I am working on a project where several software and drivers are installed on a windows 7 PC. This shall work without user inputs.
Now there is the question: How can I determine in this program if a reboot is required to finish an installation (can be driver or software).
We are working on Windows 7 embedded and there is no taskbar enabled or any tooltips or something like this visible. Software is installed in silent mode.
Use the following registry key:
HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\PendingFileRenameOperations
Source: How to find out if an MSI I just installed requested a windows reboot?
As discovered by the asker of this question HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Component Based Servicing\RebootPending
shows when a reboot is pending on the machine as long as the OS is Vista or newer.
The "PendingReboot" module incorporates all the mentioned tests (+ CCM WMI probe) into a single convenient cmdlet to reliably detect pending reboot:
# Install
Install-Module -Name PendingReboot
# Run
Test-PendingReboot -Detailed
After a long research I found a way how to query pending restarts with a native Windows DLL directly in a .NET application.
The main problem is that there can be many reasons why Windows has to restart. In addition, the Windows version sometimes also plays a role.
During the research I came across an article describing various scripts in the Windows Update environment, such as determining whether the automatic updates service is enabled or a computer needs to be rebooted. There you will find a reference to the Microsoft.Update.SystemInfo Object, which finally led to ISystemInformation interface having the method ISystemInformation::get_RebootRequired (Gets a Boolean value that indicates whether a system restart is required to complete the installation or uninstallation of one or more updates.).
For more details about the journey, see my blog post Determine programmatically pending reboot status for a Windows machine in C# and PowerShell