I Take It All Back: Using Windows Installer (MSI) Rollback Actions
2020-12-13 01:52
标签:des style blog c tar ext Original Link: http://blogs.flexerasoftware.com/installtalk/2011/10/i-take-it-all-back-using-windows-installer-msi-rollback-actions.html#sthash.KIIUKl0s.dpuf By Robert Dickau Sometimes an installer just needs to do something that Windows Installer
doesn‘t normally do. When that happens, it‘s a simple matter of writing a custom
action, right? Unfortunately, it‘s not that simple. In this post, we‘ll look at
techniques for reversing changes made by a custom action. When you launch an installation, it first runs in what‘s called immediate
mode or script-generation mode. As your installer runs in this immediate mode,
it generates an internal to-do list of what it will do on a system—"First I‘ll
install files, then I‘ll create shortcuts, then I‘ll write to the registry, and
then..."—but doesn‘t yet make any system changes. After immediate mode is done, your installer then switches to something
called deferred mode or script-execution mode. In deferred mode, your installer
performs the actions listed in this script: "Now I‘m installing files, now I‘m
creating shortcuts, now I‘m writing to the registry, and now I‘m..." (The
internal to-do list, or script, is fixed at this point, which is why you can‘t
set property values outside of immediate mode, for example). As your installer runs in deferred mode, it simultaneously creates a rollback
script describing how to undo changes made by the standard actions. While the
installer installs files, for example, it adds to the rollback script specific
information about what it would have to do to get the system back to its
pre-installer state: "To get the system back to how it was, I‘d need to remove
sample.exe and readme.txt, and also restore the original version of sample.dll
that I replaced." (Windows Installer will also temporarily hold on to resources
such as files that it needs to restore in case of rollback.) If the installer
runs to completion, the rollback script and any cached resources are deleted.
But if the installation encounters a fatal error, or if the user cancels the
installation during deferred mode, the rollback script runs. A big reason to use standard Windows Installer actions instead of custom
actions is that standard actions handle their own cleanup during uninstallation
or rollback. When you use a custom action, Windows Installer has no idea what
the executable, DLL, InstallScript, etc., that you used did to the system, and
therefore has no idea how to roll back the changes the custom action made. If
your deferred custom action makes any system changes, you should create a
corresponding rollback action. Immediate mode actions don‘t write to the rollback script, which means that
immediate-mode actions that make system changes won‘t get rolled back if the
installation fails. This is one of several reasons not to make system changes
during immediate mode (Bonus grammar tip: The noun and adjective are one
word, rollback, while the verb is two words, roll
back. "If my rollback action runs, it will roll back my changes." An easy
trick is to see if it‘s appropriate to form the past tense by adding -ed: You‘d
say "rolled back", not "rollbacked", and the present tense would be the same
number of words. Same goes for cleanup vs. clean up, setup vs. set up, and so
on. Anyway.) With InstallShield, you mark a custom action as being a rollback action using
its In-Script Execution setting. Because the rollback script is created as deferred execution is taking place,
and not beforehand, a rollback action must be placed in the Execute
sequence before the action it rolls back. (Anywhere before
the action being rolled back is fine, but for readability‘s sake and other
reasons, placing the rollback action immediately before the action it rolls back
seems to work best.) If you write a deferred custom action called
"ChangeSomething", its corresponding rollback action "ChangeSomethingBack"
should appear in the sequences immediately before it. Things start to get confusing with uninstallation custom actions. Without a
condition, an action always runs, both during the initial installation as well
as maintenance mode, including a complete uninstallation. By setting a condition
on an action, you can specify during which modes it should run: Not
Installed for the initial
installation, REMOVE="ALL" for complete
uninstallation, and so on. The same holds for rollback actions. If you have a deferred action that makes
system changes during the initial installation, you‘ll need a rollback action in
case the installation fails or the user cancels it. You‘ll also probably need an
uninstallation action that reverses the changes during uninstallation;
and also an uninstallation rollback action, in case the
uninstallation fails or the user cancels it, and you need to undo whatever you
just undid. Luckily, the same condition logic applies: if your deferred
uninstallation action uses condition REMOVE="ALL", your
uninstall-rollback action can use the same condition. If your deferred action saves any temporary data—similar to how the
InstallFiles action temporarily caches files it might need to restore—your
rollback action can clean up that data when it reverses the effects of the
original action. But what if the rollback action never runs? Windows Installer defines yet another type of action, called
a commit action, which runs only if the installation successfully
runs to completion. If a rollback action runs, a commit action won‘t run; and if
a commit action runs, it‘s too late for rollback. Defining an action as a commit
action in InstallShield also involves the In-Script Execution setting, and
follows the same condition logic as other deferred and rollback actions. To summarize, if you create a custom action that makes changes to a target
system, you might wind up making several others to handle rollback,
uninstallation, uninstallation rollback, and cleanup. If that‘s not a good
argument for avoiding custom actions that duplicate Windows Installer
functionality, I don‘t know what is. For more information and some hands-on experience—plus information about how
things get trickier with all these deferred, rollback, and commit actions
needing to read property values—come visit us at our Advanced Windows Installer (MSI) Using InstallShield Training
Course. I Take It All Back: Using Windows Installer (MSI) Rollback
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