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WiX Toolkit & Burn Bundles (setup.exe files)
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Remember that a "last resort" to find extracted setup files, is to launch the installer and then look for extracted files in the temp folder (Hold down Windows Key, tap R, type %temp% or %tmp% and hit Enter) - try the other options first though - for reliability reasons.Īpologies for the "generalized mess" with all this heavy inter-linking.

Most significantly a blurb about extracting WiX setup.exe bundles (new kid on the block). UPDATE: a few sections have now been added directly below, before the description of MSI file extract using administrative installation. Then it provides some links to handle other types of setup.exe files.
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The "discussion" below first presents the use of admin images for MSI files and how to extract MSI files from setup.exe files. Just a disclaimer: A setup.exe file can contain an embedded MSI, it can be a legacy style (non-MSI) installer or it can be just a regular executable with no means of extraction whatsoever.
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4) And there is obviously application repackaging -Ĭapturing the changes done to a computer after a setup has run andĬlean it up - requires a special tool (most of the free onesĬome and go, Advanced Installer Architect and AdminStudio are big Some claim successīy 3) opening the setup.exe in Visual Studio. General Tricks: One trick is to launch the setup.exe and look in the 1) system's temp folder for extracted files.Īnother trick is to use 2) 7-Zip, WinRAR, WinZip or similarĪrchive tools to see if they can read the format.
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Whereas NSIS seems to use regular archives that standard archive software (7-zip et al) can open and extract. NSIS / Inno: Commmon, free tools such as Inno Setup seem to make extraction hard ( unofficial unpacker, not tried by me, run by ). ( non-MSI, MSI, admin-tools, multi-platform, etc.). There are so many possible tools that can be used. They might feature all kinds of different command line switches. Many Setup Tools: It is impossible to cover all the different kinds of possible setup.exe files.

Setup.exe Extract: (various flavors to try) setup.exe /a Quick List: There are a number of common types of setup.exe files.
