Reputation: 6616
I found that Wix v3 uses a tool (heat.exe) to "harvest" information into WiX fragments. Either I am looking in the wrong location, or this is thinly documented.
What is the best way to auto-generate a WiX fragment (likely using heat.exe) for a complex folder structure that contains media files:
such that they can be built into an installer via WiX and would withstand upgrades and patches with decorum?
It was (fairly) pointed out that v3 is not yet "done" (thus the scarceness of documentation and tutorials). The sense that I get now is that it is non-trivial to automate this in my build scripts, and the tools are growing right now to ease this.
Upvotes: 7
Views: 4167
Reputation: 84784
In my experience John Robbins' Paraffin solves alot of the issues with tallow.exe (heat.exe in v3). I'm not sure if Paraffin plays nicely with v3, but it might be worth checking out.
FYI, I've used Paraffin in a build process and it allowed me to remove the previous 2-3 step cleanup process that involved a powershell script.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 66753
For the upgrade implications of auto-generated setups, read this. The take-home message:
Windows Installer doesn’t let you remove components in a minor upgrade
It is hard to guarantee that components continue to exist if you generate your setup automatically. Therefore you have to chose between auto-generation of components and the ability to do minor upgrades.
If you have some auto-generated components, then just stick to major upgrades. You can use this sample by Rob as an example.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 22436
For documentation, check out the help file that is installed with WiX - WiX.chm provides the most up to date information (along with the command line -help
option).
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 4213
Thanks for the background, I wasn't aware that they were working on a new version of Wix. According to the project page, it isn't RTM yet, so that may explain the problems you're having. I hope to hear from the WIX developers in one of the replies.
I can't help you use the under-development heat.exe features. However, I have been in your situation and my solution was to create a tool that took directory and file information as input and generated valid wix project files as output. A .vsproj file is just an XML file, and you can use XSL, C#'s LINQ, PowerShell, or a number of other tools to do the work. I personally have used (pre-LINQ) C#/XMLDOM to parse VS project files for this purpose.
Good Luck,
Dave
Upvotes: 0