There are other options and many parameters that can be used that may better suit the corporate or enterprise environment. Where administrators like to keep control away from the users yet still allow the user see the product being installed then the following installation command-line options may be relevant:
IMPORTANT:It is recommended that you do not modify the responsefile.ini. If you want to specify new values, refer Providing Property Through the Command Line.
The following example installs Novell SecureLogin in Microsoft Active Directory mode with Admin tools, Smart card support, Firefox and Group policies features added. Novell SecureLogin is launched at the completion of the installation. The process is completely invisible to the user.
msiexec.exe /i “"c:\Novell SecureLogin.msi” /qn PATHTOISS = <absolute path to responsefile.ini>
msiexec.exe /i "c:\Novell SecureLogin.msi" /qn<all property with values>
Providing Property Through the Command Line If you do not want to use the responsefile.ini and want to provide a new values to the install options, we recommend you to use the command line options to provide the property values. For example, msiexec.exe /i "c:\Novell SecureLogin.msi" /qn X_INSTALLTYPE = “STANDALONE” X_RUNATSTART UP = “Yes” X_CACHEDIR = “C:\SecureLogin\cache...” X_INSTALLADMIN = “Yes”
Table 8-2 Properties and Values
This release of SecureLogin has introduced:
A command line option in the installer to disable Java module installation when running Novell SecureLogin.
Another set of command line option that allows users to unregister and re-register Javasso, post installation during runtime.
The two command line options are
slproto /javereg: /javareg registers Javasso hook.
/javareg retrieves a list of all JRE currently installed in the system and also the Jinitiator.
For each JRE it edits or creates two properties files, register the Javasso hook, copies jacess.jar and javasso.jar files to the JRE.
slproto /javaunreg: /javaunreg unregisters Javasso hook. For this, the sljava.dll must be available in SecureLogin installation directory.
/javaunreg does not remove jaccess.jar because it is a common module for accessibility. It removes the JavaSSO key in the registry.
NOTE:The two command are mutually exclusive of each other. If you specify both the command line options, only one is executed. In this case, /javareg is executed.