Traditional MSI Installers
Most Electron developers use the official
windows-installer to create
Windows installers. It does not require Administrator privileges and comes
bundled with an automatic updater. If your app targets consumers, it will likely
be the better choice.
However, if you need to create a traditional MSI the way Microsoft intended for
software to be installed, this module is your friend. It creates a standalone
MSI that installs your application to Program Files
or any user-defined
directory, much like the installers for Office, Node.js, or other popular apps.
It allows up- and downgrades. For more details, see:
Should I use this?
Look & Feel
Prerequisites
Before using this module, make sure to
install the Wix toolkit v3. Only the command
line tools are required. If you are using AppVeyor or another Windows CI system,
it is likely already installed.
npm i --save-dev electron-wix-msi
Usage
Creating an installer is a three-step process:
import { MSICreator } from 'electron-wix-msi';
const msiCreator = new MSICreator({
appDirectory: '/path/to/built/app',
description: 'My amazing Kitten simulator',
exe: 'kittens',
name: 'Kittens',
manufacturer: 'Kitten Technologies',
version: '1.1.2',
outputDirectory: '/path/to/output/folder'
});
await msiCreator.create();
await msiCreator.compile();
Configuration
-
appDirectory
(string) - The source directory for the installer, usually the
output of
electron-packager.
-
outputDirectory
(string) - The output directory. Will contain the finished
msi
as well as the intermediate files .wxs
and .wixobj
.
-
exe
(string) - The name of the exe.
-
description
(string) - The app's description.
-
version
(string) - The app's version.
-
name
(string) - The app's name.
-
manufacturer
(string) - Name of the manufacturer.
-
appUserModelId
(string, optional) - String to set as appUserModelId
on the
shortcut. If none is passed, it'll be set to com.squirrel.(Name).(exe)
,
which should match the id given to your app by Squirrel.
-
shortName
(optional, string) - A short name for the app, used wherever
spaces and special characters are not allowed. Will use the name if left
undefined.
-
shortcutFolderName
(string, optional) - Name of the shortcut folder in the
Windows Start Menu. Will use the manufacturer field if left undefined.
-
shortcutName
(string, optional) - Name of the shortcut in the
Windows Start Menu. Will use the app's name field if left undefined.
-
programFilesFolderName
(string, optional) - Name of the folder your app will
live in. Will use the app's name if left undefined.
-
upgradeCode
(string, optional) - A unique UUID used by your app to identify
itself. This module will generate one for you, but it is important to reuse it
to enable conflict-free upgrades.
-
language
(number, optional) - The
Microsoft Windows Language Code identifier
used by the installer. Will use 1033 (English, United-States) if left
undefined.
-
certificateFile
(string, optional) - The path to an Authenticode Code
Signing Certificate.
-
certificatePassword
(string, optional) - The password to decrypt the
certificate given in certificateFile
.
-
signWithParams
(string, optional) - Paramaters to pass to signtool.exe
.
Overrides certificateFile
and certificatePassword
.
-
extensions
(array, optional) - Specify WiX extensions to use e.g ['WixUtilExtension', 'C:\My WiX Extensions\FooExtension.dll']
-
ui
(UIOptions, optional) - Enables configuration of the UI. See below for
more information.
-
arch
(string, optional) - Defines the architecure the MSI is build for. Values can
be either x86
or x64
. Default's to x86
if left undefined.
UI Configuration (Optional)
The ui
property in the options passed to the installer instance allows more
detailed configuration of the UI. It has the following optional properties:
enabled
(boolean, optional) - Whether to show a typical user interface.
Defaults to true
. If set to false
, Windows will show a minimal "Windows is
configuring NAME_OF_APP" interface.template
(string, optional) - Substitute your own XML that will be inserted
into the final .wxs
file before compiling the installer to customize the UI
options.chooseDirectory
(boolean, optional) - If set to true
, the end user will be
able to choose the installation directory. Set to false
by default. Without
effect if a custom template
is used.images
(Optional) - Overwrites default installer images with custom files. I
recommend JPG.
background
- (optional, string) 493 x 312 Background bitmap used on the
welcome and completion dialogs. Will be used as WixUIDialogBmp
.banner
- (optional, string) 493 × 58 Top banner used on most dialogs that
don't use background
. Will be used as WixUIBannerBmp
.exclamationIcon
- (optional, string) 32 x 32 Exclamation icon on the
WaitForCostingDlg
dialog. Will be used as WixUIExclamationIco
.infoIcon
- (optional, string) 32 x 32 Information icon on the cancel and
error dialogs. Will be used as WixUIInfoIco
.newIcon
- (optional, string) 16 x 16 "New folder" icon for the "browse"
dialog. Will be used as WixUINewIco
.upIcon
- (optional, string) 16 x 16 "Up" icon for the "browse" dialog.
Will be used as WixUIUpIco
.
Template Configuration (Optional)
This module uses XML bulding blocks to generate the final .wxs
file. After
instantiating the class, but before calling create()
, you can change the
default XML. The available fields on the class are:
componentTemplate
(string) - Used for <Component>
elements. One per file.componentRefTemplate
(string) - Used for <ComponentRef>
elements. Again,
one per file.directoryTemplate
(string) - Used for <Directory>
elements. This module
does not use <DirectoryRef>
elements.wixTemplate
(string) - Used as the master template.uiTemplate
(string) - Used as the master UI template.backgroundTemplate
(string) - Used as the background template.
Should I use this?
Let's start with what's bad about this: Electron is based on Chromium, and as
such, inherintly dependent upon frequent updates. Whenever a new version of
Electron comes out, you should release a new version of your app. The default
installer for Windows is based on
Squirrel, which comes with
support for automatic updates. An app that updates itself is fantastic for most
consumers. If you are not sure if you need a traditional MSI, chances are that
you don't.
"Young man, creating an installer and dying is easy. Updating it and living is
harder."
-- Windows George Washington, 1776
If you are however developing enterprise software, you might find that IT
departments don't want automatically updating software. They want controlled
rollouts and detailed control over the installation. This is true for
universities, hospitals, the military, and many other organizations that have a
managed IT infrastructure. Their administrators will expect a "classic"
installer - the same way they would install Microsoft Office, Node.js,
Photoshop, or any other software. If you see your app being used in those
environments, you should push the self-updating package, but have a traditional
MSI in your pocket. Bear in mind however that you will need to find a way to get
updates to your users without relying on Electron's auto updater.
MSI Administration
The msi
packages created with this module allow for a wide range of command line parameters. The installer is a "Windows Installer", meaning that the actual installer's logic is part of Windows itself. It supports the following command-line parameters:
Install Options
</uninstall | /x>
Uninstalls the product
Display Options
/quiet
Quiet mode, no user interaction/passive
Unattended mode - progress bar only/q[n|b|r|f]
Sets user interface level
- n No UI
- b Basic UI
- r Reduced UI
- f Full UI (default)
/help
Help information
Restart Options
/norestart
Do not restart after the installation is complete/promptrestart
Prompts the user for restart if necessary/forcerestart
Always restart the computer after installation
Logging Options
/l[i|w|e|a|r|u|c|m|o|p|v|x|+|!|*] <LogFile>
i
Status messagesw
Nonfatal warningse
All error messagesa
Start up of actionsr
Action-specific recordsu
User requestsc
Initial UI parametersm
Out-of-memory or fatal exit informationo
Out-of-disk-space messagesp
Terminal propertiesv
Verbose outputx
Extra debugging information+
Append to existing log file!
Flush each line to the log*
Log all information, except for v and x options
/log <LogFile>
Equivalent of /l*
Update Options
/update <Update1.msp>[;Update2.msp]
Applies update(s)
Repair Options
/f[p|e|c|m|s|o|d|a|u|v]
Repairs a product
p
only if file is missingo
if file is missing or an older version is installed (default)e
if file is missing or an equal or older version is installedd
if file is missing or a different version is installedc
if file is missing or checksum does not match the calculated valuea
forces all files to be reinstalledu
all required user-specific registry entries (default)m
all required computer-specific registry entries (default)s
all existing shortcuts (default)v
runs from source and recaches local package
License
MIT, please see LICENSE.md for details.