I want to create an installer EXE with some specific properties:

  1. it should be a single exe file
  2. it should be robust (i.e. the technique should be known to work well on any Windows system)
  3. it should create only a single file (a .scn screensaver file) in %systemroot%
  4. it should add the option to uninstall that particular file in "Control Panel -> Add or Remove Programs" but without creating any new entry C:\Program Files or copying an uninstaller.exe somewhere.

I've seen installers that work like that - so how to do this?

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70% accept rate
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Does it have to be an EXE? Most Windows Installers are built as MSI (Microsoft Installer) now.. =) – Rob Jul 2 '09 at 12:13
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If you do come up with a solution, be sure to send a copy to Microsoft. They haven't managed it yet. – jalf Jul 2 '09 at 12:15
ah well yeah - it meight be an MSI as well, as long as MSI installer files can be installed on any windows machines without prerequisites – Mat Jul 2 '09 at 12:15
The correct version of Windows Installer is a prerequisite for MSIs, but that should be on pretty any Windows system (and if it was missing most setups would fail). – 0xA3 Jul 2 '09 at 12:17
Hmm... If it's only copying a single file around, and that file is a program anyway (scn screensavers are just renamed exe's), why not make that one program have three different modes? "run without parameters" == copy to %systemroot%, display dialog box "thanks for installing". run with parameter /s == display screensaver. run with parameter /u == uninstall (delete from %systemroot%). – Stobor Jul 2 '09 at 12:34
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11 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

As you've said it can be an MSI, I'd suggest going down that route.

You could play around with installer projects in Visual Studio (if you have it; I'm not sure if the Express editions support making installers), as they'll quite happily produce an MSI that will do what you're asking. It's worth noting they'll produce an EXE and an MSI, you only need to distribute the MSI though.

Failing that, take a look at Windows Installer XML (WiX) as that will let you hand sculpt an MSI that does exactly what you want it to do and will cater for all five of your points above.

Note: Using an MSI will mean that you'll need to have Windows Installer on the machine you're installing to - It's in-box from Windows 2000/ME upwards.

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No, the Express versions dont support making installers. – Martin Jul 2 '09 at 12:29
So i gave Visual Studio and the installer project a try, but the created MSI wants to create a Folder in the windows "Program Files" folder. I could not remove that from the installer since it told me that this is a required folder and cannot be removed :( So now i'm going to give NSIS a try... – Mat Jul 2 '09 at 12:45
WiX has been recommended by the Microsoft Windows Installer team - quite a recommendation. blogs.msdn.com/windows_installer_team/archive/2006/05/12/… – MarkJ Oct 19 '09 at 15:49
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Take a look at NSIS it is quite simple and it is used to create installers for Windows.

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+1 because you're the only one to actually link to NSIS. – scvalex Jul 2 '09 at 12:32
I found this GUI tool very helpful for the set up of my install script nsis.sourceforge.net/NSIS_Script_Editor – user119179 Jul 2 '09 at 12:37
For something this simple, NSIS is the best bet. – saschabeaumont Jul 2 '09 at 22:32
builtin script lang allow custom setups. – gavenkoa Aug 18 '11 at 8:57
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I've heard good things about the free installer Innosetup, and the website says it can create single EXE installs.

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For start Inno Setup is better, because have an Wizard to make the setup file. – Nathan Campos Jul 13 '09 at 17:36
Innosetup is very easy, just copy the example file and add the name of your own exe. You don't need the pascal scripting unless you need to o something very complex – Martin Beckett Sep 6 '09 at 1:17
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Try Advanced Installer, I think it can do all that you ask. I use it for slightly more complex installers but the free version is easy to use and powerful.

There can be an issue with MSI files, older PCs don't have the latest Windows Installer, 3.1, so you need to install that or prompt the user to, first! Have you looked into using IExpress if you just want to copy a file across?

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NSIS is the way to go, very simple to learn, just write a simple file specifying which files you want to install over where. You can also add QuickLaunch options and so on. Then run the NSIS compiler and you get the exe.

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Both NSIS and Inno Setup will cope with all the tasks specified. Inno Setup uses a Pascal-like language for its scripts, NSIS uses its own script language.

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NSIS, MSI any installer can do that for you.

NSIS is pretty small and compact.

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If you want to use standard deployment methods with your installer you probably should stay away from NSIS. See http://unattended.sourceforge.net/installers.php for an overview.

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I'm using Actual Installer. Try it!

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InstallShield has a release option called "Single .EXE". It can bundle the payload inside, plug register w/Add-Remove Programs as you specified.

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The not copying an installer somewhere and adding an entry into Add/Remove seem to be counteractive. My understanding is that add-remove programs neccesarily references a copy of the uninstaller that resides in a Windows directory (so it doesn't lose access to it).

Perhaps you could have the screensaver double as an uninstaller if you pass it some sort of command-line option. Then simply tell the msi that the uninstaller IS the screensaver (hence no unnecessary coping to some other directory.)

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With an MSI, Windows caches it in %windir%\installer anyway, so it doesn't create any files in %programfiles% or anywhere else, which I guess probably satisfies the spirit of point 5, if not the exact wording =) – Rob Jul 2 '09 at 12:27
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it seemed very specific "or not coping uninstaller somewhere"... cacheing vs coping? – Ape-inago Jul 2 '09 at 13:02
caching is actually fine if that chache folder is hidden from the user anyway – Mat Jul 2 '09 at 13:11
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