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Is there a way to prevent prerequisites -for example some redistributable for C++- from requesting reboot using some command line argument passed to setup.exe file or something like that? I have tried /NOREBOOT, /NORESTART but they haven't worked.

EDIT

The exact prerequisite causing the problem for me is: vcredist_2008_x86.exe

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4 Answers 4

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In .Net boot strapper if the excecuted process exited a specific codes tells that it need reboot, its usually not preferred to ignore this because it may make a serious or important changes that will not take affects till you reboot.

First of all you need to check what is the exit code that your process exit with, go to setup log (usually located on %temp%\VS####.tmp) and look for

Process exited with code ###

For me the process exited with 3010 code.

After that you need to modify the package's product.xml file to make the setup ignore that exit code by adding the follwing to the ExitCodes node:

<ExitCode Value="3010" Result="Success" />

So the final product.xml file content should be looks like this:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<Product ProductCode="Microsoft Visual C++ 2008 Redistributable Package" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/developer/2004/01/bootstrapper">
  <PackageFiles CopyAllPackageFiles="false">
    <PackageFile Name="vcredist_x86.exe" PublicKey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
  </PackageFiles>
  <InstallChecks>
    <MsiProductCheck Property="IsInstalled" Product="{FF66E9F6-83E7-3A3E-AF14-8DE9A809A6A4}" />
  </InstallChecks>
  <Commands Reboot="None">
    <Command PackageFile="vcredist_x86.exe" Arguments="/q">
      <InstallConditions>
        <BypassIf Property="IsInstalled" Compare="ValueGreaterThan" Value="0" />
      </InstallConditions>
      <ExitCodes>
        <ExitCode Value="3010" Result="Success" />
        <DefaultExitCode Result="Success" String="Anunexpectedexitcodewasr" FormatMessageFromSystem="true" />
      </ExitCodes>
    </Command>
  </Commands>
</Product>

If you are using Bootstrapper Manifest Generator, you may simply add the 3010 exit code and set the result to be 'Success': enter image description here

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Use command line for Visual C++ 2008 redistributable packages (vcredist_x86.exe, vcredist_x64.exe and vcredist_ia64.exe) as

For example, if you download vcredist_x86.exe to a folder named c:\vc2008redist, then the command line would look like this:

c:\vc2008redist\vcredist_x86.exe /q /norestart

The example above use the /norestart switch to suppress reboots after the setup process completes. The /norestart switch does not eliminate the need to reboot entirely – it just gives the calling process control over when to schedule the reboot if one is needed due to files being in use during setup. If you running setup with the /norestart switch, you must check the exit code returned by the setup process and handle it accordingly in the calling process. Here are the possible exit codes:

  • Exit code 0 means that setup succeeded and no reboot is needed.
  • Exit code 3010 means that setup succeeded and a reboot is needed to complete installation.
  • Any other exit code means that setup failed.

Source: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/astebner/archive/2010/10/20/10078468.aspx

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If you run the vcredist exe with a /? argument it shows a message box with the options. It lists /norestart in lowercase, it may be case sensitive.

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  • The exact prerequisite causing the problem for me is: vcredist_2008_x86.exe, and this has no (norestart) option at all :(
    – Saw
    Mar 28, 2014 at 11:08
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If the executable doesn't provide a command line argument I don't believe you can do it directly. You can always use the WIN API through c# to intercept the Shut down/reboot messages.

Catch Shutdown event with example code

System Shutdown Functions (AbortSystemShutdown function)

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