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How to Remove a Pre- or Post-processing Script from an Application

This topic describes how to use the BizTalk Server Administration console or the command line to remove a pre- or post-processing script from an application. This removes the script from the BizTalk Management database, so that it will not be exported in the application .msi file. This does not remove the script from the local file system, if it exists there.

If the application containing the script has been installed on the local file system, and the script is designed to run during uninstallation, you must remove the script from the file system to prevent it from running when the application is uninstalled.

Prerequisites

To perform the procedure in this topic, you must be logged on with an account that is a member of the BizTalk Server Administrators group. For more detailed information on permissions, see Permissions Required for Deploying and Managing a BizTalk Application.

To remove a script from an application

Using the BizTalk Server Administration console

  1. Click Start, click All Programs, click Microsoft BizTalk Server 20xx, and then click BizTalk Server Administration.

  2. In the console tree, expand BizTalk Server Administration, expand the BizTalk group containing the script to remove, and then expand the application containing the script.

  3. Click the Resources folder, right-click the script, and then click Remove.

Using the command line

  1. Open a command prompt as follows: Click Start, click Run, type cmd, and then click OK.

  2. Type the following command, substituting the appropriate values, as described in the following table:

    BTSTask RemoveResource [/ApplicationName:value] /Luid:value [/Server:value] [/Database:value]

    Example:

    BTSTask RemoveResource /ApplicationName:MyApplication /Luid:"MyApplication:MyScript.vbs"

    Parameter Description
    /ApplicationName Name of the BizTalk application containing the BizTalk script to delete. If the name includes spaces, it must be enclosed in double quotation marks ("). If this parameter is not specified, the default application is used.
    /Luid Locally unique identifier (LUID) of the script. You can obtain the LUID by using the ListApp Command.
    /Server Name of the SQL Server instance hosting the BizTalk Management database, in the form ServerName\InstanceName,Port.

    Instance name is only required when the instance name is different than the server name. Port is only required when SQL Server uses a port number other than the default (1433).

    Examples:

    Server=MyServer

    Server=MyServer\MySQLServer,1533

    If not provided, the name of the SQL Server instance running on the local computer is used.
    /Database Name of the BizTalk Management database. If not specified, the BizTalk Management database running in the local instance of SQL Server is used.

See Also

Managing Pre- and Post-processing Scripts
RemoveResource Command