How to detect whether I need to install VCRedist?

偶尔善良 提交于 2019-12-18 11:45:39

问题


I have a question very similar to this one but the answer does not work for me.

Software I am maintaining the setup for depends on VC++ 2008 (SP1, precisely), thus I need to find a solution to install VCRedist if not yet installed. I understand the correct way would be to build msi with merge modules, but it's not on my hands.

The answer of the duplicate question I am referring to (the accepted one) does not work for me because every tiny release (e.g. 9.0.30729.01 vs 9.0.30729.17) has proper GUIDs, which I am not able to guess or predict for future versions. Furthermore, I reckon that this would not detect Visual Studios and thus unnecessarily install the VCRedist Package when it's already on a developers machine. I do not want to bug anybody with this, certainly not somebody who has already a DevStudio installed.

Now another answer says I should look in the WinSxs-folder like $WINDIR\WinSxS\x86_Microsoft.VC80.CRT_ but this does not (yet) help me to imply SP1, or is there anything I am missing at this point ? Is there a table somewhere with the internal and "external" version numbers, so I could imply a certain minor version number ?

I cannot believe that there is nothing provided by Microsoft for this scenario, but searching the interwebs for already far too long now brings me back to good ol' SO :)


回答1:


You could take the recommended approach for installing directx: always run the redistributable. Since it's required and you're already shipping it there's no harm in running it even if it's already installed.




回答2:


For Visual Studio C++ 2010, things got a bit easier.

Unlike the Visual C++ 2005 and 2008 redistributable packages, there are registry keys that can be used to detect the presence of the Visual C++ 2010 redistributable package.

Visual C++ 2010 redistributable package detection registry values

Visual C++ 2010 Redistributable Package (x86)

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\VisualStudio\10.0\VC\VCRedist\x86] Installed = 1 (REG_DWORD)

Visual C++ 2010 Redistributable Package (x64)

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\VisualStudio\10.0\VC\VCRedist\x64] Installed = 1 (REG_DWORD)

Visual C++ 2010 Redistributable Package (ia64)

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\VisualStudio\10.0\VC\VCRedist\ia64] Installed = 1 (REG_DWORD)

Note: You will need to check under Wow6432Node on a 64-bit OS. (HKLM\Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft....)

If you like the older version, here are the GUIDs

Visual C++ 2010 redistributable package product codes

  • Visual C++ 2010 Redistributable Package (x86) - {196BB40D-1578-3D01-B289-BEFC77A11A1E}
  • Visual C++ 2010 Redistributable Package (x64) - {DA5E371C-6333-3D8A-93A4-6FD5B20BCC6E}
  • Visual C++ 2010 Redistributable Package (ia64) - {C1A35166-4301-38E9-BA67-02823AD72A1B}

Visual C++ 2010 SP1 redistributable package product codes

  • Visual C++ 2010 SP1 Redistributable Package (x86) - {F0C3E5D1-1ADE-321E-8167-68EF0DE699A5}
  • Visual C++ 2010 SP1 Redistributable Package (x64) - {1D8E6291-B0D5-35EC-8441-6616F567A0F7}
  • Visual C++ 2010 SP1 Redistributable Package (ia64) - {88C73C1C-2DE5-3B01-AFB8-B46EF4AB41CD}



回答3:


looks like there is another solution proposed by a Microsoft-Developer, using MsiQueryProductState API, alas also relying on the GUIDs.

Update: The code went live yesterday and seems to be working fine. Here is what is beeing done: It is checked for the latest-known-to-me GUID AND the path² to-where-it-is-supposed-to-be-installed. If both fails, it is installed. This seems to work fine.

Additionally, it is installed with the command line arguments "/qb" which means "unattended but not invisible". See this other blog post about those params.

FWIW, GUIDs for Microsoft Visual C++ 2008 / VC90 SP1 Redistributable - x86 9.0.30729

  • 64bit 30729.17: 8220EEFE-38CD-377E-8595-13398D740ACE
  • 32bit 30729.17: 9A25302D-30C0-39D9-BD6F-21E6EC160475
  • 32bit 30729.01: 6AFCA4E1-9B78-3640-8F72-A7BF33448200

² The path: $WINDIR\WinSxS\x86_Microsoft.VC90.CRT_1fc8b3b9a1e18e3b_9.0.30729*




回答4:


I open-sourced a Visual C++ project on Github that checks for VC++ redistributable DLLs specifically and made it available under the Apache 2.0 license.

It has three different methods for checking for the availability of VC++9 and VC++10 runtimes:

  1. Checks the MsiQueryProductState APIs;
  2. Inspect the contents of the WinSxS folder for matching product directories; and
  3. Checks the current working directory for any local versions of the VC++9 and VC++10 runtimes (and inspects their contents.)

Here's a sample of what using it actually looks like:

 wcout << _T("Checking for the availability of VC++ runtimes..") << endl;
 wcout << _T("----------- Visual C++ 2008 (VC++9) -----------") << endl;
 wcout << _T("Visual C++ 2008 (x86) ? ") << (IsVC2008Installed_x86() ? _T("true") : _T("false")) << endl;
 wcout << _T("Visual C++ 2008 (x64) ? ") << (IsVC2008Installed_x64() ? _T("true") : _T("false")) << endl;
 wcout << _T("Visual C++ 2008 SP1 (x86) ? ") << (IsVC2008SP1Installed_x86() ? _T("true") : _T("false")) << endl;
 wcout << _T("Visual C++ 2008 SP1 (x64) ? ") << (IsVC2008SP1Installed_x64() ? _T("true") : _T("false")) << endl;

I licensed the crt-detector project under Apache 2.0, so feel free to use it in your own applications.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/730889/how-to-detect-whether-i-need-to-install-vcredist

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