| • | Microsoft Windows Installer 3.0: KB884016 version 1.0 (November 8, 2004) |
| • | Microsoft Windows Installer 3.0: KB884016 version 2.0 (November 15, 2004) |
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Patch sequencing
With patch sequencing, a set of new or existing patches are deployed in the correct logical order, regardless of the chronological order that the patches were received in on the computer. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Removable patches
You can now remove patches that are installed with Windows Installer 3.0 if they are marked as removable in the patch package. Patch removal enables the patched program to be returned to the state that the program was in before the patch was applied. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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More efficient patching
Several improvements have been made to patching in this release. These improvements include the following:
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Non-administrator patches and patch elevation
User with Limited accounts can now apply patches that have been marked as trusted by the system administrator. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Source list APIs and inventory management APIs
With new source list APIs, system administrators can easily examine and change the list of source locations that are registered with the Windows Installer. Windows Installer 3.0 also supports rich product,
feature, component, and patch inventory queries through new inventory
management APIs. Users with privileged accounts can use these APIs to
enumerate across all user and installation contexts. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Standard command-line
options
To ease program deployment, the Windows Installer supports standard, easy-to-understand command-line options that control display and restart behavior, and the installation, removal, logging, and application of updates. Windows Installer 2.0 command-line options will continue to be supported and can be used with new command-line options. The following new command-line options are supported:
Windows Installer 3.0 also supports the msiexec
/? option. You can use this option to display all the command-line
parameters that are available in Windows Installer 3.0.
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Better assembly
servicing
Support for binary delta patching and new assembly authoring and servicing guidelines improve assembly servicing. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Improved interface for Add or Remove Programs
in the Windows XP Control Panel The Add or Remove Programs feature in Control Panel now lets users view and interact with the installed updates to programs. With Windows XP SP2, users can select a single check box to view program updates and their relationship to a program. Updates are now grouped with a relevant program and include an installation date. |
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Windows Installer did not use a correct token after the
LogonUser function had been called. |
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Failure occurred when a custom action called an API
that queried for a string that was larger than 256 characters.
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"The Windows Installer Service could not be accessed"
error was displayed when MSIServer class registration was missing on the
server. |
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The MsiOpenProduct function failed when the
product's registration was corrupted. |
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Setup failed if you closed a browsing window by
double-clicking the program icon after you opened the program icon
menu. |
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The ServiceInstall table did not install services
correctly if the path contained a space. |
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The MsiGetComponentPath function sometimes
failed unexpectedly. |
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When you canceled program installation during the
installer engine initialization, the action was ignored and returned an
unexpected error. |
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When you tried to remove a program, an incorrect
program name was displayed as the running program. |
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An MsiAssemblyName table that was not written correctly
could prevent the removal of global assemblies on your computer.
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Windows Installer rolled back an installation when
commit custom actions failed, but ultimately reported that the
installation was a success instead of a failure. |
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The Windows Installer did not let the external user
interface filter for files in use messages. Windows Installer 3.0 now adds
the INSTALLLOGMODE_FILESINUSE = (1 << (INSTALLMESSAGE_FILESINUSE
>> 24)) parameter to public headers. |
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The DependantService registry value was truncated.
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Windows Installer provided insufficient logging
information when the BindImage API failed. |
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Windows Installer did not declare the
INSTALLMODE_NODETECTION_ANY parameter in the public header for the
MsiProvideAssembly function. |
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COM activation failed if a component was run from a
source and if source validation failed. |
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An actionable pointer was displayed as an hourglass and
did not change. |
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A service did not shut down after it failed.
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If an administrator or local system was denied access
to a file, the Windows Installer could not delete the file. |
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The ServiceInstall table did not respect the
msidbServiceInstallErrorControlVital bit if modal dialogs were disabled by
the /qb- or /qn switches. |
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The OpenPackage method ignored the Safe Session
flag. |
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The msiUILevelSourceResOnly installation table
definition was missing from the typelib definition for the Windows
Installer Automation interface. |
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Versioned files could not be installed if companion
files were specified with run-from-source components. |
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The error dialog box that is used by the Customer
Information dialog box used the wrong pointer. |
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When you pressed the spacebar or the ENTER key, you
enabled a hidden Cancel button. |
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Windows Installer did not let non-administrators
generate advertisement scripts when DisableMSI=1. |
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Security errors displayed only the OK button when you were prompted to click Retry or Cancel. |
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Environment variables were lost when you removed
programs. |
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The Windows Installer API that provides component paths
returned incorrect paths if the component was installed with a
run-from-source component and if the media disk ID for the component was
more than 99. |
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Windows Installer could not remove files with read-only
permissions for the administrator and system accounts. |
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The FilesInUse dialog box
may have displayed incorrect window titles if the window titles contained
[propertyname] references. |
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Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Enterprise
Edition |
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Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Datacenter
Edition |
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Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Standard
Edition |
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Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Datacenter Edition for
Itanium-based Systems |
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Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Enterprise Edition for
Itanium-based Systems |
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Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition |
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Microsoft Windows XP Professional Edition |
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Microsoft Windows 2000 Service Pack 4 |
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Microsoft Windows 2000 Service Pack 3 |
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Microsoft Windows 2000 Service Pack 3 |
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Microsoft Windows 2000 Service Pack
4 |
