cpython/Tools/msi
Brian Curtin 611cfd2cba Denote 3.3.0 as the last supported Windows 2000 release.
This corresponds with change b9390aa12855 to PEP-11.
2011-05-03 13:36:34 -05:00
..
README.txt
crtlicense.txt #4700: crtlicense.txt is displayed by the license() command and should be kept ascii-only. 2008-12-19 22:56:48 +00:00
msi.py Denote 3.3.0 as the last supported Windows 2000 release. 2011-05-03 13:36:34 -05:00
msilib.py Disable UAC by default. 2008-06-14 14:24:47 +00:00
msisupport.c Untabify C files. Will watch buildbots. 2010-05-09 14:46:46 +00:00
msisupport.mak Port to VS 2008. Drop W9x support. 2008-05-09 20:11:37 +00:00
schema.py Extend sizes of various fields, to support the CRT90 merge module. 2008-04-05 15:45:25 +00:00
sequence.py
uisample.py fix typos, mostly in comments 2005-10-28 14:39:47 +00:00
uuids.py Add 2.7.1 UUIDs. 2010-10-25 19:55:48 +00:00

README.txt

Packaging Python as a Microsoft Installer Package (MSI)
=======================================================

Using this library, Python can be packaged as a MS-Windows
MSI file. To generate an installer package, you need
a build tree. By default, the build tree root directory
is assumed to be in "../..". This location can be changed
by adding a file config.py; see the beginning of msi.py
for additional customization options.

The packaging process assumes that binaries have been 
generated according to the instructions in PCBuild/README.txt,
and that you have either Visual Studio or the Platform SDK
installed. In addition, you need the Python COM extensions,
either from PythonWin, or from ActivePython.

To invoke the script, open a cmd.exe window which has 
cabarc.exe in its PATH (e.g. "Visual Studio .NET 2003
Command Prompt"). Then invoke

<path-to-python.exe> msi.py

If everything succeeds, pythonX.Y.Z.msi is generated
in the current directory.