> It would appear to me that the msilib library included with standard > python 2.5 would allow be to do this. I found the source code that > builds the python distrubition installer packages, but I was wondering > if there were other examples that I can learn from.
Actually, the installer itself is built with Tools/msi/msilib, which predates the msilib shipped in 2.5; the former one uses ActiveX (automation), whereas the latter one links directly to a native library (and hence doesn't require PythonCOM). That library was also used (with modifications) to build Enthought Python. In any case, the single known application of the shipped msilib is the bdist_msi command of distutils. If you want to start using MSI, you absolutely have to know about the database tables and their purpose. Use orca.exe to inspect MSI files, and try to make sense out of that. Read MSDN documentation. msilib greatly helps in writing installers quickly, but the "learning curve" is perhaps even steeper than "mere" MSI, as you need to understand both the MSI principles themselves, and then how msilib wraps it in a more compact form. Of course, if you can manage to package your application as a distutils package, you can just try running bdist_msi, and see what you get. Regards, Martin -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list