Difference between revisions of "Variables"
(→Applying different versions) |
(→WPKG 1.3.x and above) |
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Line 92: | Line 92: | ||
<variable name="PKG_VER" value="1.2.0"> | <variable name="PKG_VER" value="1.2.0"> | ||
<condition> | <condition> | ||
− | <check type="host" condition="environment" value="PKG_VER=^$" | + | <check type="host" condition="environment" value="PKG_VER=^$" /> |
</condition> | </condition> | ||
</variable> | </variable> |
Latest revision as of 20:40, 14 January 2013
Contents
Variables
Where can they be set
- At operating system level
- Through WPKG client
- Through the host definition
- Through the profile definition
- Through the package definition
In which order are they applied
WPKG 1.2.x and below
The level below another will overwrite the previous definition.
- operating system
- WPKG client
- package
- profile
- host
For example, if a variable is defined at the package and the profile level, the definition of the profile will be used.
<profile id="TestPC">
<variable name="PKG_VER" value="1.2.3"/>
<package package-id="WpkgSettings"/>
</profile>
<package
id="WpkgSettings"
name="WPKG Client Settings"
revision="%PKG_VER%"
priority="999"
reboot="false"
execute="once">
<variable name="PKG_VER" value="1.2.0"/>
</package>
WPKG 1.3.x and above
The level below another will overwrite the previous definition.
- operating system
- WPKG client
- host
- profile
- package
For example, if a variable is defined at the package and the profile level, the definition of the package will be used.
<profile id="TestPC">
<variable name="PKG_VER" value="1.2.3"/>
<package package-id="WpkgSettings"/>
</profile>
<package
id="WpkgSettings"
name="WPKG Client Settings"
revision="%PKG_VER%"
priority="999"
reboot="false"
execute="once">
<variable name="PKG_VER" value="1.2.0"/>
</package>
To get the behavior of WPKG 1.2.x with WPKG 1.3.x, you need to check if the variable is set and only apply the current change if the variable is not set.
<profile id="TestPC">
<variable name="PKG_VER" value="1.2.3"/>
<package package-id="WpkgSettings"/>
</profile>
<package
id="WpkgSettings"
name="WPKG Client Settings"
revision="%PKG_VER%"
priority="999"
reboot="false"
execute="once">
<variable name="PKG_VER" value="1.2.0">
<condition>
<check type="host" condition="environment" value="PKG_VER=^$" />
</condition>
</variable>
</package>
Why use variables
- To easily change multiple occurrences of a value in the install, upgrade, downgrade and remove commands
- To use one version variable for package revision, checks and installer executable name
- To apply different versions of a package based on host groups and profiles
Replacing multiple occurrences
<package id="WpkgClient"
name="WPKG Client"
revision="%PKG_VER%"
reboot="false"
priority="999">
<variable name="PKG_VER" value="1.3.14" />
<!-- replace x32 with x86 and x64 with AMD64 in the installer file name -->
<variable name="PKG_SOURCE" value="%SOFTWARE%\WPKG Client\WPKG Client %PKG_VER%-%PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE%.msi" />
<check type="uninstall" condition="versiongreaterorequal" path="WPKG" value="%PKG_VER%"/>
<install cmd='msiexec /norestart /passive /log "%TMP%\WpkgClient.log" /i "%PKG_SOURCE%" ALLUSERS=1 SETTINGSFILE="%WPKG_ROOT%\settings.xml"' >
<exit code="1641" />
<exit code="3010" reboot="false"/>
</install>
<upgrade include="install"/>
<remove cmd='MsiExec.exe /norestart /passive /log "%TMP%\WpkgClient.log" /x "%PKG_SOURCE%"' />
</package>
Applying different versions
Below find the host definition for two computers, where the package definition is defining different variables based on the hosts name.
<host name="TestPC" profile-id="DesktopPC" />
<host name="OfficePC" profile-id="DesktopPC" />
Both computers use the same profile.
<profile id="DesktopPC">
<package package-id="WpkgClient"/>
</profile>
Both computers use the same package.
<package id="WpkgClient"
name="WPKG Client"
revision="%PKG_VER%"
reboot="false"
priority="999">
<variable name="PKG_VER" value="1.3.9" />
<variable name="PKG_VER" value="1.3.14" hostname="^TestPC$"/>
<!-- replace x32 with x86 and x64 with AMD64 in the installer file name -->
<variable name="PKG_SOURCE" value="%SOFTWARE%\WPKG\WPKG Client\WPKG Client %PKG_VER%-%PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE%.msi" />
<check type="uninstall" condition="versiongreaterorequal" path="WPKG" value="%PKG_VER%"/>
<install cmd='msiexec /norestart /passive /log "%TMP%\WpkgClient.log" /i "%PKG_SOURCE%" ALLUSERS=1 SETTINGSFILE="%WPKG_ROOT%\settings.xml"' >
<exit code="1641" />
<exit code="3010" reboot="false"/>
</install>
<upgrade include="install"/>
<remove cmd='MsiExec.exe /norestart /passive /log "%TMP%\WpkgClient.log" /x "%PKG_SOURCE%"' />
</package>
In the end the computer OfficePC gets revision 1.3.9 of the package installed, where TestPC gets revision 1.3.14 installed.