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## Summary of the Pull Request Accumulated information from internal transition about the modules development, and reworked it to be added in dev docs. Also the dev docs intself was restructured to be more organized. New pages was verified by transition team. ## PR Checklist - [x] **Dev docs:** Added/updated --------- Co-authored-by: Zhaopeng Wang (from Dev Box) <zhaopengwang@microsoft.com> Co-authored-by: Hao Liu <liuhao3418@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Peiyao Zhao <105847726+zhaopy536@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Mengyuan <162882040+chenmy77@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: zhaopeng wang <33367956+wang563681252@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Jaylyn Barbee <51131738+Jaylyn-Barbee@users.noreply.github.com>
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PowerToys Installer
Installer Architecture (WiX 3)
- Uses a bootstrapper to check dependencies and close PowerToys
- MSI defined in product.wxs
- Custom actions in C++ for special operations:
- Getting install folder
- User impersonation
- PowerShell module path retrieval
- GPO checking
- Process termination
Installer Components
- Separate builds for machine-wide and user-scope installation
- Supports x64 and ARM64
- Custom actions DLL must be signed separately before installer build
- WXS files generated during build process for file components
- Localization handling for resource DLLs
- Firewall exceptions for certain modules
MSI Installer Build Process
- First builds
PowerToysSetupCustomActions
DLL and signs it - Then builds the installer without cleaning, to reuse the signed DLL
- Uses PowerShell scripts to modify .wxs files before build
- Restores original .wxs files after build completes
- Scripts (
applyBuildInfo.ps1
andgenerateFileList.ps1
) dynamically update files list for installer- Helps manage all self-contained dependencies (.NET, WinAppSDK DLLs, etc.)
- Avoids manual maintenance of file lists
Special Build Processes
- .NET applications need publishing for correct WebView2 DLL inclusion
- WXS files backed up and regenerated during build
- Monaco UI components (JavaScript/HTML) generated during build
- Localization files downloaded from server during CI release builds
Per-User vs Per-Machine Installation
- Functionality is identical
- Differences:
- Per-User:
- Installed to
%LOCALAPPDATA%\PowerToys
- Registry entries in HKCU
- Different users can have different installations/settings
- Installed to
- Per-Machine:
- Installed to
Program Files\PowerToys
- Registry entries in HKLM
- Single installation shared by all users
- Installed to
- Per-User:
- Default is now Per-User installation
- Guards prevent installing both types simultaneously
MSIX Usage in PowerToys
- Context menu handlers for Windows 11 use sparse MSIX packages
- Previous attempts to create full MSIX installers were abandoned
- Command Palette will use MSIX when merged into PowerToys
- The main PowerToys application still uses MSI for installation
MSIX Packaging and Extensions
- MSIX packages for extensions (like context menus) are included in the PowerToys installer
- The MSIX files are built as part of the PowerToys build process
- MSIX files are saved directly into the root folder with base application files
- The installer includes MSIX files but doesn't install them automatically
- Packages are registered when a module is enabled
- Code in
package.h
checks if a package is registered and verifies the version - Packages will be installed if a version mismatch is detected
- When uninstalling PowerToys, the system checks for installed packages with matching display names and attempts to uninstall them
GPO Files (Group Policy Objects)
- GPO files for x64 and ARM64 are identical
- Only one set is needed
- GPO files in pipeline are copies of files in source
Installer Debugging
- Can only build installer in Release mode
- Typically debug using logs and message boxes
- Logs located in:
%LOCALAPPDATA%\Temp\PowerToys_bootstrapper_*.log
- MSI tool logs%LOCALAPPDATA%\Temp\PowerToys_*.log
- Custom installer logs
- Logs in Bug Reports are useful for troubleshooting installation issues
Building PowerToys Locally
Prerequisites for building the MSI installer
- Install the WiX Toolset Visual Studio 2022 Extension.
- Install the WiX Toolset build tools. (installer direct link)
- Download WiX binaries and extract
wix.targets
toC:\Program Files (x86)\WiX Toolset v3.14
.
Building prerequisite projects
From the command line
- From the start menu, open a
Developer Command Prompt for VS 2022
- Ensure
nuget.exe
is in your%path%
- In the repo root, run these commands:
nuget restore .\tools\BugReportTool\BugReportTool.sln
msbuild -p:Platform=x64 -p:Configuration=Release .\tools\BugReportTool\BugReportTool.sln
nuget restore .\tools\StylesReportTool\StylesReportTool.sln
msbuild -p:Platform=x64 -p:Configuration=Release .\tools\StylesReportTool\StylesReportTool.sln
From Visual Studio
If you prefer, you can alternatively build prerequisite projects for the installer using the Visual Studio UI.
- Open
tools\BugReportTool\BugReportTool.sln
- In Visual Studio, in the
Solutions Configuration
drop-down menu selectRelease
- From the
Build
menu, chooseBuild Solution
. - Open
tools\StylesReportTool\StylesReportTool.sln
- In Visual Studio, in the
Solutions Configuration
drop-down menu selectRelease
- From the
Build
menu, chooseBuild Solution
.
Locally compiling the installer
- Open
installer\PowerToysSetup.sln
- In Visual Studio, in the
Solutions Configuration
drop-down menu selectRelease
- From the
Build
menu chooseBuild Solution
.
The resulting PowerToysSetup.msi
installer will be available in the installer\PowerToysSetup\x64\Release\
folder.
Supported arguments for the .EXE Bootstrapper installer
Head over to the wiki to see the full list of supported installer arguments.