Can a .msi file install itself (presumably via a Custom Action)? - wix

I wand to construct an MSI which, in its installation process, will deploy itself along with its contained Files/Components, to the TargetDir.
So MyApp.msi contains MyApp.exe and MyAppBootstrapperEmpty.exe (with no resources) in its File Table.
The user launches a MyAppBootstrapperPackaged.exe (containing MyApp.msi as a resource, obtained from the internet somewhere, or email or otherwise). MyAppBootStrapperPackaged.exe extracts MyApp.msi to a temp folder and executes it via msiexec.exe.
After the msiexec.exe process completes, I want MyApp.msi, MyBootstrapperEmpty.exe (AND MyApp.exe in %ProgramFiles%\MyApp folder so MyApp.exe can be assured access to MyApp.msi when it runs (for creating the below-mentioned packaged content).
MyAppBootstrapper*.exe could try and copy MyApp.msi to %ProgramFiles%\MyApp folder, but would need elevation to do so, and would not allow for its removal via Windows Installer uninstall process (from Add/Remove Programs or otherwise), which should be preserved.
Obviously (I think it's obvious - am I wrong?) I can't include the MSI as a file in my Media/CAB (chicken and egg scenario), so I believe it would have to be done via a Custom Action before the install process, adding the original MSI to the MSI DB's Media/CAB and the appropriate entry in the File table on the fly. Can this be done and if so how?
Think of a content distribution model where content files are only ever to be distributed together with the App. Content is produced by the end user via the App at run time, and packaged into a distributable EXE which includes both the App and the content.
MyApp's installer must remain an MSI, but may be executed by a Bootstrapper EXE. The installed MyApp.exe must have access to both MyApp.msi and EXE is to be "assembled" at runtime by the App from a base (empty) MyAppBootstrapper.exe, which is also installed by the MSI, and the content created by the end-user. The EXE's resource MSI must be the same as that used to install the App which is doing the runtime packaging.
WIX is not to be installed with MyApp.
There can be no network dependencies at run-/packaging- time (i.e. can't do the packaging via a Webservice - must be done locally).
I am familiar with (and using) Custom Actions (managed and unmanaged, via DTF and otherwise).

Add an uncompressed medium to your wxs like this:
<Media Id='2'/>
And then create a component with a File element like this:
<File Source='/path/to/myinstaller.msi' Compressed='no' DiskId='2' />
This will make the installer look for a file called "myinstaller.msi" on the installation medium, in the same folder as the msi that is being installed. The source path above should point to a dummy file, it is only there to appease wix.
Edit: The following sample test.wxs demonstrates that it works. It produces a test.msi file which installs itself to c:\program files\test. Note that you need to put a dummy test.msi file in the same folder as text.wxs to appease wix.
<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
<Wix xmlns='http://schemas.microsoft.com/wix/2006/wi'>
<Product
Name='ProductName'
Id='*'
Language='1033'
Version='0.0.1'
Manufacturer='ManufacturerName' >
<Package
Keywords='Installer'
Description='Installer which installs itself'
Manufacturer='ManufactererName'
InstallerVersion='100'
Languages='1033'
Compressed='yes'
SummaryCodepage='1252'/>
<Media Id='1' Cabinet='test.cab' EmbedCab='yes'/>
<Media Id='2' />
<Directory Id='TARGETDIR' Name="SourceDir">
<Directory Id='ProgramFilesFolder'>
<Directory Id='TestFolder' Name='Test' >
<Component Id="InstallMyself">
<File Source="./test.msi" Compressed="no" DiskId="2" />
</Component>
</Directory>
</Directory>
</Directory>
<Feature
Id='Complete'
Display='expand'
Level='1'
Title='Copy msi file to program files folder'
Description='Test'>
<ComponentRef Id="InstallMyself" />
</Feature>
</Product>
</Wix>

Having one .MSI package launch another .MSI package from "within" itself is called a nested install, and it's bad juju (see Rule 20). Windows Installer has some global data that it uses to manage the current install, and it doesn't handle well multiple installs at the same time. For the same reason, if you start one install and then try to start another while the first is still in progress, you'll usually see a pop-up to the effect of "another install in progress, please wait until it's done".
You can have a program, usually called a bootstrapper (I think that's what you're referring to) which is itself not an install package, but which contains an install package (such as an .MSI or an .EXE) as a resource, possibly compressed. The action of the bootstrapper program is to extract/expand the resource to a file, commonly in a %TEMP% directory, then either launch the extracted .EXE or run MSIEXEC on the extracted .MSI. The bootstrapper can contain multiple resources and extract+install them one by one, if you need to install prerequisites before the main package. Or you can ship multiple packages as separate files, and have the bootstrapper execute/install them directly from the distribution media one by one, or copy them down to the target machine and run the series of install from there, or...
WiX itself does not get installed, no. It's a tool with which .MSI packages can be built. The WiX project has on its wishlist a generic bootstrapper program, but it hasn't been implemented yet. There are other bootstrappers available, e.g. this one.
You won't need a custom action -- in fact, since the bootstrapper isn't itself a Windows Installer installation package, "custom action" has no meaning to it. And, if you're familiar enough with CAs to know about managed/unmanaged/DTF, then you know enough to avoid custom actions whenever you can. (grin)

I think it's much easier for your bootstrapper to extract MSI file to some predefined location rather than to the temp folder. For example, to C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\My Company\My Product Install Cache. After installation finishes bootstrapper would leave MSI file sitting there. If at some stage user decides to reinstall your product Windows Installer will be able to locate source MSI file.
Also, add path to this file to RemoveFile table so that it gets deleted on uninstall. You can use RemoveFile element in WiX for that.

So if I understand, then I think I would have the app create a transform (MST) that has the content files and apply that to the base MSI. I'm still not convinced that I understand though. :)

I'd configure the MSI cache path to a known location.
Then at runtime if you need to "edit" the MSI use VBScript or similar.
But still, I ask WHY!?!

I am also working on a way to deploy multiple MSI files. I have a bootstrapper.exe program that bundles the MSI files and runs them one at a time. This solves my problem for most cases.
The case it does not solve is GPO (Global Policy Object) distribution of the install. GPO requires a dot-msi file to run an install.
To do this here's what I did which almost solved the problem (but not quite). I put the dot-msi files in the file table of an installer and put my bootstrapper in the binary table and run it from a custom action inserted after InstallFinalize in the InstallExecuteSequence. Of course the bootstrapper won't be able to run other MSI's because the top level MSI holds the _MSIExecute mutex.
It was pretty easy to get a little further. I made the bootstrapper return control to the top level installer and continute. And then I added a WaitForSingleObject call to wait for the top level install to finish, and the bootstrapper can then continue to finish the install.
My problem is that the GPO installation happens at boot time and the top level install completes before the sub installers are done and GPO reboots the machine.
The toplevel install also returns a success status when the install may actually fail later on.
I'm still looking for a way to block the top level install from completing until after the bootstrapper completes.

Related

How do I stop removal of files during uninstallation using Wix

When uninstalling my application, I'd like to configure the Wix setup to NOT to remove few files that were added as part of the installation. It seems like the uninstaller removes all the files that were originally installed from the MSI file. How do I do that?
Here are my files which I wish to keep it forever
<Binary Id="RootCABinary" SourceFile="Assets\Certificates\RootCA.cer" />
<Binary Id="SubCABinary" SourceFile="Assets\Certificates\SubCA.cer" />
I have used WixIIsExtension.dll to install these certificates to the windows store.
Overwrite: Is it important that the file never gets overwritten? If so, add
"Never Overwrite" to your component. WiX attribute: NeverOverwrite="yes". Remember to test upgrade scenarios!
Permanent Component: As stated by Pavel, you can set a component permanent:
<Component Permanent="yes">
<File Source="License.rtf" />
</Component>
Blank GUID: Another way to do it is to set a blank component GUID. It essentially means "install and then leave alone". No repair or uninstall should be done (remember to add NeverOverwrite="yes" if the file should never be overwritten):
<Component Guid="" Feature="MainApplication">
<File Source="SubCA.cer" KeyPath="yes" />
</Component>
Read-Only Copy: I sometimes install files to a per-machine path (for example somewhere under program files) and then copy them to a per-user location (somewhere in the user-profile) on application launch, and then do operations on them that entail that the files should not be deleted. This is good in cases where you want to do something that change the files in question (they need to be writable). Then it is good to "untangle" them from deployment concerns (files will not be meddled with by installer operations at all - the installer has no knowledge of them). The original read-only copy installed to program files can be uninstalled though (no longer needed?).
Other approaches: You can also create such files using custom actions during installation (usually text files only), you can download the file in question from your web site on application launch (makes the file easy to manage and update / replace? Vulnerable to connection problems - firewalls, etc...) and the application can create the file using "internal defaults" in the main executable on launch. And there are no doubt further approaches that I can't recall.
Put your binaries in a separate WiX component and make it permanent. Have a look at this thread as well

Wix throws away components that are marked as NeverOverWrite="yes"

I've created an installer that upgrades our software, but for some reason the XML configuration files (those of our software) are removed when upgrading.
This appears to happen if all features of the software are upgraded.
Our software is an archive type thing. If I install just that feature and upgrade it everything is fine.
However, if I install all services accompanying the archive and upgrade those then all configuration files (and each is in a different folder!) are gone.
As an example:
<ComponentGroup Id="AutoArchiveTool" Directory="AutoArchiverFolder">
<Component Id="C_AutoArchivingTool_Gateway_exe_config" NeverOverwrite="yes" Guid="{A62D5200-FDE0-4DA1-A04A-7FBDACEA83B2}">
<File Id="F_AutoArchivingTool_Gateway_exe_config" Source="$(var.Gateway.TargetDir)Gateway.exe.config" KeyPath="yes"/>
</Component>
... more script
</ComponentGroup>
If you log the installer you can even see that it's recognized as "never overwrite":
Disallowing installation of component: {A62D5200-FDE0-4DA1-A04A-7FBDACEA83B2} since the keyfile exists and the component is marked to never overwrite existing installations
Yet it's gone after the upgrade. What am I missing?
I've see the "Permanent" property, but that's not what I want. I want the installer to leave the config files alone during an upgrade. Not leave them (config files) after removal.
NeverOverwrite does not mean "don't uninstall" so:
a) if the component ID changes between the original install and the new one the sharing won't work as you intend and the ref count will decrement and the file will be removed, this being when the upgrade is scheduled "late", such as afterInstallExecute.
b) If the upgrade is scheduled early (such as afterInstallInitialize) all the old product is uninstalled first, then the new product is installed. You haven't said where your upgrade is sequenced, but sometimes Windows Installer screws up in an "early" upgrade: it decides that the file won't be overwritten, but fails to re-evaluate this when the install turns out to be an upgrade. In this case your upgrade will complete and the file will be missing. If you have this issue then a repair of the product will restore the file from the new version of the product (because that is the current owner of the component). This won't help.
So make sure that the component ID didn't change and your upgrade is scheduled late, such as afterInstallExecute. In addition, do the upgrade with verbose logging to verify what's going on.
Having said all that, NeverOverwrite is often used to solve a problem that doesn't exist. The file overwrite rules (that are invoked by a "late" upgrade) say that modified files won't be overwritten:
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa370531(v=vs.85).aspx
So if the first setup installs the file, then it gets updated by the app, then your upgrade runs it will not replace the modified file anyway, and there is no need to set NeverOverwrite.

WiX/MSI: could not deploy files harvested by heat tool when using MS Intune

I've got a 32b MSI installer developed on 64b machine using WiX toolset (3.10).
It has been tested on both 32b and 64b platforms with different Windows (7, 8.1, 10) and it works without any issues.
The problem starts when I've tried to install my MSI via Microsoft Intune. (It works well with other tools for mass deployment)
While performing the fresh install, user is prompted to insert MSI file (after it is selected, the installation goes smoothly but that is not the purpose of mass deployment).
I've observed that the problem is not occurring when I remove from MSI files that are harvested using heat tool.
The command is (passed via Visual Studio):
"$(WIX)\bin\heat.exe" dir "C:\SOURCE_PATH" -ke -scom -frag -srd -ag
-var var.Resources -cg ResourcesGroupId -dr INSTALLDIR_RES
-out "$(ProjectDir)Source\Fragments\HarvestedResources.wxs"
This component group is added to main Feature containing all other components.
The destination directory is created as:
<DirectoryRef Id='INSTALLDIR_RES'>
<Component Id='cmp_ResDiR' Guid='{SOME_GUID}'>
<CreateFolder />
<RemoveFolder Id='INSTALLDIR_RES' On='uninstall' />
</Component>
</DirectoryRef>
INSTALLDIR_RES is a sibling path located under INSTALLDIR.
Logs are showing that ComponentRegistry is done with exit code 1 (success).
Install scope is per-machine, elevated installation is enabled. All properties used during install are marked as:
secure="yes" admin="yes"
And visible under AdminProperties and SecureCustomProperties (checked via Orca). I don't use any CustomAction to deploy this resources, though.
How can Intune affect my MSI? What am I missing?
The problem was only partially related to MS Intune and absolutely not related to heat.exe and harvesting files.
It turned out that there were two issues:
MSI was deployed using MS Intune but without providing the original MSI to the users. During installation the MSI has been copied to the temp directory and removed after app has been installed. It would be ok, although access to original MSI is helpful in case of self-repair, which leads to second issue:
On some machines, during initial run, the MSI was launching the self-repair procedure. As the original MSI wasn't available on hard disk, the user was prompted for selecting the MSI manually as described in first post. Thanks to the great description of self-healing issues in MSI by Stein Åsmul I was able to detect the root cause (advertised shortcut to main executable with regEntry in user specific path) and fix it.
As a summary: MS Intune doesn't affect deploying files harvested by heat.exe.

wix bootstrapper

I have written a managed wix bootstrapper using WPF. The actual installation steps requires chaining of multiple msi's/exe's and batch files.
<Chain>
<MsiPackage SourceFile="xxx"/>
<ExePackage Id="Test" SourceFile="..\TestBatch.bat" Vital="yes"/>
<MsiPackage SourceFile="yyy"/>
</Chain>
During the execution of each package, a message should be displayed (preferably from the bootstrapper UI) indicating which msi/exe package/ batch file is being executed currently.
In short, a ProgressText is needed in the bootstrapper How can I make this happen?
Another question: I do not want all the msi's to be packaged into the bootstrapper exe. This is because: Each time an msi is changed we would like to ship only the updated/modified msi and not the entire bootstrapper exe. Is there a way to do this?
Two answers, one suggestion:
To get messages back during the MsiPackages being installed, handle the BootstrapperCore.ExecuteMsiMessage event. The event args there will contain a Message that contains the data you are looking for.
To configure how the packages are compressed or not, use the Compress attribute. You can either mark the entire Bundle/#Compress='no' or mark each package Compress='no' (or 'yes' if you want to go that way).
--
Suggestion: Be sure to add DetectCondition to the ExePackages so Burn will know if the ExePackages are already present or not.

Copy file using Burn

I am using WiX Burn to make my installer, i am bundling one exe and one msi.
And the exe needs an properties file at the time of install.
Is there a way to copy the file using burn, i tried Payload but it is not working.
Can i know the location throguh any Bundle variable where my file is copied.
Thanks
Ravi S
Make sure you are specifying the properties file as the payload for the exe and not for the bootstrapper. For example, in your bundle, your chain may look something like this:
<Chain>
<MsiPackage SourceFile="MyInstaller.msi" Id="MyInstaller" Cache="yes"/>
<ExePackage SourceFile="MyExe.exe" Id="MyExe" Cache="yes">
<Payload SourceFile="OtherFile.properties" Id="Properties"/>
</ExePackage>
</Chain>
Also, as a sanity check, which version of WiX are you using? If you are using an older build (such as RC0), you could try updating to the latest weekly build.
Update:
In WiX 3.6 it does not appear that you can get the absolute path of a payload file. There are two bugs/feature request open right now regarding the issue that are deferred to WiX 3.7:
Add burn variable to cache path - ID: 3557446
Change working folder to the cache folder - ID: 3538846
One workaround would be to use burn to write your own bootstrapper application and then programmatically determine the working directory and set the appropriate parameters, but that would be a lot of work for this one issue.