Manual Installation instructions for Windows Media Connect
For various reasons, it is often useful to have instructions for manual install or uninstall of an application. Perhaps you'd just like to "reset" all of the settings without actually deleting or re-adding any of the files. Here are the manual install and uninstall steps for Windows Media Connect. Note, these are not officially supported, but they may be of use. Before you begin, you’ll need to get your hands on the RAW WMC v2 files. The easiest way to do that is to get the install package from the download center and extract the files from the package using WinZip or a similar program.
- Create an install directory. Something like c:\program files(x86)\Windows Media Connect 2
- Copy wmccds.exe, wmcsci.dll, and wmcfg.exe to your install directory.
- Open a command window and navigate to your install directory.
- Run "regsvr32 wmcsci.dll"
- Run "wmccds.exe -installwithfiles" ( or just -install if all the support files are already present in the directory)
- Run wmccfg.exe and complete the "first run wizard"
To uninstall WMC (without removing any actual files)
- Exit wmccfg.exe (not just close to the task bar, but actually exit)
- Run "wmccds.exe -uninstall"
- Run "net stop wmconnectcds" to stop the service.
- Run "regsvr32 -u wmcsci.dll".
You don't need to do any manual registry cleanup for WMC as it simply removes all of its registry entries on uninstall and creates them on install.
Hmmm, seems too simple doesn’t it? This is actually a bit of work that I’m very proud of. During the development of a product you end up installing the silly thing several times a day to unit test your progress. Over the course of a year that might be thousands of times. I knew this at the beginning of the project and I waned to automate the process, so I added a command line switch to our service executable that would do all of the install steps. All you had to do was run our main .exe on the command line with the install switch and it would install. Nice huh. I told my boss, “Well this is just for development. We can take it out or leave it undocumented when we ship.”
The idea took root in the team and soon everyone was using it. Sean, one of the other developers on the team too the idea even further. He did the work to add a bunch of support files to the product (the various icons and images needed). In addition to adding them to the project, he also added them as resources into the main executable. After that he wired up the -installwithfiles switch to call all of my code and then unpack the support files into the same directory as the main executable. Fantastic!
The result was pure magic. All that was needed to do a manual setup was to copy a few files and run a command line switch. Uninstall was the same way. It was so useful during development that we kept it up to date as things changed. If this saved 10 minutes per install per developer over the course of the year then it is likely that this saved hundreds of hours of development time for the team.
When it came time to author the full install package for the release it just called our command line switch. At that point, there was no removing it. It became a feature of the product. It still isn’t officially supported, but our install depends on it working so it should work for you too.
Comments
- Anonymous
January 28, 2006
I found these install instructions helpful and was hoping to get WMC installed on my Win2K3 File server that has all my music, photos, movies etc. Why is Win2K3 not supported by the install and conifguration? Many a tach person like myself have both the Xbox 360 and Win2K3 systems acting as their file server? Is there a way to get it up and running in Win2K3 (I tried this manual install but even when installed it seems unusable)? Any plans to incorporate Win2K3 in an update approaching? I and other would appreciate it.
I believe these steps are great to be laid out however and appreciate you and your team's efforts. - Anonymous
January 28, 2006
It doesn't work on Win2K3 because UPnP isn't present on any of the Server OS's. Aparently UPnP is seens as a "consumer only" technology and not to be made avaialbe in the data center (don't get me started). WMC can't work without UPnP so even if you use the manual install steps, you aren't going anywhere. Now, UPnP is present on x64 so using these steps there actually gets you something. It was really for the x64 folks that I made these public. - Anonymous
January 29, 2006
The comment has been removed