Installation Tips

For additional detailed information, see the Installation Section


Creating a Network Install Tab
Installing Windows95 OEM SR2 over an existing version of Windows
Office95 Upgrade Without Existing Version
Upgrading Without a Previous Version of Windows Installed
Automating Office95 Installations
Installing Windows95 with no Plug and Play search
Installing Windows95 with no MSN or InBox Icons
New Win95 Batch Install Program
Win95 SETUP switches - Includes undocumented bypass of License screen.


Creating a Network Install Tab

You can create a Network Install tab that will show up in the Control Panel / Add/Remove Program icon.
This will allow you to centrally control applications that users can easily install over a network.
There are two parts to setting this up:

  1. Configuring the file with the applications that can be installed
  2. Configurating the workstation to look for this file

Configuring the APPS.INI File

The file that controls what applications can be installed is called APPS.INI.

A sample is:

[AppInstallList]
Microsoft Word=\\server\share\apps\word\setup.exe
Microsoft Excel=\\server\share\apps\excel\setup.exe

On the left hand side is the name that will appear to the user in the Network Install tab.
On the right hand side would be your location for the install program.
No DOS paths are allowed. Only UNC names will work

This file should be put on a network server. This way when it needs to be modified, it can be done in one location.

Configuring the Workstation

  1. Start Regedit
  2. Go to HKEY_Local_Machine / SOFTWARE / Microsoft / Windows / CurrentVersion
  3. Add a String Value called AppInstallPath
  4. Its value should be a DOS or UNC path to the location of the APPS.INI file, including the file name

Now when users open up the Control Panel / Add/Remove Programs icon, there will be a Network Install tab with the programs you specify.
This can be usefully for allowing people to automatically update virus definition files, printer drivers, install applications etc.


Installing Windows95 OEM SR2 over an existing version of Windows

Currently, you cannot install the new OEM version of Windows95 over and existing version of Windows (3.x or 95).
In order to get around this problem, simply rename any WIN.COM file on your hard drive and install normally.
This will let you keep you current Windows settings.

It will make things easier if the location of your new version is the same as your old one.

Note: You will not be able to convert to FAT32 using this procedure. For that you need to FDISK your hard drive.


Office95 Upgrade Without Existing Version

To install office 95 upgrade version you need to own another Office like application like WordPerfect or something right ?
Wrong !!

When setup goes to find an application to upgrade from just point it to the EXCEL directory on the office CD and you're off...
Enjoy.


Automated Office95 Installation

There are several undocumented switches you can use to automate your Office95 Installation.
An full unattended install should only take 3-4 minutes from the CD.

/K Enters the CD key
/K "12345678"
The CD key should not have the dash
/Q 0 - Quiet Install - with Exit screen
1 - No exit screen
T - Shows nothing on the screen during install
/N User's Name
/N "Name"
/O Organization Name
/O "Org"
/T Specify the STF file
The default is the SETUP.STF on the root of the Office95 CD.

This is an ASCII text file you can copy to a local or network drive, modify the applications you want to install and then point your installation to use that file

/T X:\NEW.STF

/U Uninstalls all apps but leaves common files in place
/UA Uninstalls all apps and removes common files
/R ReInstalls previously installed Office95 apps

A whole string might look something like:
SETUP /K "12345678" /Q1 /N "YOUR_NAME" /O "YOUR_ORGANIZATION" T: C:\NEW.STF

Other Windows applications use similar STF file structure.

You could have this launch automatically at the end of your Windows95 installation if you are using INF files.
See the Installation Using INF Files section.


Installing Windows95 and Ignoring Plug and Play

If you want to install Windows95 and have it not test for any Plug and Play devices,
simply add a /PI after the SETUP command.

 


Installing Win95 with no MSN or InBox Icons

 

If you want to install Windows95 and not have it create the MSN or Exchange InBox every time
you need to create a setup INF file. Instructions for doing this can be found later in this section under
Batch Install Program

Having created an INF file you want to use, add the following lines to remove both icons during installation:


Upgrading Without a Previous Version of Windows Installed

If you purchased the upgrade version of Windows95 but don't have a previous version installed, normally you cannot install it.

If you need to install Windows 95 Upgrade on your computer and you no longer have Windows 3.1, you can simply create the following file on your hard disk:
WIN386.EXE and the Upgrade version will then install.

The easiest way to create this file is to type the following at the command prompt:
ECHO [some random characters] > WIN386.EXE

 

Another way to Upgrade without a Previous Version of Windows Installed

If you are a Windows 95 "UPGRADE" user and you must reinstall Windows 95 for any reason, you don't need to have a copy of Windows 3.x installed on your computer first. Just place the first Win 3.1 disk into your drive and during the install of Windows95 it will find the necessary files.


Batch Install Program

If you are re-installing Win95 and use the same settings and programs each time, there is a Batch Installation program in the Admin\Nettools\Netsetup directory on the CD or download it from Version 2.0

You can specify what applications, network, protocol etc. to load when you install Win95. Save the file, then run SETUP FILENAME.INF when you re-install Win95. . You won't be prompted for much else


Setup Switches

There are several switches that can be used when running SETUP

SETUP Switches

There are several switches available to use along with SETUP.
Some are undocumented.
filename Runs the particular INF file
/ID Ignores the DIsk Space check
/IS Ignores the routine System check
/IQ Skips the test for cross-linked files
/IM Skips the memory check
/IN Runs setup without the Network Setup Module
/IW Bypasses needing to read the License screen.
Needs to be upper case when run within Windows
Undocumented.
/IP Ignores Plug and Play
Undocumented
/IR By passes the checkin into the system CMOS. Useful for some combinations of motherboard and Award BIOS ver 4.50 P
Undocumented
/D If you do not want Setup to use your existing Windows configuration (such as your current Win.ini and System.ini files), use this switch.
Undocumented
/N Allows setup to run without a mouse
Undocumented
/P Detection Switch Option String - Using a /P allows you to use an additional switch for viewing and setting some detection parameters. You can separate them with a semicolon (;). For example /P g=3;i;p.
  • g=0 to 3 - This switch controls how verbose the built-in progress bar is. At maximum level (3), it shows all the resources of the detected devices along with the progress bar. This switch can help to identify which detection module causes a certain problem. The default is 0.
  • b - This switch enables Prompt Before mode. It prompts you before a detection module is called so that you can step through each detection module manually and decide if you want to skip it. The default is disabled.
  • i - This switch tells Setup not to report the existence of a Plug and Play BIOS. It is useful on systems that have a Plug and Play BIOS that is not reported in Machine.inf.
  • p - This switch enables performance logging. It writes performance timing information to the DETLOG.TXT file.The default is disabled.
  • f - This switch enables Clean Registry mode. It forces Detection to clean the root branch of the registry before starting. This switch is ignored when Setup is run in the Windows 95 graphical user interface (GUI). The default is disabled.