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Trying to use WMI to obtain a list of installed programs for Windows XP. Using wmic, I tried:

wmic /output:c:\ProgramList.txt product get name,version

and I get a listing of many of the installed programs, but after scrubbing this list against what "Add/Remove Programs" displays, I see many more programs listed in the GUI of Add/Remove Programs than with the WMI query. Is there another WMI query I need to use to get the rest of the programs installed? Or is there some other place I need to look for the rest?

Also, there are two installed programs that are listed in the WMI query that aren't in Add/Remove programs. Any idea why?

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14 Answers 14

33

I believe your syntax is using the Win32_Product Class in WMI. One cause is that this class only displays products installed using Windows Installer (See Here). The Uninstall Registry Key is your best bet.

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\WOW6432Node\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall

UPDATE FOR COMMENTS:

The Uninstall Registry Key is the standard place to list what is installed and what isn't installed. It is the location that the Add/Remove Programs list will use to populate the list of applications. I'm sure that there are applications that don't list themselves in this location. In that case you'd have to resort to another cruder method such as searching the Program Files directory or looking in the Start Menu Programs List. Both of those ways are definitely not ideal.

In my opinion, looking at the registry key is the best method.

5
  • Are there any other locations to watch? IOW are there any programs that count as 'installed' without using the Installer or the uninstall registry key?
    – romandas
    Mar 23, 2009 at 13:12
  • Updated answer per your comment.
    – Rob Haupt
    Mar 23, 2009 at 14:21
  • +1 and accepted - more complete answer (at the time of this comment), though listing the registry entry like Bobby did would be nice.
    – romandas
    Mar 27, 2009 at 22:14
  • `HKLM\SOFTWARE\Classes\Installer` Jan 19, 2017 at 15:38
  • Also be sure to check the same paths under HKEY_CURRENT_USER. Some software that is only installed for the current user and not installed system-wide will be listed there.
    – Ajedi32
    Jun 29, 2020 at 16:39
13

All that Add/Remove Programs is really doing is reading this Registry key:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall
2
  • 1
    On Windows 8.1, one of my application's uninstall info was found in a different registry location: HKLM\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\AppName_is1. The _is1 is a decoration added by InnoSetup.
    – cod3monk3y
    Jan 14, 2014 at 18:53
  • 1
    That "All that..." is not quite right. The HKLM-Key is ONE key that contains software. It depends on the software type 32bit or 64bit. Under HKLM\Software\Microsoft\...\Uninstall you find 64bit software. Under HKLM\Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\...\Uninstall you find 32bit software.
    – Gerd
    Aug 10, 2018 at 9:08
7

Besides the most commonly known registry key for installed programs:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall

wmic command and the add/remove programs also query another registry key:

HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Installer\Products

Software name shown in the list is read from the Value of a Data entry within this key called: ProductName

Removing the registry key for a certain product from both of the above locations will keep it from showing in the add/remove programs list. This is not a method to uninstall programs, it will just remove the entry from what's known to windows as installed software.

Since, by using this method you would lose the chance of using the Remove button from the add/remove list to cleanly remove the software from your system; it's recommended to export registry keys to a file before you delete them. In future, if you decided to bring that item back to the list, you would simply run the registry file you stored.

5

I have been using Inno Setup for an installer. I'm using 64-bit Windows 7 only. I'm finding that registry entries are being written to

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall

I haven't yet figured out how to get this list to be reported by WMI (although the program is listed as installed in Programs and Features). If I figure it out, I'll try to remember to report back here.

UPDATE:

Entries for 32-bit programs installed on a 64-bit machine go in that registry location. There's more written here:

http://mdb-blog.blogspot.com/2010/09/c-check-if-programapplication-is.html

See my comment that describes 32-bit vs 64-bit behavior in that same post here:

http://mdb-blog.blogspot.com/2010/09/c-check-if-programapplication-is.html?showComment=1300402090679#c861009270784046894

Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be a way to get WMI to list all programs from the add/remove programs list (aka Programs and Features in Windows 7, not sure about Vista). My current code has dropped WMI in favor of using the registry. The code itself to interrogate the registry is even easier than using WMI. Sample code is in the above link.

5

You can get it in one line with powershell and batch file :

@echo off
Powershell /command "Get-ItemProperty HKLM:\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\* | Select-Object DisplayName, DisplayVersion, Publisher, InstallDate | Format-List"
Pause
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  • You can also look at: HKLM:\Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall* Nov 14, 2019 at 15:12
  • 1
    put: > mytextfile.txt after the second line to put the files into a text file Nov 14, 2019 at 15:13
5

Not the best, but whether it is practical method:

Use HijackThis. (Old version: HijackThis)

Run hijack this, click the "Open the Misc Tools section" button

HijackThis Main Menu

click "Open Uninstall Manager"

HijackThis Configuration

click save list (*.txt), yes to the prompts, notepad will open with your add/remove programs list.

HijackThis Add/Remove Programs Manager


Source

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  • 1
    This seems like a lot of work for nothing and has nothing to do with the question, which was how to use WMI for doing the query.
    – romandas
    May 19, 2011 at 1:10
  • 5
    @romandas, I think this answer was given because quantme assumed that the poster did not have a pure theoretical interest in WMI query, but was actually trying to get a complete and reliable list of installed programs. This answer is also a reply to the sub question "Or is there some other place I need to look for the rest?" Feb 9, 2014 at 10:03
2

Installed products consist of installed software elements and features so it's worth checking wmic alias's for PRODUCT as well as checking SOFTWAREELEMENT and SOFTWAREFEATURE:

wmic product get name,version

wmic softwareelement get name,version

wmic softwarefeature get name,version
2

You can use the script from http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee692772.aspx#EBAA to access the registry and list applications using WMI.

2

Hope this helps somebody: I've been using the registry-based enumeration in my scripts (as suggested by some of the answers above), but have found that it does not properly enumerate 64-bit software when run on Windows 10 x64 via SCCM (which uses a 32-bit client). Found something like this to be the most straightforward solution in my particular case:

Function Get-Programs($Bits) {
  $Result = @()
  $Output = (reg query HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall /reg:$Bits /s)

  Foreach ($Line in $Output) {
    If ($Line -match '^\s+DisplayName\s+REG_SZ\s+(.+?)$') {
      $Result += New-Object PSObject -Property @{
        DisplayName = $matches[1];
        Bits = "$($Bits)-bit";
      }
    }
  }

  $Result
}

$Software  = Get-Programs 32
$Software += Get-Programs 64

Realize this is a little too Perl-ish in a bad way, but all other alternatives I've seen involved insanity with wrapper scripts and similar clever-clever solutions, and this seems a little more human.

P.S. Trying really hard to refrain from dumping a ton of salt on Microsoft here for making an absolutely trivial thing next to impossible. I.e., enumerating all MS Office versions in use on a network is a task to make a grown man weep.

2

With time having moved on quite a bit since this question was asked...

There's a WMI class available these days for the Uninstall entries in the registry. This is much quicker to reference than Win32_Product, which I think also runs verification on the list and can take a while to enumerate. The below Powershell code (possibly requires Powershell 3 or later) will list all entries (The Out-Gridview part is just for a pretty display).

Get-CimInstance Win32Reg_AddRemovePrograms | Out-gridview
1

Add/Remove Programs also has to look into this registry key to find installations for the current user:

HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall

Applications like Google Chrome, Dropbox, or shortcuts installed through JavaWS (web start) JNLPs can be found only here.

1

In order to build a more-or-less reliable list of applications that appear in the "Programs and Feautres" in the Control Panel, you have to consider that not all applications were installed using MSI. WMI only provides the ones installed with MSI.

Here is a short summary of what I've found out:

MSI applications always have a Product Code (GUID) subkey under HKLM\...\Uninstall and/or under HKLM\...\Installer\UserData\S-1-5-18\Products. In addition, they may have a key that looks like HKLM\...\Uninstall\NotAGuid.

Non-MSI applications do not have a product code, and therefore have keys like HKLM\...\Uninstall\NotAGuid or HKCU\...\Uninstall\NotAGuid.

0

I adapted the MS-Technet VBScript for my needs. It dumps Wow6432Node as well as standard entries into "programms.txt" Use it at your own risk, no warranty!

Save as dump.vbs

From command line type: wscript dump.vbs

Const HKLM = &H80000002
Set objReg = GetObject("winmgmts://" & "." & "/root/default:StdRegProv")
Set objFSO = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")

outFile="programms.txt"

Set objFile = objFSO.CreateTextFile(outFile,True)
writeList "SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\", objReg, objFile
writeList "SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\", objReg, objFile
objFile.Close 

Function writeList(strBaseKey, objReg, objFile) 
objReg.EnumKey HKLM, strBaseKey, arrSubKeys 
    For Each strSubKey In arrSubKeys
        intRet = objReg.GetStringValue(HKLM, strBaseKey & strSubKey, "DisplayName", strValue)
        If intRet <> 0 Then
            intRet = objReg.GetStringValue(HKLM, strBaseKey & strSubKey, "QuietDisplayName", strValue)
        End If
        objReg.GetStringValue HKLM, strBaseKey & strSubKey, "DisplayVersion", version
        objReg.GetStringValue HKLM, strBaseKey & strSubKey, "InstallDate", insDate 
        If (strValue <> "") and (intRet = 0) Then
            objFile.Write strValue & "," & version & "," & insDate & vbCrLf
        End If
    Next
End Function
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I had the same issue with the WMIC command only showing a subset of all installed programs. I needed a command that would output a CSV file of all the installed programs in Windows 10 and I wanted to make it easy for colleagues to run. The following Powershell command seems to work well, running much quicker than the WMIC command; it will generate a CSV in the user's Documents folder called AppsInstalled.csv with programs sorted by name, and with empty lines removed (numerous blank lines were returned in my tests for some reason?).

Get-ItemProperty HKLM:\Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\* | Select-Object DisplayName, DisplayVersion, Publisher, InstallDate| Where-Object DisplayName -ne $null | Sort-Object -Property DisplayName | Export-Csv "$($env:USERPROFILE)\Documents\AppsInstalled.csv" -NoTypeInformation

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