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‎Nov 29, 2016
10:02 AM
Install Localization Question(s)...
Hi all,
I was wondering how the runtime language is determined when running and .msi, NOT a Setup.exe with the language selection dialog.
For example, my default language is set as English. However, when launching the .msi on a German OS, the internal dialogs (not Windows Installer processing messages) display in German. I thought, since there is no language selection the default language would display, English. I am just executing the .msi by double clicking and NOT firing via command line with the passage of a language transform parameter.
My language transforms are embedded and not external .mst files if that makes a difference.
I'm trying to figure out how the displayed language is chosen as I'm trying to troubleshoot an issue on a German OS and, well, without knowing the language, its kind of tough. I guess I could pass English as the language, but that might produce different results seen in the field (executing from command line with no transform argurment (language) specified.
I was wondering how the runtime language is determined when running and .msi, NOT a Setup.exe with the language selection dialog.
For example, my default language is set as English. However, when launching the .msi on a German OS, the internal dialogs (not Windows Installer processing messages) display in German. I thought, since there is no language selection the default language would display, English. I am just executing the .msi by double clicking and NOT firing via command line with the passage of a language transform parameter.
My language transforms are embedded and not external .mst files if that makes a difference.
I'm trying to figure out how the displayed language is chosen as I'm trying to troubleshoot an issue on a German OS and, well, without knowing the language, its kind of tough. I guess I could pass English as the language, but that might produce different results seen in the field (executing from command line with no transform argurment (language) specified.
(6) Replies
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‎Nov 29, 2016
12:20 PM
Here's what appears to be happening...
We have an .msi that I fire off and the dialogs are displayed in German on that OS language without passing a TRANSFORMS parameter to it. We then install another .msi and attempt to launch that via a custom action .exe. There, we pass the language from the calling .msi. When the secondary .msi runs I get the following in German...
Error in the application of transforms. Make sure that the specificed transformation paths are valid.
I can take the same secondary .msi and use the calling command line to display the different supported languages on an English OS.
msiexec /i "c:\My\Path\To\Test.msi" TRANSFORMS=:1031
On an English OS I can display German dialog verbiage using the above command line, but the same does not work on a German OS.
Are the command lines different for passing Transforms on different language OSs?
We have an .msi that I fire off and the dialogs are displayed in German on that OS language without passing a TRANSFORMS parameter to it. We then install another .msi and attempt to launch that via a custom action .exe. There, we pass the language from the calling .msi. When the secondary .msi runs I get the following in German...
Error in the application of transforms. Make sure that the specificed transformation paths are valid.
I can take the same secondary .msi and use the calling command line to display the different supported languages on an English OS.
msiexec /i "c:\My\Path\To\Test.msi" TRANSFORMS=:1031
On an English OS I can display German dialog verbiage using the above command line, but the same does not work on a German OS.
Are the command lines different for passing Transforms on different language OSs?
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‎Nov 29, 2016
03:35 PM
Why or how does Windows Installer recognize and apply the embedded transform if the .msi is launched directly, but errors when calling the embedded transform via the command line.
I could call the secondary .msi directly from my custom action without passing the language transform parameter and I believe that would work. However, there may be instances where the user would like to launch these installers in a language foreign to the operating system. Why can this not be done via the command line as can be done on my English OS? I don't have any issue calling all the languages from the command line on that OS.
I could call the secondary .msi directly from my custom action without passing the language transform parameter and I believe that would work. However, there may be instances where the user would like to launch these installers in a language foreign to the operating system. Why can this not be done via the command line as can be done on my English OS? I don't have any issue calling all the languages from the command line on that OS.
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‎Nov 30, 2016
09:29 AM
I think I may have found the answer...
http://windows-installer-xml-wix-toolset.687559.n2.nabble.com/single-msi-file-seems-to-need-1033-mst-transform-file-td3261535.html
The only problem is that in the Template Summary property, setting the Language to 0 (language neutral), I thought I ran into problems of some sort having 0 in there.
http://windows-installer-xml-wix-toolset.687559.n2.nabble.com/single-msi-file-seems-to-need-1033-mst-transform-file-td3261535.html
The only problem is that in the Template Summary property, setting the Language to 0 (language neutral), I thought I ran into problems of some sort having 0 in there.
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‎Nov 30, 2016
10:09 AM
So I dug around and found my issues with having 0 mentioned as part of the Template summary property...
http://forum.installsite.net/index.php?showtopic=20984
https://community.flexerasoftware.com/showthread.php?201377-Major-Upgrade-Not-Working
I think what I have to try is my current blank upgrade table setting with 0 in the template summary property. Hopefully major upgrades will work and I will be able to call specific foreign language transforms.
http://forum.installsite.net/index.php?showtopic=20984
https://community.flexerasoftware.com/showthread.php?201377-Major-Upgrade-Not-Working
I think what I have to try is my current blank upgrade table setting with 0 in the template summary property. Hopefully major upgrades will work and I will be able to call specific foreign language transforms.
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‎Dec 01, 2016
01:01 AM
I do not know about this