. It will help you pinpoint the issue hopefully more clearly.
Related
I'm working on an MSI installer written in Wix. The installer works in both per-user, and per-machine contexts.
In a per-machine installation, everything goes smoothly; the product is installed and configured for the initial user. Upon switching to a test user, the application appears in the start menu correctly. Running it for the first time, a msiexec process starts with the message that the app is being configured. However, if the original .msi has been deleted, this process fails.
The failing setup action gives the following message in its log:
Error 1706. An installation package for the product myProduct cannot be found. Try the installation again using a valid copy of the installation package 'myInstaller.msi'.
=== Logging stopped: 3/16/2017 11:15:52 ===
I understand from reading a blog post by Rob Mensching (Lead of Wix) that it probably isn't possible to just edit the source list to point towards the windows cached .msi, a point backed up by another article I've found. Is that correct?
Is there a way to stop this entire action of calling the msi on first run by users from happening? Caching the msi or keeping the original is not ideal, I'd like to use the .msi in a custom bootstrapper that involves deleting the msi once installation is complete.
Microsoft recommends you keep the original MSI available, Rule 31:
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/windows_installer_team/2006/05/24/tao-of-the-windows-installer-part-3/
and I won't repeat what it says about repair/resiliency, but you cannot guarantee the source MSI won't be needed sometime.
You're probably getting this "repair" because there is some resource (a file most likely) that is being installed to a user-profile location. When another user logs on and uses the application that file is missing, so potentially the application is broken. For example a file installed to User's Application Data needs to be available for all users of the system, not just the user that installed it.
So keeping the MSI might not be ideal but is strongly recommended, and in your case of product use by multiple users it's even more likely to required. There should be an Application Event log entry under MsiInstaller that says something about the missing resource.
it is possible to install wix installer in non user mode and it take the input from the answer file this is the screen
answer file will put the Server name and data base name.
<serverName>localhost\SqlExpress</serverName><databaseName></databaseName>
This is the my answer file
Windows Installer does not have a facility for answer files. Instead, automated behavior is provided through property settings.
The primary way to set properties for an installer operation is via the msiexec command-line. You would probably want to use one of the quiet/unattended modes, too.
Another way, since an MSI file is a database, is to set properties in a copy of the MSI.
My Wix installer worked installing my program, but it's broken for uninstallation. A file is removed too early, and it's needed further down the line. The uninstaller fails and reverts its changes.
This means I can't remove the package from my machine, and hence can't install any further builds of my installer (a considerable inconvenience). How can I force removal of the package?
Update, Stein Åsmul: Injecting this newer list of cleanup approaches.
Find your package in C:\Windows\Installer, where Windows keeps copies of installed MSI packages. The names are generated randomly, so you'll have to look at the creation dates of the files.
Open the MSI file with Orca. (Unfortunately there is no simple download for the orca installer. You can get it by installing the "MSI Tools" of the Windows 10 SDK, and then searching for orca.msi in C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits.)
Delete the offending custom action from the CustomAction table
Now you should be able to uninstall the package.
UPDATE: You can find the actual cache MSI file using Powershell. That was for one package, you can also get for all packages (scroll down to first screenshot).
This command usually works for me:
msiexec /fv installer.msi
It somewhat recaches the installer, so you can try again with a corrected one.
One time this command didn't work and I had to use Microsoft FixIt. It solved the problem (quite a shock for me).
Depending on the exact reason of the behavior you described, you might have at least a couple of options.
If the reason of the failure is a custom action which runs on uninstall, and this custom action is conditioned with some properties you can influence upon, you can try to pass the desired value via the command line:
msiexec /x {YOUR-PRODUCTCODE-HERE} RUNMYACTION=false
In this sample RUNMYACTION is a Windows Installer property which participates in a custom action condition, and if you pass false as its value, the action won't run.
Otherwise, you can fix the logic (or just disable the custom action explicitly) and build the new MSI package. Then upload it to that target machine, and run like this:
msiexec /i YourPackage.msi REINSTALL=ALL REINSTALLMODE=vomus
Here YourPackage.msi is a new fixed package, REINSTALL=ALL instructs the msiexec to re-install the product using this new package, and REINSTALLMODE=vomus (the v part of it) will re-cache the MSI package and you'll be able to remove it the normal way afterwards.
A side note: you should test your installation on a virtual machine in order not to risk your real one.
FYI: In Windows 8.1 the installers have been moved here: C:\ProgramData\Package Cache\
If you are really desperate and all solutions above don't work try
msizap.exe
This will erase all that your installer put on a machine
LITTLE WARNING
Don't run msizap without knowing what options you want to run it with (for a list of options run msizap /? first).
I used this little tool also from Microsoft
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/17588/fix-problems-that-block-programs-from-being-installed-or-removed
Basically this tool can be used to "repair issues including corrupted registry keys that block you from installing or removing programs"
What it fixes:
Corrupted registry keys on 64-bit operating systems
Corrupted registry keys that control the update data
Problems that prevent new programs from being installed
Problems that prevent existing programs from being completely uninstalled or updated
Problems that block you from uninstalling a program through Add or Remove Programs (or Programs and Features) in Control Panel
It can be used for:
Windows 7
Windows 8
Windows 8.1
Windows 10
I usually just look for <Your Installer's Name>.msi or <Your Installer's Company Name> in the registry and delete some of the uninstall keys from some of the Products under the Windows installer trees and everything usually works fine and dandy afterwards, although this WOULD leave some stuff lying around like cached installers and possibly tons of other registry keys for each file installed, etc. but its ALWAYS worked for me when developing installers because honestly, who cares if one MSI is left over and cached somewhere? You're using the machine for development anyways, right?
I've developed a Wix installer for an internal project however entirely by accident I've found that I'm unable to uninstall the installer on my development machine as I get the following error message:
The feature you are trying to use is on a network resource that is unavailable
with a dialog pointing to the path of the .msi that I installed from feature from. (The .msi is there, however is has been rebuilt and so has changed since I installed it)
I'm concerned by this dialog as I had believed that Windows Installer kept track of installed .MSI files, however this dialog seems to suggest that I can break my uninstaller by deleting, moving or changing the installer.
Is this the case?
What do I need to do to make sure that I don't break my uninstaller in this way? (Do we need to keep copies of all versions of the installer ever installed on a machine?)
The easiest way to get out of this situation is to do a recache/reinstall. Build a new version of your MSI that isn't "broken" (in whatever way it is broken, in this case, it might not really be broken at all, you just need a new source). Then you use a command line like:
msiexec /fv path\to\your.msi /l*v i.txt
That will copy your.msi over the MSI that is cached and do a repair. Then you'll be in a better place.
One of the first painful lessons of writing installs is to never run your install on your own box. Certainly not until it reaches a point of maturity and has gone through several QA cycles. This is what we have integration labs and virtual machines for. (There is a saying about things you shouldn't do in your own back yard.)
That said, normally an MSI uninstall doesn't require the MSI but there are situations where it could be required. For example if one was to call the ResolveSource action during an uninstall, MSI would then look for the .MSI.
Now there are several ways out of this pickle:
Take an MSI you do have and edit it with ORCA to match to file name, UpgradeCode, ProductCode and PackageCode of the MSI that you installed. You should be able to get all of this information from looking at the stripped cached MSI that exists in %WINDIR%\Installer. CD to that directory and do a findstr -i -m SOMESTRING *.msi where SOMESTRING is something unique like your ProductName property. Once you know the name of the cached MSI, open it in Orca to get the required attributes. Then put these attributes in a copy of the MSI you have available and try to do an uninstall. No, it's not the exact MSI that you installed but usually it's close enough.
or
Use the front end windows installer cleanup utility (if you still have it) and/or the backend MSIZAP utility to wipe all knowledge of the application from MSI and Add/RemovePrograms. Note, this doesn't actually uninstall the program so you'll have to also write a script or otherwise manually uninstall all traces of the program.
or
Reimage your workstation
If you know exactly what is wrong (which is often the case during development), I prefer to open the MSI file that Windows will use for uninstallation and edit it directly with a tool like Orca to fix or remove the part that causes the failure.
For example:
Locate the MSI file in %WINDIR%\Installer. The MSI should be the last edited MSI file in that folder right after you did the failed uninstallation.
Open the msi file with Orca.
Remove the failing part - for example the InstallExecuteSequence action that fails which is atypical scenario.
Save the msi and close Orca to release the lock on the msi file.
1 - Have you experimented with "run from source" during installation?
This is an option in the feature tree which allows you to run some files from their installation source. This is generally combined with an admin image on the network. See image below. I haven't tried it, but I assume this could cause: "The feature you are trying to use is on a network resource that is unavailable" if the network is down and you are trying to uninstall. Just a theory, there are other ways this could happen.
2 - Are you running script custom actions? If so, do you extract to the tmp folder or run from installed files or the binary table? If so, is the custom action conditioned to run only on install?
3 - Are you perhaps running an EXE custom action that is pointing to an installed file? If so this file may be unreachable on the network.
4 - Are any of your userprofile folders redirected to a network share?
5 - Are you installing anything directly to a folder on the network?
There are plenty of other possibilities.
I'm writing a new major upgrade of our product.
In my installer I start by finding configuration settings of the previous version, then I'd like to uninstall the previous version.
I have found several guides telling me how one should make a MSI suitable for such upgrades.
However, the previous was not an MSI.
It was not according to best practices.
It does, however, in registry HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall{GUID} specify an UninstallString.
Using a RegistrySearch I can easy find the command below, which I store in UNINSTALL_CMD.
RunDll32 C:\PROGRA~1\COMMON~1\INSTAL~1\PROFES~1\RunTime\10\01\Intel32\Ctor.dll,LaunchSetup
"C:\Program Files\InstallShield Installation Information\{GUID}\setup.exe"
-l0x9 -removeonly 4:
I cannot get the hang of the CustomAction needed to perform the actual uninstall.
<CustomAction Id="ca.UninstPrev" Property="UNINSTALL_CMD" ExeCommand="" />
The MSI logs says:
Info 1721. There is a problem with this Windows Installer package. A program required for this install to complete could not be run. Contact your support personnel or package vendor. Action: ca.UninstallPrevious, location: RunDll32 C:\PROGRA~1\COMMON~1\INSTAL~1\PROFES~1\RunTime\10\01\Intel32\Ctor.dll,LaunchSetup "C:\Program Files\InstallShield Installation Information{GUID}\setup.exe" -l0x9 -removeonly, command:
Anyone seeing what I am doing wrong here?
Regards
Leif
I did application repackaging for a couple years at Continental Airlines where I did SMS pushes to an 18,000 seat forest. I frequently had a legacy application in the wild that was not installed using MSI that I needed to get redeployed using MSI and once that was done I supported major upgrades going forward.
These previously deployed apps typically had very broken and misbehaved uninstallers. Instead of calling these, I would use SMS to query the forest to get all the deployed versions. I would then deploy those old packages to a integration lab and work out what it was each installer did to the machine and write my own aggregated "forced cleanup" custom action that was capable of wiping the various versions of the application off the machine.
I executed this custom action prior CostInitialize so that when the new MSI did it's costing it wouldn't be influenced by the crap that was no longer on the machine. This worked for me because I pushed packages as System and I didn't have to worry about elevation issues. If you want to be fully UAC compliant you would want to run this custom code from a prereq package and either have your users run it manually or wire it into a bootstrapper to run prior to your MSI.
After a good nights sleep I found my error.
If you really read http://wix.sourceforge.net/manual-wix3/wix_xsd_customaction.htm the answer was there.
I was trying to make a type 50 custom action, launch an executable already installed on system.
Property specifies the full path to an executable to launch
ExeCommand specifies the command line arguments for this executable above.
And my fault was that I did place the full exe+command line in the Property field.
/L