summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/PCbuild/rt.bat
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorTim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com>2001-08-05 13:58:48 (GMT)
committerTim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com>2001-08-05 13:58:48 (GMT)
commit223ec936f14a36011d58dec1772260bac08b28a4 (patch)
tree15ef8593b7a1cf21e72a6706869069a3a016b28f /PCbuild/rt.bat
parente02f904cbfd12e5d89b71bc65ed76d5828cb4e83 (diff)
downloadcpython-223ec936f14a36011d58dec1772260bac08b28a4.zip
cpython-223ec936f14a36011d58dec1772260bac08b28a4.tar.gz
cpython-223ec936f14a36011d58dec1772260bac08b28a4.tar.bz2
+ Made installer more reluctant to overwrite MS C runtime DLLs -- it's
been overwriting them even if they have the same version, not just if they're an older version (and our installers have always done this). + Added an "Advanced Options" subdialog to "Select Components". Allows to do a non-admin install even if you have Administrator rights, and to skip registering file extensions and/or creating Start Menu shortcuts. Since so far these installers have been tested only by me, and Win2K has been full of surprises, I want those options available out in the field. Lots of web searching turned up what should have been obvious: Because Windows Installer is a native Win2K service, it can run at a higher privilege level than the user invoking it. So MSI installs don't bash into these permission gotchas on Win2K, but Wise 8.1 does (it's just another app to Win2K, and we're not alone in wrestling with this; but, like changing int division in Python, Win2K is doing a right thing <wink>).
Diffstat (limited to 'PCbuild/rt.bat')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions