Hi all, New to this forum and indeed SCCM. I have managed to setup a one site SCCM deployment. 'Application' deployments seem to be working fine and as expected. All clients will Windows 7 64 bit. I am still testing things at the moment. My latest application to be installed is PDF Creator.
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I have installed this via a 'manual scripted' method as an 'Application'. This seems to install fine on the test clients. As far as I am aware there is no official MSI for this program, so I thought I'd try to uninstall the software, via the following.cmd script: 'C: Program Files (x86) PDFCreator unins000.exe' /verysilent /SUPPRESSMSGBOXES /NORESTART This works fine when run manually but I cannot seem to get it working via SCCM.
I have searched the net and there has been discussion about batch scripts and system rights, etc. Perhaps it's something to do with 'what folder the script needs to execute? Can someone please let me know, the full and proper procedure using SCCM 2012 to uninstall this program. Because Windows doesn't allow programs to delete their own EXEs, the uninstaller creates and spawns a copy of itself in the TEMP directory. This 'clone' performs the actual uninstallation, and at the end, terminates the original uninstaller EXE (at which point you get an exit code back), deletes it, then displays the 'uninstall complete' message box (if it hasn't been suppressed with /SILENT or /VERYSILENT). SCCM thinks the uninstaller has completely finished when in fact it hasn't.
The easiest solution is probably what @ suggested. Its probably the error code at the end of the uninstall. You can make sccm ignore behaviour based on exit code in the deployment type. @ Can you explain how to do this please? I can see the default codes but not sure if they need to be modified or new ones added.
I have just tried adding the extra 'suppress code' and changing the detection rule to a reg value. These still resulted in a 'software failure' message. On general note: Why is it that my.cmd script did not work and entering the code directly does? Is it something to with the script trying to run from a UNC path? I ask because, I tested a simple batch file that maps a network drive and that script also did not actually execute. It would just be good to know for future reference.
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Hi all, New to this forum and indeed SCCM. I have managed to setup a one site SCCM deployment. 'Application' deployments seem to be working fine and as expected. All clients will Windows 7 64 bit. I am still testing things at the moment. My latest application to be installed is PDF Creator. I have installed this via a 'manual scripted' method as an 'Application'.
This seems to install fine on the test clients. As far as I am aware there is no official MSI for this program, so I thought I'd try to uninstall the software, via the following.cmd script: 'C: Program Files (x86) PDFCreator unins000.exe' /verysilent /SUPPRESSMSGBOXES /NORESTART This works fine when run manually but I cannot seem to get it working via SCCM. I have searched the net and there has been discussion about batch scripts and system rights, etc.
Perhaps it's something to do with 'what folder the script needs to execute? Can someone please let me know, the full and proper procedure using SCCM 2012 to uninstall this program. Because Windows doesn't allow programs to delete their own EXEs, the uninstaller creates and spawns a copy of itself in the TEMP directory. This 'clone' performs the actual uninstallation, and at the end, terminates the original uninstaller EXE (at which point you get an exit code back), deletes it, then displays the 'uninstall complete' message box (if it hasn't been suppressed with /SILENT or /VERYSILENT). SCCM thinks the uninstaller has completely finished when in fact it hasn't. The easiest solution is probably what @ suggested. Its probably the error code at the end of the uninstall.
You can make sccm ignore behaviour based on exit code in the deployment type. @ Can you explain how to do this please? I can see the default codes but not sure if they need to be modified or new ones added. I have just tried adding the extra 'suppress code' and changing the detection rule to a reg value. These still resulted in a 'software failure' message. On general note: Why is it that my.cmd script did not work and entering the code directly does? Is it something to with the script trying to run from a UNC path?
Pdf Converter
I ask because, I tested a simple batch file that maps a network drive and that script also did not actually execute. It would just be good to know for future reference.
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