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I am deploying my application using the installer that i create using the Setup and Deployment project in visual studio. When i build the setup project i get a .exe and a .msi file.

I would like to know the difference between them.

I noticed that the .exe cannot work without the .msi, but the reverse is not so.

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  • I would also like to know this answer. +1 Dec 13, 2010 at 13:25
  • I'd always wondered too!
    – TabbyCool
    Dec 13, 2010 at 13:26

3 Answers 3

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The exe file is a bootstrapper that installs any required prerequisites and then calls your setup, which is the msi file.

You can start the setup by itself, running the msi file, but it will fail if the required prerequisites are not installed (possible examples: .Net framework, VC++ redistributable, newer version of MSI, etc.)

It fails when you try to run the setup with the bootstrapper (exe file) and your msi is missing, because basically it will install all the prerequisites and then it will try to start your installer ( the msi file). If the file is not there, it doesn't have what to start.

Depending on your application needs, a similar technique would be to use Merge Modules for your application prerequisites. A merge module would basically load all the required components into your main installer so you'll end up just with one MSI file that has everything inside. You have to be sure that every component that you use has a merge module available, if it doesn't you'll have to use a bootstrapper.

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Adrian is correct. This might add some more info.

http://www.ghacks.net/2009/03/23/msi-or-exe-setup/

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    could you add/quote/summarize some of the content at that link? in case of link-rot, this would be uselessin the future... Feb 18, 2011 at 17:58
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I believe MSI files are just scripts for installation, with the association being the Windows Installer. Executable files wrap the MSI, creating a loader which does pretty much the same thing but can install prerequisites.

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