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WiX: A Developer's Guide to Windows Installer XML
WiX: A Developer's Guide to Windows Installer XML

WiX: A Developer's Guide to Windows Installer XML: If you’re a developer needing to create installers for Microsoft Windows, then this book is essential. It’s a step-by-step tutorial that teaches you all you need to know about WiX: the professional way to produce a Windows installer package.

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WiX: A Developer's Guide to Windows Installer XML

Chapter 1. Getting Started

Windows Installer XML (WiX) is a free XML markup from Microsoft that is used to author installation packages for Windows-based software. The underlying technology is Windows Installer, which is the established standard for installing desktop-based applications to any Windows operating system. It is used by countless companies around the world. Microsoft uses it to deploy its own software including Microsoft Office and Visual Studio. In fact, Microsoft uses WiX for these products.

Windows Installer has many features, but how do you leverage them? How do you even know what they are? This book will help you by making you more familiar with the wide range of capabilities that are available. WiX makes many of the arcane and difficult to understand aspects of Windows Installer technology simple to use. This book will teach you the WiX syntax so that you can create a professional-grade installer that's right for you.

In this chapter, we will cover the following:

  • Getting WiX and using it with Visual Studio

  • Creating your first WiX installer

  • Examining an installer database with Orca

  • Logging an installation process

  • Adding a simple user interface

Introducing Windows Installer XML


In this section, we'll dive right in and talk about what WiX is, where to get it, and why you'd want to use it when building an installation package for your software. We'll follow up with a quick description of the WiX tools and the new project types made available in Visual Studio.

What is WiX?

Although it's the standard technology and has been around for years, creating a Windows Installer, or MSI package, has always been a challenging task. The package is actually a relational database that describes how the various components of an application should be unpacked and copied to the end user's computer.

In the past you had two options:

  • You could try to author the database yourself—a path that requires a thorough knowledge of the Windows Installer API.

  • You could buy a commercial product like InstallShield to do it for you. These software products will take care of the details, but you'll forever be dependent on them. There will always be parts of the process that are hidden from you.

WiX is relatively new to the scene, offering a route that exists somewhere in the middle. Abstracting away the low-level function calls while still allowing you to write much of the code by hand, WiX is an architecture for building an installer in ways that mere mortals can grasp. Best of all, it's free. As an open source product, it has quickly garnered a wide user base and a dedicated community of developers. Much of this has to do not only with its price tag but also with its simplicity. It can be authored in a simple text editor (such as Notepad) and compiled with the tools provided by WiX. As it's a flavor of XML, it can be read by humans, edited without expensive software, and lends itself to being stored in source control where it can be easily merged and compared.

The examples in this first chapter will show how to create a simple installer with WiX using Visual Studio. However, later chapters will show how you can build your project from the command line using the compiler and linker from the WiX toolset. The WiX source code is available for download, so you can be assured that nothing about the process will be hidden if you truly need to know.

Is WiX for you?

To answer the question "Is WiX for you?" we have to answer "What can WiX do for you?" It's fairly simple to copy files to an end user's computer. If that's all your product needs, then the Windows Installer technology might be overkill. However, there are many benefits to creating an installable package for your customers, some of which might be overlooked. Following is a list of features that you get when you author a Windows Installer package with WiX:

  • All of your executable files can be packaged into one convenient bundle, simplifying deployment.

  • Your software is automatically registered with Add/Remove Programs.

  • Windows takes care of uninstalling all of the components that make up your product when the user chooses to do so.

  • If files for your software are accidently removed, they can be replaced by right-clicking on the MSI file and selecting Repair.

  • You can create different versions of your installer and detect which version has been installed.

  • You can create patches to update only specific areas of your application.

  • If something goes wrong while installing your software, the end user's computer can be rolled back to a previous state.

  • You can create Wizard-style dialogs to guide the user through the installation.

Many people today simply expect that your installer will have these features. Not having them could be seen as a real deficit. For example, what is a user supposed to do when they want to uninstall your product but can't find it in the Add/Remove Programs list and there isn't an uninstall shortcut? They're likely to remove files haphazardly and wonder why you didn't make things easy for them.

Maybe you've already figured that Windows Installer is the way to go, but why WiX? One of my favorite reasons is that it gives you greater control over how things work. You get a much finer level of control over the development process. Commercial software that does this for you also produces an MSI file, but hides the details about how it was done. It's analogous to crafting a web site. You get much more control when you write the HTML yourself as opposed to using WYSIWYG software.

Even though WiX gives you more control, it doesn't make things overly complex. You'll find that making a simple installer is very straightforward. For more complex projects, the parts can be split up into multiple XML source files to make it easier to work with. Going further, if your product is made up of multiple products that will be installed together as a suite, you can compile the different chunks into libraries that can be merged together into a single MSI. This allows each team to isolate and manage their part of the installation package.

WiX is a stable technology, having been first released to the public in 2004, so you don't have to worry about it disappearing. It's also had a steady progression of version releases. The most current version is updated for Windows Installer 4.5 and the next release will include changes for Windows Installer 5.0, which is the version that comes preinstalled with Windows 7. These are just some of the reasons why you might choose to use WiX.

Where can I get it?

You can download WiX from the Codeplex site, http://wix.codeplex.com/, which has both stable releases and source code. The current release is version 3.0. Once you've downloaded the WiX installer package, double-click it to install it to your local hard drive.

This installs all of the necessary files needed to build WiX projects. You'll also get the WiX SDK documentation and the settings for Visual Studio IntelliSense, highlighting and project templates. Version 3 supports Visual Studio 2005 and Visual Studio 2008, Standard edition or higher.

WiX comes with the following tools:

Tool

What it does

Candle.exe

Compiles WiX source files (.wxs) into intermediate object files (.wixobj).

Light.exe

Links and binds .wixobj files to create final .msi file. Also creates cabinet files and embeds streams in MSI database.

Lit.exe

Creates WiX libraries (.wixlib) that can be linked together by Light.

Dark.exe

Decompiles an MSI file into WiX code.

Heat.exe

Creates a WiX source file that specifies components from various inputs.

Melt.exe

Converts a "merge module" (.msm) into a component group in a WiX source file.

Torch.exe

Generates a transform file used to create a software patch.

Smoke.exe

Runs validation checks on an MSI or MSM file.

Pyro.exe

Creates an patch file (.msp) from .wixmsp and .wixmst files.

WixCop.exe

Converts version 2 WiX files to version 3.

In order to use some of the functionality in WiX, you may need to download a more recent version of Windows Installer. You can check your current version by viewing the help file for msiexec.exe, which is the Windows Installer service. Go to your Start Menu and select Run, type cmd and then type msiexec /? at the prompt. This should bring up a window like the following:

If you'd like to install a newer version of Windows Installer, you can get one from the Microsoft Download Center website. Go to:

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/en/default.aspx

Search for Windows Installer. The current version for Windows XP, Vista, Server 2003, and Server 2008 is 4.5. Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 can support version 5.0. Each new version is backwards compatible and includes the features from earlier editions.

Votive

The WiX toolset provides files that update Visual Studio to provide new WiX IntelliSense, syntax highlighting, and project templates. Together these features, which are installed for you along with the other WiX tools, are called Votive. You must have Visual Studio 2005 or 2008 (Standard edition or higher). Votive won't work on the Express versions. If you're using Visual Studio 2005, you may need to install an additional component called ProjectAggregator2. Refer to the WiX site for more information:

http://wix.sourceforge.net/votive.html

After you've installed WiX, you should see a new category of project types in Visual Studio, labeled under the title WiX. To test it out, open Visual Studio and go to File | New | Project. Select the category WiX.

There are six new project templates:

  • WiX Project: Creates a Windows Installer package from one or more WiX source files

  • WiX Library Project: Creates a .wixlib library

  • C# Custom Action Project: Creates a .NET custom action in C#

  • WiX Merge Module Project: Creates a merge module

  • C++ Custom Action Project: Creates an unmanaged C++ custom action

  • VB Custom Action Project: Creates a VB.NET custom action

Using these templates is certainly easier than creating them on your own with a text editor. To start creating your own MSI installer, select the template WiX Project. This will create a new .wxs (WiX source file) for you to add XML markup to. Once we've added the necessary markup, you'll be able to build the solution by selecting Build Solution from the Build menu or by right-clicking on the project in the Solution Explorer and selecting Build. Visual Studio will take care of calling candle.exe and light.exe to compile and link your project files.

If you right-click on your WiX project in the Solution Explorer and select Properties, you'll see several screens where you can tweak the build process. One thing you'll want to do is set the amount of information that you'd like to see when compiling and linking the project and how non-critical messages are treated. Refer to the following screenshot:

Here, we're selecting the level of messages that we'd like to see. To see all warnings and messages, set the Warning Level to Pedantic. You can also check the Verbose output checkbox to get even more information. Checking Treat warnings as errors will cause warning messages that normally would not stop the build to be treated as fatal errors.

You can also choose to suppress certain warnings. You'll need to know the specific warning message number, though. If you get a build-time warning, you'll see the warning message, but not the number. One way to get it is to open the WiX source code (available at http://wix.codeplex.com/SourceControl/list/changesets) and view the messages.xml file in the Wix solution. Search the file for the warning and from there you'll see its number. Note that you can suppress warnings but not errors.

Another feature of WiX is its ability to run validity checks on the MSI package. Windows Installer uses a suite of tests called Internal Consistency Evaluators (ICEs) for this. These checks ensure that the database as a whole makes sense and that the keys on each table join correctly. Through Votive, you can choose to suppress specific ICE tests. Use the Tools Setting page of the project's properties as shown in the following screenshot:

In this example, ICE test 102 is being suppressed. You can specify more than one test by separating them with semicolons. To find a full list of ICE tests, go to MSDN's ICE Reference web page at:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa369206%28VS.85%29.aspx

The Tool Settings screen also gives you the ability to add compiler or linker command-line flags. Simply add them to the text boxes at the bottom of the screen. We will discuss command-line arguments for Candle and Light later in the book.

A word about GUIDs

In various places throughout WiX, you'll be asked to provide a GUID, which is a Globally Unique Identifier. This is so that when your product is installed on the end user's computer, references to it can be stored in the Windows Registry without the chance of having name conflicts. By using GUIDs, Windows Installer can be sure that every software application, and even every component of that software, has a unique identity on the system.

Each GUID that you create on your computer is guaranteed to be different from a GUID that someone else would make. Using this, even if two pieces of software, both called "Amazing Software", are installed on the same computer, Windows will be able to tell them apart.

Visual Studio 2008 provides a way to create a GUID. Go to Tools | Create GUID and copy a new GUID using the Registry Format. WiX can accept a GUID with or without curly brackets around it as 01234567-89AB-CDEF-0123-456789ABCDEF or {01234567-89AB-CDEF-0123-456789ABCDEF}.

Be sure to only use uppercase letters, though. In this book, I'll display real GUIDs, but you should not reuse them as then your components will not be guaranteed to be unique.

Your first WiX project


To get started, download the WiX Toolset. It can be found at:

http://wix.codeplex.com/

Once you've downloaded and installed it, open Visual Studio and select New Project | WiX | WiX Project. This will create a solution with a single .wxs (WiX source) file. Visual Studio will usually call this file Product.wxs, but the name could be anything as long as it ends with .wxs.

Even the most minimal installer must have the following XML elements:

  • an XML declaration

  • a Wix element that serves as the root element in your XML document

  • a Product element that is a child to the Wix element, but all other elements are children to it

  • a Package element

  • a Media element

  • at least one Directory element with at least one child Component element

  • a Feature element

XML declaration and Wix element

Every WiX project begins with an XML declaration and a Wix element.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<Wix xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/wix/2006/wi">

</Wix>

The xmlns, or XML namespace, just brings the core WiX elements into the local scope of your document. At the bottom of the file, you'll have to close the Wix element, of course. Otherwise, it's not valid XML. The Wix element is the root element of the document. It comes first and last. All other elements will be nested inside of it.

At this point, you could also add the RequiredVersion attribute to the Wix element. Given a WiX toolset version number, such as "3.0.5419.0", it won't let anyone compile the .wxs file unless they have that version or higher installed. If, on the other hand, you're the only one compiling your project, then it's no big deal.

Product element

Next, add a Product element.

<Wix ... >
  <Product Id="3E786878-358D-43AD-82D1-1435ADF9F6EA"
           Name="Awesome Software"
           Language="1033"
           Version="1.0.0.0"
           Manufacturer="Awesome Company"
           UpgradeCode="B414C827-8D81-4B4A-B3B6-338C06DE3A11">
  </Product>
</Wix>

This is where you define the characteristics of the software you're installing: its name, language, version, and manufacturer. The end user will be able to see these properties by right-clicking on your MSI file, selecting Properties and viewing the Summary tab. Most of the time, these values will stay the same from one build of your project to the next. The exception is when you want to increment the software's version or indicate that it's an upgrade of a previous installation. In that case you need only change the Version, and sometimes Id, attribute. We'll talk more about upgrading previous installations later on in the book.

The Product element's Id attribute represents the so-called ProductCode of your software. It's always a unique number—a GUID—that Windows will use to uniquely identify your software (and tell if it's already installed on the computer). You can either hardcode it, like here, or just put an asterisk. That way, WiX will pick a new GUID for you each time you compile the project.

<Wix ... >
  <Product Id="*"
           Name="Awesome Software"
           Language="1033"
           Version="1.0.0.0"
           Manufacturer="Awesome Company"
           UpgradeCode="B414C827-8D81-4B4A-B3B6-338C06DE3A11">
  </Product>
</Wix>

The Name attribute defines the name of the software. In addition to being displayed in the MSI file's Properties page, it will also be shown in various places throughout the user interface of your installer—that is, once you've added a user interface, which we'll touch on at the end of this chapter.

The Language attribute is used to display error messages and progress information in the specified language to the user. It's a decimal language ID (LCID). A full list can be found on Microsoft's LCID page at:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/goglobal/bb964664.aspx

The previous example used "1033", which stands for "English-United States". If your installer uses characters not found in the ASCII character set, you'll also need to add a Codepage attribute set to the code page that contains those characters. Don't worry too much about this now. We'll cover languages and code pages later in the book when we talk about localization.

The Version attribute is used to set the version number of your software. It can accept up to four digits separated by periods, although the last digit is ignored by Windows Installer during operations such as detecting previously installed versions of your application. Typically, when you make a big enough change to the existing software, you'll increment the number. Companies often use the [MajorVersion].[MinorVersion].[Build].[Revision] format, but you're free to use any numbering system you like.

The Manufacturer attribute tells the user who this software is from and usually contains the name of your company. This is another bit of information that's available via the MSI file's Properties.

The final attribute to consider is UpgradeCode. This should be set to a GUID and will identify your product across version releases. Therefore, it should stay the same even when the Product ID and Version change. Windows will use this number in its efforts to keep track of all the software installed on the machine. WiX has the ability to search for previously installed versions of not only your own software but also those created by others and it uses UpgradeCode to do it. Although, technically, this is an optional attribute, you should always supply it.

Package element

Once you've defined your Product element, the next step is to nest a Package element inside. An example is shown:

<Wix ... >
  <Product ... >
    <Package Compressed="yes"
             InstallerVersion="301"
             Manufacturer="Awesome Company"
             Description="Installs Awesome Software"
             Keywords="Practice,Installer,MSI"
             Comments="(c) 2010 Awesome Company"  />
  </Product>
</Wix>

Of the attributes shown in this example, only Compressed is really required. By setting Compressed to yes, you're telling the installer to package all of the MSI's resources into CAB files. Later, you'll define these CAB files with Media elements.

Technically, an Id attribute is also required, but by omitting it, you're letting WiX create one for you. You'd have to create a new one anyway since every time you change your software or the installer in any way, the "package" (the MSI file) has changed and so the ID must change. This really, in itself, emphasizes what the Package element is. Unlike the Product element, which describes the software that's in the installer, the Package element describes the installer itself. Once you've built it, you'll be able to right-click on the MSI and select Properties to see the attributes you've set here.

The InstallerVersion attribute can be set to require a specific version of msiexec.exe (the Windows Installer service that installs the MSI when you double-click on it) to be installed on the end user's computer. If they have an older version, Windows Installer will display a MessageBox telling them that they need to upgrade. It will also prevent you from compiling the project unless you also have this version installed on your own computer. The value can be found by multiplying the major version by 100 and adding the minor version. So, for version 4.5 of msiexec.exe, you'd set InstallerVersion to "405".

The rest of the attributes shown provide additional information for the MSI file's Properties window. Manufacturer is displayed in the Author text field, Description is shown as Subject, Keywords show up as Keywords, and Comments show as Comments. It's usually a good idea to provide at least some of this information, if just to help you distinguish one MSI package from another.

Media element

The files that you intend to install are bundled up into CAB files. You have the option of splitting your package into several parts or keeping it all in one. For each Media element that you add to your WiX markup, a new CAB file will be created. Generally, you should limit the number of files you put into a single CAB file to 64 K or less and no single file should be larger than 2 GB. You can find more information about the CAB file format at:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee177956(v=EXCHG.80).aspx

Media elements come nested inside the Product element alongside the Package element.

<Wix ... >
  <Product ... >
    <Package ... />
    <Media Id="1"
           Cabinet="media1.cab"
           EmbedCab="yes" />
  </Product>
</Wix>

Each Media element gets a unique Id attribute to distinguish it in the MSI Media table. It must be a positive integer. If the files that you add to your installation package don't explicitly state which CAB file they wish to be packaged into, they'll default to using a Media element with an Id of 1. Therefore, your first Media element should always use an Id of 1.

The Cabinet attribute sets the name of the CAB file. You won't actually see this unless you set EmbedCab to no, in which case the file won't be bundled inside the MSI package. This is atypical, but might be done to split the installation files onto several disks. Even this is becoming rare in the age of 4 GB DVDs and Internet downloads. Setting EmbedCab to no will produce a visible CAB file that must be provided alongside the MSI file during an installation.

If you do choose to split the installation up into several physical disks (or even virtual ISO images), you'll want to add the DiskPrompt and VolumeLabel attributes. In the following example, I've added two Media elements instead of one. I've also added a Property element above them, which defines a variable called DiskPrompt with a value of Amazing Software - [1].

<Property Id="DiskPrompt"
          Value="Amazing Software - [1]" />
<Media Id="1"
       Cabinet="media1.cab"
       EmbedCab="no"
       DiskPrompt="Disk 1"
       VolumeLabel="Disk1" />

<Media Id="2"
       Cabinet="media2.cab"
       EmbedCab="no"
       DiskPrompt="Disk 2" 
       VolumeLabel="Disk2" />

The Property element will be used as the text in the MessageBox the end user sees prompting them to insert the next disk. The text in the DiskPrompt attribute is combined with the text in the property's value, switched with [1], to change the message for each subsequent disk. Make sure you give this property an Id of DiskPrompt.

So that Windows will know when the correct disk is inserted, the VolumeLabel attribute must match the "Volume Label" of the actual disk, which you'll set with whichever CD or DVD burning program you use. Once you've built your project, include the MSI file and first CAB file on the first disk. The second CAB file should then be written to a second disk.

Although we haven't described the File element yet, it's used to add a file to the installation package. To include one in a specific CAB file, add the DiskId attribute, set to the Id of the corresponding Media element. The following example includes a text file called myFile.txt in the media2.cab file:

<File Id="fileTXT"
      Name="myFile.txt"
      Source="myFile.txt"
      KeyPath="yes"
      DiskId="2" />

We'll discuss the File element in more detail later on in the chapter. If you're only using one Media element, you won't need to specify the DiskId attribute on your File elements.

Directories

So, now we've defined the identity of the product, set up its package properties, and told the installer to create a CAB file to package up the things we'll eventually install. Then, how do you decide where your product will get installed to on the end user's computer? How do we set the default installation path, such as some folder under Program Files?

When you want to install to C:\Program Files, you can use a sort of shorthand. There are several directory names provided by Windows Installer that will be translated to their true paths at install time. For example, ProgramFilesFolder usually translates to C:\Program Files. Following is a list of these built-in directory properties:

Directory property

Actual path

AdminToolsFolder

Full path to directory containing administrative tools

AppDataFolder

Full path to Roaming folder for current user

CommonAppDataFolder

Full path to application data for all users

CommonFiles64Folder

Full path to 64-bit Common Files folder

CommonFilesFolder

Full path to Common Files folder for current user

DesktopFolder

Full path to Desktop folder

FavoritesFolder

Full path to Favorites folder for current user

FontsFolder

Full path to Fonts folder

LocalAppDataFolder

Full path to folder containing local (non-roaming) applications

MyPicturesFolder

Full path to Pictures folder

NetHoodFolder

Full path to NetHood folder

PersonalFolder

Full path to Documents folder for current user

PrintHoodFolder

Full path to PrintHood folder

ProgramFiles64Folder

Full path to 64-bit Program Files folder

ProgramFilesFolder

Full path to 32-bit Program Files folder

ProgramMenuFolder

Full path to Program Menu folder

RecentFolder

Full path to Recent folder

SendToFolder

Full path to SendTo folder for current user

StartMenuFolder

Full path to Start Menu folder

StartupFolder

Full path to Startup folder

System16Folder

Full path to 16-bit system DLLs folder

System64Folder

Full path to System64 folder

SystemFolder

Full path to System folder for current user

TempFolder

Full path to Temp folder

TemplateFolder

Full path to Template folder for current user

WindowsFolder

Full path to Windows folder

The easiest way to add your own directories is to nest them inside one of the predefined ones. For example, to create a new directory called Install Practice inside the Program Files folder, you could add it as a child to ProgramFilesFolder. To define your directory structure in WiX, use Directory elements:

<Wix ... >
  <Product ... >
    <Package ... />
    <Media ... />

    <Directory Id="TARGETDIR"
               Name="SourceDir">
      <Directory Id="ProgramFilesFolder">
        <Directory Id="MyProgramDir"
                   Name="Install Practice" />
      </Directory>
    </Directory>

  </Product>
</Wix>

You should place your Directory elements inside of the top-level Product element. Other than that, there aren't any restrictions about exactly where inside Product they have to go. One thing to know is that you must start your Directory elements hierarchy with a Directory with an Id of TARGETDIR and a Name of SourceDir. This sets up the "root" directory of your installation. Therefore, be sure to always create it first and nest all other Directory elements inside.

By default, Windows Installer sets TARGETDIR to the local hard drive with the most free space—in most cases, the C: drive. However, you can set TARGETDIR to another drive letter during installation. You might, for example, set it with a VolumeSelectCombo user interface control. We'll talk about setting properties and UI controls later in the book.

A Directory element always has an Id attribute that will serve as a primary key on the Directory table. If you're using a predefined name, such as ProgramFilesFolder, use that for Id. Otherwise, you can make one up yourself. The previous example creates a new directory called Install Practice inside the Program Files folder. The Id, MyProgramDir, is an arbitrary value.

When creating your own directory, you must provide the Name attribute. This sets the name of the new folder. Without it, the directory won't be created and any files that were meant to go inside it will instead be placed in the parent directory—in this case, Program Files. Note that you do not need to provide a Name attribute for predefined directories.

You can nest more subdirectories inside your folders by adding more Directory elements. Here is an example:

<Directory Id="TARGETDIR"
           Name="SourceDir">
  <Directory Id="ProgramFilesFolder">
    <Directory Id="MyProgramDir"
               Name="Install Practice">
      <Directory Id="MyFirstSubDir"
                 Name="Subdirectory 1">
        <Directory Id="MySecondSubDir"
                   Name="Subdirectory 2" />
      </Directory>
    </Directory>
  </Directory>
</Directory>

Here, a subdirectory called Subdirectory 1 is placed inside the Install Practice folder. A second subdirectory, called Subdirectory 2, is then placed inside Subdirectory 1, giving us two levels of nested directories under Install Practice.

To put something inside a directory, use a DirectoryRef element. DirectoryRef takes only a single attribute: Id. This is your reference to the Id set on the corresponding Directory element. DirectoryRef elements, like Directory elements, are placed as children to the top-level Product element.

Using a DirectoryRef adds a layer of abstraction between where you define your directory structure and the files that will go into those directories. The following example adds a file (via the Component element, which we'll cover next) to the MyProgramDir directory.

<Directory Id="TARGETDIR"
           Name="SourceDir">
  <Directory Id="ProgramFilesFolder">
    <Directory Id="MyProgramDir"
               Name="Install Practice" />
  </Directory>
</Directory>

<DirectoryRef Id="MyProgramDir">
  <Component ... />
</DirectoryRef>

By using a DirectoryRef, we're able to separate the markup that adds files to directories from the markup that defines the directories. You can also add a component directly inside a Directory element:

<Directory Id="TARGETDIR"
           Name="SourceDir">
  <Directory Id="ProgramFilesFolder">
    <Directory Id="MyProgramDir"
               Name="Install Practice">
      <Component ... />
    </Directory>
  </Directory>
</Directory>

Placing components directly inside Directory elements is more straightforward, but it couples your directory structure more tightly to the files that you're installing. By using DirectoryRef elements, you're able to make the two pieces more modular and independent of one another.

Components

Once you've mapped out the directories that you want to target or create during the installation, the next step is to copy files into them. Windows Installer expects every file to be wrapped up in a component before it's installed. It doesn't matter what type of file it is either. Each gets its own Component element.

Components, which always have a unique GUID, allow Windows to track every file that gets installed on the end user's computer. During an installation, this information is stored away in the Registry. This lets Windows find every piece of your product during an uninstallation so that your software can be completely removed. It also uses it to replace missing files during a "repair", which you can trigger by right-clicking on an MSI file and selecting Repair. You won't get an error by placing more than one file into a single component, but it is considered bad practice.

To really explain components, we'll need something to install. So, let's create a simple text file and add it to our project's directory. We'll call it InstallMe.txt. For our purposes, it doesn't really matter what's in the text file. We just need something for testing.

The Component element is used to uniquely identify each file that you plan to install. Each Component element gets a unique GUID via its Guid attribute. To create a GUID in Visual Studio, go to Tools | Create GUID and copy a new GUID using the Registry format. Be sure to make all of the letters uppercase. The Id attribute is up to you. It will serve as the primary key for the component in the MSI database, so each one must also be unique.

<Component  Id="CMP_InstallMeTXT"
            Guid="E8A58B7B-F031-4548-9BDD-7A6796C8460D">

  <File Id="FILE_InstallMeTXT"
        Source="InstallMe.txt"
        KeyPath="yes" />
</Component>

Here, I've created a new component called CMP_InstallMeTXT. I've started it with CMP_ to label it as a component. Although it isn't required, it helps to prefix components in this way so that it's always clear what sort of element it refers to.

The File element inside the component references the file that's going to be installed. Here, it's the InstallMe.txt file located in the current directory (which is the same directory as your WiX source file). You can specify a full or absolute path with the Source attribute.

You should always mark a File element as the KeyPath file and you should only ever include one File inside a Component. A KeyPath file will be replaced if it's missing when the user triggers a repair (Windows Installer documentation calls this resiliency). Placing more than one File element inside a single Component is, at least in most cases, not recommended. This is because only one file can be the KeyPath, so the other files wouldn't be covered by a repair. You would really only ever place more than one File in a Component if you didn't want the extra files to be resilient.

Once you've created your File and Component elements, you'll need to tell Windows Installer where they should be installed to. To do that, place them inside a DirectoryRef element that references one of your Directory elements—as shown in the following snippet:

<DirectoryRef Id="MyProgramDir">
  <Component Id="CMP_InstallMeTXT"
             Guid="E8A58B7B-F031-4548-9BDD-7A6796C8460D">

    <File Id="FILE_InstallMeTXT" 
          Source="InstallMe.txt" 
          KeyPath="yes" />
  </Component>
</DirectoryRef>

To add more files, simply create more Component and File elements. Of course, they don't all have to be installed to the same place. You might install some to the MyProgramDir folder that we're creating and others to a different folder. You always have to create a Directory element before you can place components in that directory. For example, you can't use the AppDataFolder property to place files in the Application Data directory until you've first added a Directory element for it.

Files

As you've seen, the actual files inside components are declared with File elements. File elements can represent everything from simple text files to complex DLLs and executables. Remember, you should only place one file into each component. The following example would add a file called SomeAssembly.dll to the installation package:

<Component ... >
  <File Id="FILE_SomeAssemblyDLL" 
        Name="Some Assembly.dll" 
        Source="SomeAssembly.dll" 
        KeyPath="yes" />
</Component>

A File element should always get the Id, Source, and KeyPath attributes. Name is optional and gives you a chance to set the name of the file to something user-friendly. Without it, the name will default to whatever it's called in the Source attribute. Notice that you should set the value to the file name plus file type extension. In earlier versions of WiX, you'd have to use a separate attribute if the name was longer than eight characters or the extension longer than three. Now, this attribute can handle longer names as well.

Source defines the path to the file during compilation. I've listed a relative path here, but you could also specify an absolute path. The Id attribute should be something unique, but you might consider starting it with FILE to make it clear that it refers to a File element. To mark a file as important (and that it should be replaced if it goes missing), set it as the KeyPath for the component. Since you should only ever place one file inside a component, in almost all cases that file should be the KeyPath.

There are quite a few optional attributes available for the File element. A few useful ones are:

  • Hidden: Set to yes to have the file's Hidden flag set. The file won't be visible unless the user sets the directory's options to show hidden files.

  • ReadOnly: Set to yes to have the file's Read-only flag set. The user will be able to read the file, but not modify it unless they change the file's properties.

  • Vital: Set to yes to stop the installation if the file isn't installed successfully.

Features

After you've defined your components and the directories that they'll be copied into, your next step is to define features. A feature is a group of components that the user can decide to install all at once. You'll often see these in an installation dialog as a list of modules, called a feature tree, where each is included or excluded from the installation. Here is an example of such a tree:

Every component must be included in a feature. Generally, you should group together components that rely on one another or that form a complete, self-sufficient unit. That way, if a feature is disabled, you won't have orphaned files (files that aren't being used) installed onto the computer. In some instances, if your product doesn't have any optional parts, you'll only want to create one feature.

If you've included a feature tree dialog, which we'll explain later in the book, like the one shown, the user can simply click a feature to exclude it. However, even without this, they can select features from the command line. The following command only installs the Main Product feature:

msiexec /i myInstaller.msi ADDLOCAL="MainProduct"

Here, we're using the msiexec program to launch an installer. The /i flag targets the MSI file to install. The ADDLOCAL property is set to the names of the features we want to include. If more than one, use commas to separate the names. To install all available features set ADDLOCAL="ALL", as shown:

msiexec /i myInstaller.msi ADDLOCAL=ALL

To create a new feature in your WiX file, add a Feature element inside the Product element. The following example installs three components under the feature Main Product. Another feature called Optional Tools installs another component. Components are included in a feature with the ComponentRef element. The Id attribute of ComponentRef targets the Id attribute from the corresponding Component element.

<Feature Id="MainProduct"
         Title="Main Product"
         Level="1">
  <ComponentRef Id="CMP_MyAppEXE" />
  <ComponentRef Id="CMP_ReadMeTXT" />
  <ComponentRef Id="CMP_StartMenuShortcuts" />
</Feature>

<Feature Id="OptionalTools"
         Title="Optional Tools"
         Level="1">
  <ComponentRef Id="CMP_ToolsEXE" />
</Feature>

The Feature element's Id attribute uniquely identifies the feature and is what you'll reference when using the ADDLOCAL property on the command line. The Title attribute is used to set a user-friendly name that can be displayed on dialogs. Setting the Feature element's Level attribute to 1 means that feature will be included in the installation by default. The end user will still be able to remove it through the user interface or via the command line. If, on the other hand, Level is set to 0, that feature will be removed from the feature tree and the user won't be able to install it.

If you wanted to, you could create a more complex tree with features nested inside features. You could use this to create more categories for the elements in your product and give the user more options concerning what gets installed. You would want to make sure that all possible configurations function correctly. Windows Installer makes this somewhat manageable in that if a parent feature is excluded, its children features will be too. Here's an example of a more complex feature setup:

<Feature Id="MainProduct"
         Title="Main Product"
         Level="1">
  <ComponentRef Id="CMP_MyAppEXE" />
  <ComponentRef Id="CMP_StartMenuShortcuts" />

  <Feature Id="SubFeature1"
           Title="Documentation"
           Level="1">
    <ComponentRef Id="CMP_ReadMeTXT" />
  </Feature>
</Feature>

<Feature Id="OptionalTools"
         Title="Optional Tools"
         Level="1">
  <ComponentRef Id="CMP_ToolsEXE" />
</Feature>

Here, I've moved the ReadMe.txt file into its own feature called Documentation that's nested inside the Main Product feature. Disabling its parent feature (Main Product), will also disable it. However, you could enable Main Product and disable Documentation.

If you're going to use a feature tree, you have the ability to prevent the user from excluding a particular feature. Just set the Absent attribute to disallow. You might do this for the main part of your product where excluding it wouldn't make sense.

You might also consider adding the Description attribute, which can be set to a string that describes the feature. This could be displayed in your dialog alongside the feature tree, if you decide to use one. It would look something like this:

<Feature Id="ProductFeature"
         Title="Main Product"
         Description="Installs the Main Feature"
         Level="1">

  <ComponentRef Id="cmp_MyAppEXE" />
  <ComponentRef Id="cmp_ReadMeTXT" />
  <ComponentRef Id="cmp_StartMenuShortcuts" />
</Feature>

Start Menu shortcuts

Having a working installer is good, but wouldn't it be nice to add some shortcuts for the application to the Start Menu? To do so, create a new component with a nested Shortcut element. Shortcuts are stored in their own table in the MSI database. First, add another Directory element that references the Start Menu via the built-in ProgramMenuFolder name:

<Directory Id="TARGETDIR"
           Name="SourceDir">
  <Directory Id="ProgramFilesFolder">
    <Directory Id="MyProgramDir"
               Name="Awesome Software" />
  </Directory>
  <Directory Id="ProgramMenuFolder">
    <Directory Id="MyShortcutsDir"
               Name="Awesome Software" />
  </Directory>
</Directory>

Here, I've added a reference to the Start Menu folder with the ProgramMenuFolder Directory element Id. I've then told the installer to create a new subfolder inside it called Awesome Software. Now, you can use a DirectoryRef element to reference your new shortcuts folder, as in the following code snippet:

<DirectoryRef Id="MyShortcutsDir">
  <Component Id="CMP_DocumentationShortcut" 
             Guid="33741C82-30BF-41AF-8246-44A5DCFCF953">

    <Shortcut Id="DocumentationStartMenuShortcut"
              Name="Awesome Software Documentation"
              Description="Read Awesome Software Documentation"
              Target="[MyProgramDir]InstallMe.txt" />
  </Component>
</DirectoryRef>

Each Shortcut element has a unique identifier set with the Id attribute. The Name attribute defines the user-friendly name that gets displayed. Description is set to a string that describes the shortcut and will appear when the user moves their mouse over the shortcut link.

The Target attribute defines the path on the end user's machine to the actual file being linked to. For that reason, you'll often want to use properties that update as they're changed instead of hardcoded values. In the previous example, the main installation directory is referenced by placing the Id of its corresponding Directory element in square brackets, which is then followed by the name of the file. Even if the path of MyProgramDir changes, it will still lead us to the InstallMe.txt file.

Two things that should accompany a shortcut are a RemoveFolder element and a RegistryValue element. RemoveFolder ensures that the new Start Menu subdirectory will be removed during an uninstall. It uses an Id attribute to uniquely identify a row in the MSI RemoveFile table and an On attribute to specify when to remove the folder. You can set On to install, uninstall, or both. You can specify a Directory attribute as well to set to the Id of a Directory element to remove. Without one, though, the element will remove the directory defined by the parent DirectoryRef element.

Let's add the RemoveFolder and RegistryValue elements to our component:

<DirectoryRef Id="MyShortcutsDir">
  <Component Id="CMP_DocumentationShortcut"
             Guid="33741C82-30BF-41AF-8246-44A5DCFCF953">

    <Shortcut Id="DocumentationStartMenuShortcut"
              Name="Awesome Software Documentation"
              Description="Read Awesome Software Documentation"
              Target="[MyProgramDir]InstallMe.txt" />

    <RemoveFolder Id="RemoveMyShortcutsDir"
                  On="uninstall" />

    <RegistryValue Root="HKCU"
                   Key="Software\Microsoft\AwesomeSoftware"
                   Name="installed"
                   Type="integer"
                   Value="1"
                   KeyPath="yes" />
  </Component>
</DirectoryRef>

The RegistryValue element is needed simply because every component must have a KeyPath item. Shortcuts aren't allowed to be KeyPath items as they aren't technically files. By adding a RegistryValue, a new item is added to the Registry and this is marked as the KeyPath. The actual value itself serves no other purpose. We will cover writing to the Registry in more detail later.

There's actually another reason for using a RegistryValue as the KeyPath. The shortcut we're creating is being installed to a directory specific to the current user. Windows Installer requires that you always use a registry value as the KeyPath item when doing this in order to simplify uninstalling the product when multiple users have installed it.

Another type of shortcut to add is one that uninstalls the product. For this, add a second Shortcut element to the same component. This shortcut will be different in that it will have its Target set to the msiexec.exe program, which is located in the System folder. The following example uses the predefined System64Folder directory name because it will automatically map to either the 64-bit or 32-bit System folder, depending on the end user's operating system.

By setting Target to the path of an executable, you're telling Windows to launch that program when the user clicks the shortcut. The msiexec program can remove software by using the /x argument followed by the ProductCode of the product you want to uninstall. The ProductCode is the Id specified in the Product element.

<DirectoryRef Id="MyShortcutsDir">
  <Component Id="CMP_DocumentationShortcut"
             Guid="33741C82-30BF-41AF-8246-44A5DCFCF953">

    <Shortcut Id="DocumentationStartMenuShortcut"
              Name="Awesome Software Documentation"
              Description="Read Awesome Software Documentation"
              Target="[MyProgramDir]InstallMe.txt" />

    <Shortcut Id="UninstallShortcut"
              Name="Uninstall Awesome Software"
              Description=
              "Uninstalls Awesome Software and all of its components"
              Target="[System64Folder]msiexec.exe"
              Arguments="/x [ProductCode]" />

    <RemoveFolder Id="RemoveMyShortcutsDir"
                  On="uninstall" />

    <RegistryValue Root="HKCU"
                   Key="Software\Microsoft\AwesomeSoftware"
                   Name="installed"
                   Type="integer"
                   Value="1"
                   KeyPath="yes" />
  </Component>
</DirectoryRef>

Notice that we don't have to use the exact GUID from the Product element to get the ProductCode. We can reference it using the built-in property called ProductCode surrounded by square brackets. If you'd like to add an icon to your shortcut, first add an Icon element as another child to the Product element. Then, reference that icon with the Icon attribute on the Shortcut element.

<Icon Id="icon.ico" SourceFile="myIcon.ico"/>
<DirectoryRef ... >
  <Component ... >
    <Shortcut Id="DocumentationStartMenuShortcut" 
              Name="Awesome Software Documentation"
              Description="Read Awesome Software Documentation"
              Target="[MyProgramDir]InstallMe.txt"
              Icon="icon.ico" />

    <RemoveFolder ... />
    <RegistryValue ... />
  </Component>
</DirectoryRef>

Be sure to add the new component that contains the shortcuts to one of your features:

<Feature Id="ProductFeature"
         Title="Main Product"
         Level="1">
  <ComponentRef Id=" CMP_InstallMeTXT" />
  <ComponentRef Id="CMP_DocumentationShortcut" />
</Feature>

Putting it all together

Now that you've seen the different elements used to author an MSI package, here is the entire .wxs file:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<Wix xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/wix/2006/wi">

  <Product Id="3E786878-358D-43AD-82D1-1435ADF9F6EA"
           Name="Awesome Software"
           Language="1033"
           Version="1.0.0.0"
           Manufacturer="Awesome Company"
           UpgradeCode="B414C827-8D81-4B4A-B3B6-338C06DE3A11">

    <Package InstallerVersion="301"
             Compressed="yes" />
    <Media Id="1"
           Cabinet="media1.cab"
           EmbedCab="yes" />

    <!--Directory structure-->
    <Directory Id="TARGETDIR"
               Name="SourceDir">
      <Directory Id="ProgramFilesFolder">
        <Directory Id="MyProgramDir"
                   Name="Awesome Software" />
        <Directory Id="ProgramMenuFolder">
          <Directory Id="MyShortcutsDir" 
                     Name="Awesome Software" />
        </Directory>
      </Directory>
    </Directory>

    <!--Components-->
    <DirectoryRef Id="MyProgramDir">
      <Component Id="CMP_InstallMeTXT" 
                 Guid="E8A58B7B-F031-4548-9BDD-7A6796C8460D">
        <File Id="FILE_InstallMeTXT" 
              Source="InstallMe.txt"
              KeyPath="yes" />
      </Component>
    </DirectoryRef>

    <!--Start Menu Shortcuts-->
    <DirectoryRef Id="MyShortcutsDir">
      <Component Id="CMP_DocumentationShortcut"
                 Guid="33741C82-30BF-41AF-8246-44A5DCFCF953">

        <Shortcut Id="DocumentationStartMenuShortcut"
                  Name="Awesome Software Documentation"
                  Description="Read Awesome Software Documentation"
                  Target="[MyProgramDir]InstallMe.txt" />

        <Shortcut Id="UninstallShortcut"
                  Name="Uninstall InstallPractice"
                  Description="Uninstalls Awesome Software"
                  Target="[System64Folder]msiexec.exe"
                  Arguments="/x [ProductCode]" />

        <RemoveFolder Id="RemoveMyShortcutsDir"
                      On="uninstall" />

        <RegistryValue Root="HKCU" 
                       Key="Software\Microsoft\AwesomeSoftware"
                       Name="installed"
                       Type="integer"
                       Value="1"
                       KeyPath="yes" />
      </Component>
    </DirectoryRef>

    <!--Features-->
    <Feature Id="ProductFeature"
             Title="Main Product"
             Level="1">
      <ComponentRef Id="CMP_InstallMeTXT" />
      <ComponentRef Id="CMP_DocumentationShortcut" />
    </Feature>
  </Product>
</Wix>

Compile the project in Visual Studio and you should get a new MSI file.

You can double-click it or right-click and select Install to install the software. Doing so should create a subfolder for your program in the Start Menu.

You should also find a new folder under Program Files.

To uninstall the software, you have several options:

  • Use the uninstall shortcut from the Start Menu

  • Right-click on the MSI file and select Uninstall

  • Uninstall it from Add/Remove Programs

  • From a command prompt, navigate to the directory where the MSI file is and use the command:

    msiexec /x AwesomeSoftware.msi

Adding a User Interface


Although you'll eventually want to add your own dialogs to gather information from the user that's important for your own application, you may want to use one of WiX's built-in dialog sequences in the meantime. All of them are stored in an assembly called WixUIExtension.dll. You can add a reference to this file with Visual Studio's Add a Reference screen. The file exists in WiX's Program Files folder. You may have to navigate to C:\Program Files\Windows Installer XML v3\bin.

Once you've added the new reference, add the following line to your WiX source file. It doesn't matter exactly where, as long as it's a child to the Product element:

<UIRef Id="WixUI_Minimal" />

This will insert the Minimal dialog set into your installation sequence. It shows a single dialog screen containing a license agreement and Install button. Feel free to try any of the other dialog sets. Just replace WixUI_Minimal, with one of the other names in the UIRef element. WixUI_Advanced and WixUI_InstallDir require some further setup to really work properly. You can try out the following attributes:

  • WixUI_Advanced

  • WixUI_FeatureTree

  • WixUI_InstallDir

  • WixUI_Mondo

We will explore these standard dialogs in more detail later and also explain how to create your own.

Viewing the MSI database


I mentioned before that an MSI file is really a sort of relational database. WiX does all the work of creating tables, inserting rows, and matching up keys in this database. However, as we progress through the rest of the book, I encourage you to explore how it looks behind the scenes. For example, we discussed the File and Component elements. Sure enough, there are two tables called File and Component in the MSI that contain the definitions you've set with your XML markup. To get inside the installer, you'll need a tool called Orca.

Orca.exe

Once you've compiled your project in Visual Studio, you'll have a working MSI package that can be installed by double-clicking it. If you'd like to see the database inside, install the MSI viewer, Orca.exe. Orca is provided as part of the Windows SDK and despite the icon of a whale on the shortcut, stands for One Really Cool App. You can find versions of the SDK at Microsoft's Windows Development Center website:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/bb980924.aspx

After you've installed the SDK (specifically, the .NET tools that are included), you can find the installer for Orca—Orca.msi—in the Microsoft SDKs folder in Program Files. On my machine, it can be found in C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.0\Bin.

Install Orca and then right-click on your MSI file and select Edit with Orca.

Orca lets you view the database structure of your installer. This can be a big help in troubleshooting problems or just to get a better idea about how different elements work together. Following is a screenshot of the Component database:

If you wanted to, you could edit your MSI package directly with Orca. This is helpful when learning or trying out different concepts. You'll need to know exactly which tables and rows to modify. Sometimes, though, you'll be able to just change a single value and check its effect.

Turning logging on during installation


If you get into trouble with your installer, it may help to run it with logging turned on. To do so, install your package from a command prompt using msiexec with the arguments /l*v and the name of a file to write the log to. For example, if you had an installer called myInstaller.msi, you could use this command to write a log during the installation to a file called myLog.txt:

msiexec /i myInstaller.msi /l*v myLog.txt

Every event that occurs during installation will be recorded here. It works for uninstalls too. Simply use the /x argument instead of /i. The log can be pretty helpful, but also very verbose. If your installer fails midway through, you might try searching the log for the text return value 3. This indicates that an action returned a status of failure. Often, you'll also see a specific MSI error code. You can find its meaning by searching for that number in the MSI SDK Documentation help file that comes with WiX.

Other resources


If you have specific questions about WiX, you'll find additional resources at the following websites:

Summary


In this chapter, we discussed downloading the WiX toolset and its various features. Creating a simple MSI package is relatively easy. There are only a handful of XML elements needed to get started. As we explore more complex setups, you'll be introduced to elements that are more specialized.

Throughout the rest of this book, I'll make references to the structure of the MSI database. Orca is an excellent tool for seeing this structure yourself. Although this book focuses on WiX and not the underlying Windows Installer technology, it helps sometimes to see how the mechanics of it work. You may find it useful to consult Microsoft's MSI documentation too, which can be found online or in a help file provided by WiX, to get a deeper understanding of the properties and constructs we will discuss.

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Key benefits

  • Package your software into a single-file, double-click MSI for easy installation
  • Read and write to the Windows Registry and create, start, and stop Windows Services during installation
  • Write .NET code that performs specific tasks during installation via custom actions
  • Learn how the WiX command-line tools work to build and link your project
  • Become proficient with to-the-point examples and real-world advice

Description

WiX is an open source project and a toolset that builds Windows installation packages from XML source code. WiX, which is used internally by Microsoft and by many companies around the World, simplifies many of the installation tasks that used to be shrouded in mystery. The tool set provides a command-line environment that you can integrate into your old-style build processes or you can use the newer technology from inside integrated development environments to build your setup packages. You'll find that you understand your installer better, can create it in less time, and save money in the process. No one really wants to devote a lifetime to understanding how to create a hassle-free installer for any software. This hands-on guide takes the mystery out of Windows Installer by showing how simple XML elements can be leveraged to create a sophisticated install package. By relying on Microsoft standards, you'll be able to use features like Property elements to customize your application's entry in Add/Remove Programs, the Shortcut element to create Start menu shortcuts, and other specialized elements for building upgrade and patch support and more. This book will show you the fundamental ingredients needed to build a professional-grade installer using Windows Installer XML. The initial chapters will introduce you to the set of required elements necessary to build a simple installer. We'll then explore those basic elements in more detail and see how best to use them in the real world.In the ensuing chapters, you'll move on to learn about adding conditions that alter what the user can install, then how to add actions to the install sequence and how to author a user interface. We'll move on to advanced topics such as editing data in the Windows Registry, installing a Windows service, and building your project from the command line. Finally, you'll learn to localize your package for different languages and detect older versions during upgrades. Each chapter uses to-the-point examples to illustrate the best way to use the language.

Who is this book for?

If you are a developer and want to create installers for software targeting the Windows platform, then this book is for you. You'll be using a lot of XML so that you get accustomed to the basics of writing well-formed documents, using XML namespaces and the dos and don'ts of structuring elements and attributes. You should know your way around Visual Studio, at least enough to compile projects, add project references, and tweak project properties. No prior knowledge of Windows Installer or WiX is assumed.

What you will learn

  • Install, start, stop, and uninstall Windows Services at the time of setup
  • Make your project more modular with Fragments, ComponentRefs, and ComponentGroups
  • Learn tips for installing special types of files such as font files and how to optimize copying speed
  • Prevent users from installing your software on unsupported operating systems and introduce other pre-requisite checks
  • Gain an understanding of the order in which events happen during an install and how to add your own actions to this sequence
  • Build a customized user interface that meets the unique requirements of your project
  • Understand how WiX builds and links your files into the final MSI package and how to control this process
  • Read and write to the Windows Registry with XML
  • Build various language-specific installers without duplicating large amounts of code
  • Create rules for checking for and removing older versions of your software or to patch existing files
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Table of Contents

13 Chapters
Getting Started Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Creating Files and Directories Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Putting Properties and AppSearch to Work Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Improving Control with Launch Conditions and Installed States Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Understanding the Installation Sequence Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Adding a User Interface Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Using UI Controls Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Tapping into Control Events Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Working from the Command Line Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Accessing the Windows Registry Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Controlling Windows Services Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Localizing Your Installer Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Upgrading and Patching Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Customer reviews

Top Reviews
Rating distribution
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Half star icon 4.5
(17 Ratings)
5 star 70.6%
4 star 17.6%
3 star 5.9%
2 star 5.9%
1 star 0%
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Harish.Viswanathan Aug 17, 2020
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
Wonderful book covering an extensive range of topics on how to build your custom installer using Wix. Very helpful
Amazon Verified review Amazon
A. Davis Jan 27, 2011
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
If you want to learn WiX, but are not sure whether you need to spend money on this book instead of relying solely on free resources available online, do yourself a favor: buy the book. It will explain the basic concepts of both the Windows Installer technology and WiX development better than other tutorials, wikis, and help guides you may find (at least based on the resources I found by the time of writing this review). Not only does it describe what you need to do to accomplish certain tasks, but it also explains why you need to do this and that. It is definitely not a comprehensive guide, but for its size, it covers a lot of topics.I have some experience with MSI, InstallShield, and related installer technologies, but my knowledge of MSI internals is very limited (before switching to WiX, I mostly used Visual Studio Installer projects for building installers). I started learning WiX the hard way: reading user guide, tutorials, wiki; and in a couple of weeks I was able to write several installers for internal projects. Nevertheless, I still had very vague idea about the implementation (i.e. what does this property mean, why I need to include this attribute, what do these elements do), so I bought the book (well, my department did pay for it, but if not, I would've paid myself). The book cleared a lot of things for me.The book covers the fundamentals extremely well. What is a product, package, media? How do they relate? How do you use features, components, files? The book answers these and other questions in more detail than you would find elsewhere. I found the description of major upgrades (e.g. the matrix explaining the effects of scheduling removal of older version at different execution events) particularly helpful. Chapters covering user interfaces (using default wizards, modifying existing dialogs, customizing wizards) are very informational. So is the discussion of localization. Examples illustrate the topics nicely. The book offers sensible recommendations (e.g. avoid per-user setup packages).A couple of things I found somewhat confusing include description of properties, variables, etc, when it's not clear whether these get resolved during build time or deployment time and issues pertaining to 64-bit vs 32-bit installers (e.g. how system folders get resolved on various combinations of platforms and installers: 32-bit MSI/64-bit OS, etc). I wish the index were more comprehensive; most of the time when I needed to find something, I just flipped the pages.I agree with points made by other three reviewers, so I won't repeat them. In short, if you're planning to use WiX to write installers, get this book; you will find it quite helpful.
Amazon Verified review Amazon
Deep Roy Feb 07, 2015
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
I got asked by my boss to make modifications to a WiX installer; after reading the first few chapters in this book, I was able to finish the WiX updates that I had to make.Since I couldn't very good documentation on the web, and because the author's writing style was informative, and easy to digest, and, because I finished my project, I gave the book 5 stars!
Amazon Verified review Amazon
seinerb Mar 28, 2011
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
This book is very well written in an easy to read style. It has helpful coding examples and is a good reference for WiX coding.
Amazon Verified review Amazon
Petter Hesselberg Dec 01, 2010
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
This is a well-written and thorough guide to WiX. You learn how to create an installer (simple or advanced), how to customize the UI, how to handle elevation (the dreaded UAC), how to handle upgrades and much more. Which is all very nice, but more or less what you'd expect from such a book.But there's more: A prerequisite for using WiX effectively is a fair understanding of how Windows Installer works (and that is not even remotely straight-forward). After reading this book I understand much more about the Windows Installer than I did before -- it is almost beginning to make sense.If only more software development books were like this one...
Amazon Verified review Amazon
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