And since Murphy likes to make my day miserable I obviously started with the worst application of them all.
VMWare ThinApp allows you to virtualize and create portable versions of applications. It was previously known as "Thinstall" and was bought by VMWare back in 2008.
VMWare
ThinApp takes a snapshot of the system prior to the installation of an
application, then the application is installed and after the installation
another snapshot of the system is taken.
The
differences between those two snapshots are then packaged into an executable
file.
To
make this work VMWare ThinApp provides virtualized system resources such as
environment variables, files and registry keys. Upon execution of the
virtualized application the application is presented with a merged view of the
physical and virtual resources, fooling the application into thinking it was
properly installed.
Usually a virtualized application is linked to an actual executable file such as an .exe file which will be started when you execute the virtualized package. For applications like Adobe Reader or any other application that gets fully installed on a system this works fairly well.
But
in my case the application I wanted to package consisted of an installer that
only provided the files necessary to run the application (which is hosted on a
server share). And in addition to that I had to deploy documentation (.pdf files) and internet links
(.url files).
I had
quite a hard time figuring out how to do this because the documentation is
severely lacking for such a use-case. (Probably since this is not really a
use-case for this software.)
After
preparing the system and installing the VMWare ViewAgent and VMware ThinApp
Enterprise software I let the ThinApp software take the snapshot prior to
installing the application with the default settings selected.
After
all the required configuration for the application was done I let the ThinApp
software take the second snapshot.
After the second snapshot was done I had to select a so-called "Entry Point", the executable file that is going to be started when the packaged application is executed.
Here
I simply selected any one file. It did not really matter much which because I
had to edit the package definition anyway. For the remaining options until the
"Isolation" configuration I used the defaults.
Because
the application I am trying to package (or rather the users using the
application) requires write-access to the local file system I had to select the
"Merged" isolation mode for the file system. More on isolation modes
can be found in the VMWare knowledge base.
Except
for taking part in the "Quality Assurance Statistics" (which I
declined to take part in), giving the packaged application a descriptive
"Inventory Name" and at the end enabling the option to also create an
MSI package I left the default settings for all the other options.
Upon
completion of the wizard (without actually building the virtualized application
yet) all changes to the system between the two snapshots were saved to
"C:\Program Files (x86)\VMware\VMware ThinApp\Captures\<application
name>", which you can access by clicking "Open Project
Folder" in the wizard.
In
this folder you will find a number of folders as seen above. These folders will
contain various files and folders you can delete because they serve no purpose
for the application you are packaging. Windows Update logs, other log files,
temporary files, and so on. Also the three files
"HKEY_CURRENT_USER.txt", "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE.txt" and
"HKEY_USERS.txt" will contain a number of registry keys you can safely
remove from the files. But be careful not to delete too much.
In
e.g. the folder "%Common Desktop%" you will find all files you copied
to the common desktop between the two snapshots. In my case the .lnk file, the
two .url files and three .pdf files.
But
the really interesting file is "Package.ini" which contains all the
configuration options for the package.
In my
case the file contained the following entries at the very bottom (shortened to
just include one of each type):
[Start
Application.exe]
Source=%Common
Desktop%\Start Application.lnk
ReadOnlyData=Package.ro.tvr
Shortcuts=%Desktop%
[Internet
Link 1.exe]
Shortcut=Start
Application.exe
Source=%Common
Desktop%\Internet Link 1.url
Shortcuts=%Desktop%
[Documentation
1.exe]
Source=%Common
Desktop%\Documentation 1.pdf
Shortcut=Start
Application.exe
Shortcuts=%Desktop%
After cleaning up the files and folders in the build folder I ran the build process by executing the "build.bat" script with admin privileges.
I
then linked the resulting .exe and .msi files to a desktop pool in our VDI
environment and was severely disappointed. Executing the resulting .exe files
(even the ones that were supposed to contain nothing more than an internet
shortcut) was extremely slow.
After
much back and forth and at least a dozen test builds I finally found a way to
make the start of both the .url and .pdf files as quick as starting any other
regular files of these types. In fact, I even made the .url files obsolete in
the process.
VMWare ThinApp allows for a very poorly documented feature where you do not actually make the file itself an executable with the whole virtual file system attached but you package a shortcut to an existing application with your file or url as a parameter (as long as that application supports this).
To
achieve this I modified the "Package.ini" file to contain the
following lines, replacing the lines above:
[Start
Application.exe]
Source=%Common
Desktop%\Start Application.lnk
ReadOnlyData=Package.ro.tvr
Shortcuts=%Desktop%
[Internet
Link 1.exe]
;ReadOnlyData=Package.ro.tvr
Shortcut=Start
Application.exe
Source=%ProgramFilesDir%\Internet
Explorer\iexplore.exe
CommandLine=%ProgramFilesDir%\Internet
Explorer\iexplore.exe http://www.google.com
Shortcuts=%Desktop%
RetainAllIcons=1
[Documentation
1.exe]
;ReadOnlyData=Package.ro.tvr
Shortcut=Start
Application.exe
Source=%ProgramFilesDir%\Adobe\Acrobat
Reader DC\Reader\AcroRd32.exe
CommandLine=%ProgramFilesDir%\Adobe\Acrobat
Reader DC\Reader\AcroRd32.exe "%Common Desktop%\Documentation 1.pdf"
Shortcuts=%Desktop%
RetainAllIcons=1
The .url files were now obsolete because the resulting .exe files already contained the URLs in the shortcuts. The .pdf files still had to be present in the "%Common Desktop%" folder though.
And
after figuring out that it worked like this I could even get rid of the .lnk
file by simply pointing the "Source" and "CommandLine"
parameters of the "[Start Application.exe]" section to the same
destinations as the .lnk file.
With
this starting the application and opening the internet links and documentation
files were as quick as on any other system with comparable specs.
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