I have tried that in a "run once"-package before. And unless things have changed, you can not use wpkg to remove the wpkg.xml, because it will be read into memory before execution, and re-written after. However, I could use a startup-script to do the same. I'll just have do do some testing first. :) It would be great if wpkg could have "remove package and don't run remove flag" as an option. Kevin Keane wrote: > You could add a package that unconditionally calls a batch file. Give it a high priority so it executes first. > > This batch file should do the following: > > - Check if %SystemRoot%\System32\wpkg.xml contains information about Windows updates (hint: findstr.exe may help you here) > - If not, exit > - If it does: > - delete %SystemRoot%\System32\wpkg.xml > - reboot (to prevent the WPKG from using what it may have already read from wpkg.xml > > The next time wpkg runs, it will rebuild the wpkg.xml file from scratch. > > -----Original Message----- > From: wpkg-users-bounces at lists.wpkg.org [mailto:wpkg-users-bounces at lists.wpkg.org] On Behalf Of David Petterson > Sent: Saturday, July 03, 2010 4:40 PM > To: wpkg-users at lists.wpkg.org > Subject: [wpkg-users] How to remove the package but leave the software installed > > I have been using WPKG to force installation of Windows XP updates, and are now switching to a WSUS server. > > So the question for you all: > Is there a way to force remove the package information from the clients without running any remove commands? > > Solutions I have though of and why they wont work. > > 1. > Solution: Remove the packages from the computer profiles. > > Problem: I have made "remove" entries for all updates (sometime it is not good to do things the right way). If I just remove the package from the computer profile, the updates will be removed, the users annoyed by the computer beeing slow for too long and I will be hunted down. > > 2. > Solution: Create a new revision of all packages and remove the "remove"-entries. Then after all clients have got the new revision, remove the packages from the computer profile and remove/rename the packages to force removal of the package on the client. > > Problem: We have a lot of users working on laptops, some are away for months (up to a year in some cases) and I have no idea when all computers have received the updated packages. (this was the first reason why I started to use WPKG to force install updates on the computers when they get back to campus. With WSUS I can force install critical updates by setting a deadline) > > > /David > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > wpkg-users mailing list archives >> http://lists.wpkg.org/pipermail/wpkg-users/ > _______________________________________________ > wpkg-users mailing list > wpkg-users at lists.wpkg.org > http://lists.wpkg.org/mailman/listinfo/wpkg-users > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- |