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When uninstalling my application, it attempts to stop it if it's running:

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Sadly, the automatically closing doesn't really work and it displays this error:

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My applications disappear, the windows, the tray bar icon, they are all gone. But I can still see them in the process list.

I'm guessing Windows sends a signal to the applications to exit gracefully and the UI does so, but there's some lingering thread preventing the processes from terminating.

How does Windows Installer close an application during uninstall?

Once I know this I want to simulate it while debugging my app to see what's going on. Is this a sound plan?

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  • I'm curious how you solve this. I did a quick google search and couldn't come up with any good articles on implementing win32 specific restart manager interactions in a java application. May 11, 2018 at 2:58
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    @ChristopherPainter: I haven't started working on it yet. Michael Urman posted a lot of sources that I need to read, process, understand and then I'll take a stab at fixing this. It somehow doesn't surprise me this is an issue as Java for the desktop is essentially abandonware. May 11, 2018 at 8:29
  • This may be one situation where it's ok to just use a QuietExecuteCA to TASKKILL the process. May 11, 2018 at 11:57
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    @ChristopherPainter: I think that after a lot of head banging against win32 brick walls, I managed to get a Java Restart Manager working. I'm planning on writing down my findings in my blog. If I haven't done it after a while, feel free to prod me. May 19, 2018 at 11:45
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    @Dale: I wrote that blog post ;) Feb 24, 2021 at 23:07

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Since Windows Vista, Windows Installer will leverage the Restart Manager to identify, close, and restart applications. Microsoft's documentation on Using Restart Manager, and in particular Using Restart Manager with a Primary Installer should be a solid starting point for implementing a test harness. Your applications and services should instead follow the Guidelines for Applications and Services.

The Guidelines for Applications discuss the messages sent to your application by the restart manager; services are restarted through the service control manager. In theory you could simulate the restart manager at that level, but I suspect you'd be better served by invoking the real thing, registering a carefully chosen list of resources to target just your application, if possible.

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    Well... that was a deep rabbit hole to go into. Starting from this and piecing together many other posts and source code I found, I managed to implement Restart Manager on Java. I'm thinking of making a blog post about it. I'll post the link when that's done for anyone interested. May 19, 2018 at 11:44

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