I have a product setup executable that copies some files to the user's hard drive. It's not a typical installer in the normal sense (it doesn't add anything to the Start Menu or Program Files folders).
Each time the setup program is run on Vista, after the exe terminates, Vista produces a task dialog:
- This program might not have installed correctly
- Reinstall using recommended settings
- This program installed correctly
Is there a function I need to call from the exe or registry entry to set, to indicate to the operating system that the program installed correctly (or to at least supress this message)?
Related questions: "This program might not have installed correctly" message in Windows 7 RC (for Windows 7-specific issues)
One of the reasons that this message pops up is when the system thinks you're running an installer but it doesn't find an entry for the application in the add/remove programs list.
I don't know if this is the case for your app, but it's worth checking.
There seems to be more reasons for this. If you renamed you application remember also the names in Assembly Information, they all has to be equal otherwise the nag-screen "This program might not have installed correctly" might pop-up :-P
Can also be modified directly in the AssemblyInfo.vb/.cs file
The first thing you should try is to add a "Vista manifest" with requestedExecutionLevel
If that is not enough (Clicking cancel on uninstall with UAC off etc) you need to use undocumented stuff like setting the image version field in the PE header to 6.0
You need to add some information into the AppCompat section of the registry.
See this link and look for "How to disable a Program Compatibility Assistant warning".
Also there is apparently a method that involves adding a manifest file to your setup executable to flag it as "Vista-aware".
Include this section in the program's manifest file:
It'll suppress Program Compatibility Assistant by stating that your app is compatible with Vista and Win 7.