21

I am very new to PowerShell and have some difficulty with understanding.
I want to install an .MSI inside PowerShell script.
Can please explain me how to do that or provide me beginners level tutorial.

$wiObject = New-Object -ComObject WindowsInstaller.Installer
?????

7 Answers 7

23

When trying to silently install an MSI via PowerShell using this command:

Start-Process $webDeployInstallerFilePath -ArgumentList '/quiet' -Wait

I was getting the error:

The specified executable is not a valid application for this OS platform.

I instead switched to using msiexec.exe to execute the MSI with this command, and it worked as expected:

$arguments = "/i `"$webDeployInstallerFilePath`" /quiet"
Start-Process msiexec.exe -ArgumentList $arguments -Wait

Hopefully others find this useful.

1
  • Also you can do -ArgumentList '/quiet /passive. /passive removes any UI that will be shown with just /quiet
    – maxc137
    Apr 9, 2021 at 18:19
21

Why get so fancy about it? Just invoke the .msi file:

& <path>\filename.msi

or

Start-Process <path>\filename.msi

Edit: Full list of Start-Process parameters

https://ss64.com/ps/start-process.html

2
  • And you can simply add switches and other parameters to this?
    – Brettski
    Jul 8, 2016 at 20:33
  • 1
    Without passing more switches, this is the equivalent of double-clicking the .msi - This does not install the package, only loads it/hands it off to msiexec in the GUI.
    – Orangutech
    Jan 12 at 17:03
7

You can use:

msiexec /i "c:\package.msi"

You can also add some more optional parameters. There are common msi parameters and parameters which are specific for your installer. For common parameters just call msiexec

7
#Variables
$computername = Get-Content 'M:\Applications\Powershell\comp list\Test.txt'
$sourcefile = "\\server\Apps\LanSchool 7.7\Windows\Student.msi"
#This section will install the software 
foreach ($computer in $computername) 
{
    $destinationFolder = "\\$computer\C$\download\LanSchool"
    #This section will copy the $sourcefile to the $destinationfolder. If the Folder does not exist it will create it.
    if (!(Test-Path -path $destinationFolder))
    {
        New-Item $destinationFolder -Type Directory
    }
    Copy-Item -Path $sourcefile -Destination $destinationFolder
    Invoke-Command -ComputerName $computer -ScriptBlock { & cmd /c "msiexec.exe /i c:\download\LanSchool\Student.msi" /qn ADVANCED_OPTIONS=1 CHANNEL=100}
}

I've searched all over for this myself and came up with zilch but have finally cobbled this working script together. It's working great! Thought I'd post here hopefully someone else can benefit. It pulls in a list of computers, copies the files down to the local machines and runs it. :) party on!

2

After some trial and tribulation, I was able to find all .msi files in a given directory and install them.

foreach($_msiFiles in 
($_msiFiles = Get-ChildItem $_Source -Recurse | Where{$_.Extension -eq ".msi"} |
 Where-Object {!($_.psiscontainter)} | Select-Object -ExpandProperty FullName)) 
{
    msiexec /i $_msiFiles /passive
}
1

In powershell 5.1 you can actually use install-package, but it can't take extra msi arguments.

install-package .\file.msi

Otherwise with start-process and waiting:

start -wait file.msi ALLUSERS=1,INSTALLDIR=C:\FILE
-1
#$computerList = "Server Name"
#$regVar = "Name of the package "
#$packageName = "Packe name "
$computerList = $args[0]
$regVar = $args[1]
$packageName = $args[2]
foreach ($computer in $computerList)
{
    Write-Host "Connecting to $computer...."
    Invoke-Command -ComputerName $computer -Authentication Kerberos -ScriptBlock {
    param(
        $computer,
        $regVar,
        $packageName
        )

        Write-Host "Connected to $computer"
        if ([IntPtr]::Size -eq 4)
        {
            $registryLocation = Get-ChildItem "HKLM:\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\"
            Write-Host "Connected to 32bit Architecture"
        }
        else
        {
            $registryLocation = Get-ChildItem "HKLM:\Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\"
            Write-Host "Connected to 64bit Architecture"
        }
        Write-Host "Finding previous version of `enter code here`$regVar...."
        foreach ($registryItem in $registryLocation)
        {
            if((Get-itemproperty $registryItem.PSPath).DisplayName -match $regVar)
            {
                Write-Host "Found $regVar" (Get-itemproperty $registryItem.PSPath).DisplayName
                $UninstallString = (Get-itemproperty $registryItem.PSPath).UninstallString
                    $match = [RegEx]::Match($uninstallString, "{.*?}")
                    $args = "/x $($match.Value) /qb"
                    Write-Host "Uninstalling $regVar...."
                    [diagnostics.process]::start("msiexec", $args).WaitForExit() 
                    Write-Host "Uninstalled $regVar"
            }
        }

        $path = "\\$computer\Msi\$packageName"
        Write-Host "Installaing $path...."
        $args = " /i $path /qb"
        [diagnostics.process]::start("msiexec", $args).WaitForExit()
        Write-Host "Installed $path"
    } -ArgumentList $computer, $regVar, $packageName
Write-Host "Deployment Complete"

}
2
  • 1
    You have to give some comments to your answer
    – ohlmar
    May 22, 2014 at 12:01
  • Please add a description of the code. What it does, how it does it, how to use it, etc.
    – Trisped
    May 20, 2022 at 20:50

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