Install.exe switches


















For more information, see get tenant ID. Specifies one or more Windows user accounts or groups to be given access to client settings and policies.

This property is useful when you don't have local administrative credentials on the client computer. Specify a list of accounts that are separated by semicolons ;. When you use this property, the computer restarts without warning. This behavior occurs even if a user is signed in to Windows. To specify that the client is always internet-based and never connects to the intranet, set this property value to 1. The client's connection type displays Always Internet.

Use this property to specify the certificate issuers list. This list includes certificate information for the trusted root certification authorities CA that the Configuration Manager site trusts. This value is a case-sensitive match for subject attributes that are in the root CA certificate. Separate attributes by a comma , or a semicolon ;.

Specify more than one root CA certificate by using a separator bar. Use the value of the CertificateIssuers attribute in the mobileclient. For more information about the certificate issuers list and how clients use it during the certificate selection process, see Planning for PKI client certificate selection.

If the client has more than one certificate for HTTPS communication, this property specifies the criteria for it to select a valid client authentication certificate.

If you use the Subject Name, the Subject keyword is case-sensitive, and the SubjectStr keyword is case-insensitive. For the complete list of attributes that you can use for certificate selection, see Supported attribute values for PKI certificate selection criteria.

If the client installer can't locate a valid certificate in the default Personal certificate store for the computer, use this property to specify an alternate certificate store name.

This property enables debug logging when the client installs. This property causes the client to log low-level information for troubleshooting. Avoid using this property in production sites. Excessive logging can occur, which might make it difficult to find relevant information in the log files.

For more information, see About log files. The frequency in minutes at which the client health evaluation tool ccmeval. Specify an integer value from 1 to By default, ccmeval runs once a day minutes. For more information on client health evaluation, see Monitor clients. The hour during the day when the client health evaluation tool ccmeval. Specify an integer value from 0 midnight to 23 PM. By default, ccmeval runs at midnight. If you set this property to 1 , the client selects the PKI certificate with the longest validity period.

If the client is managed over the internet, this property specifies the FQDN of the internet-based management point. Directly assign internet-based clients to an internet-based site. This property can specify the address of a cloud management gateway CMG. For example: ccmsetup. Specifies the port for the client to use when it communicates over HTTP to site system servers. By default, this value is Use this property to set the folder to install the Configuration Manager client files.

Regardless of where you install the client files, it always installs the ccmcore. On a bit OS, it installs a copy of ccmcore. When a Configuration Manager log file reaches the maximum size, the client renames it as a backup and creates a new log file. This property specifies how many previous versions of the log file to keep. The default value is 1. If you set the value to 0 , the client doesn't keep any log file history. This property specifies the maximum log file size in bytes.

When a log grows to the specified size, the client renames it as a history file, and creates a new one. The default size is , bytes, and the minimum size is 10, bytes. Set this property to TRUE to block administrators from changing the assigned site in the Configuration Manager control panel.

If set to TRUE, this property disables the ability of administrative users from changing the client cache folder settings in the Configuration Manager control panel. When the client locates a management point, it tells the client about other management points in the hierarchy. This behavior means that the management point that the client finds from DNS can be any one in the hierarchy.

You don't have to specify this property if the client is in the same domain as a published management point. In that case, the client's domain is automatically used to search DNS for management points. For more information about DNS publishing as a service location method for Configuration Manager clients, see Service location and how clients determine their assigned management point. Specify the fallback status point that receives and processes state messages sent by Configuration Manager clients.

For more information, see Determine if you need a fallback status point. If you install the Configuration Manager client without installing App-V, you can't deploy virtual applications. When you enable this property, the client reports status, but doesn't remediate problems that it finds.

For more information, see How to configure client status. Use this property to start a task sequence on a client after it successfully registers with the site. If the task sequence installs software updates or applications, clients need a valid client authentication certificate.

Token authentication alone doesn't work. For more information, see Release notes - OS deployment. For example, you provision a new Windows device with Windows Autopilot, auto-enroll it to Microsoft Intune, and then install the Configuration Manager client for co-management. If you specify this new option, the newly provisioned client then runs a task sequence. This process gives you additional flexibility to install applications and software updates, or configure settings. Create a non-OS deployment task sequence to install apps, install software updates, and configure settings.

Deploy this task sequence to the new built-in collection, All Provisioning Devices. The deployment's purpose can be either available or required. Since you specify the deployment ID as the property value, the purpose doesn't matter. Install the Configuration Manager client on a device using ccmsetup. Set the value of this property as the task sequence deployment ID.

If you're installing the client from Intune during co-management enrollment, see How to prepare internet-based devices for co-management. This method may have additional prerequisites.

For example, enrolling the site to Azure Active Directory, or creating a content-enabled cloud management gateway. After the client installs and properly registers with the site, it starts the referenced task sequence. If client registration fails, the task sequence won't start. This task sequence starts immediately after the client registers, so it won't be part of any collection to which you've deployed custom client settings. The client doesn't process or apply custom client settings before this task sequence runs.

For the task sequence to work properly, you may need to change certain settings in the Default Client Settings. For example,. Incorrect use of any option invokes this help option. Quiet display option. The installer runs an installation without displaying a user interface. No prompts, messages, or dialog boxes are displayed to the user. The user cannot cancel the installation.

If no reboot options are specified, the installer restarts the computer whenever necessary without displaying any prompt or warning to the user. Passive display option. The installer displays a progress bar to the user that indicates that an installation is in progress but no prompts or error messages are displayed to the user.

If no reboot option is specified, the installer restarts the computer whenever necessary without displaying any prompt or warning to the user. Prompt before restarting option. Displays a message that a restart is required to complete the installation and asks the user whether to restart the system now. But as an all-in-one resource for finding setup installer silent switches, ITNinja is hard to beat and a great way to get the commands you need if USSF fails.

Who actually wrote this software and can it be updated? This program works great. However, it would be extra nice if it could somehow scan adobe setup files namely Setup.

I want to install silently with a progress bar only…but can only install silently. Great tip Raymond! I guess using this software we can find command switches for different software and integrate them into Windows to create a Windows unattended CD. Thanks Ray! Mike 7 years ago. Yes Man 8 years ago. Marko 14 years ago. Billy 14 years ago. Tejas 14 years ago. Syahid A.



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