Also see this answer: How can I find the product GUID of an installed MSI setup?.Get-wmiobject Win32_Product | Format-Table Name, LocalPackage -AutoSize Then maximize the PowerShell window and run the command below:
To fire up PowerShell: hold down the Windows key, tap R, release the Windows key, type in "powershell" and press OK.This is the easiest option in my opinion.
UNINSTALL REASON CORE SECURITY FULL
UNINSTALL REASON CORE SECURITY HOW TO
Or as Christopher Galpin points out, turn on the "Comments" column in Windows Explorer and select the MSI file ( see this article for how to do this). The summary stream from the MSI will be visible at the bottom of the Windows Explorer window. All the MSI files here will have a random name (hex format) assigned, but you can get information about each MSI by showing the Windows Explorer status bar (View -> Status Bar) and then selecting an MSI.On the topic of disk space: How can I get rid of huge cached MSI files (and other disk space cleanup tricks). Avoid these huge cached files by using admin installations.Read the linked thread for more details - recommended read for anyone who finds this answer and fiddles with dangerous Windows settings. NB: This supper-hidden folder is now being treated differently in Windows 7 onwards.MSI strips out all cabs (older Windows versions) and caches each MSI installed in a super-hidden system folder at %SystemRoot%\Installer (you need to show hidden files to see it).Here is the Technet version.Ĥ - Using the cached MSI database in the super hidden cache folder Msiexec (command-line options) - overview of the command line for msiexec.exe from MSDN. More information on logging from : How do I create a log file of my installation? - great overview of different options and also specifics of InstallShield logging. Several other ways described here (registry, local cache folder, etc.): Find GUID From MSI File.There are several ways, my recommended way is using Powershell: How can I find the product GUID of an installed MSI setup?.How to find the product GUID for an installed MSI? This is particularly useful for verbose files, because they are so, well, verbose :-).
Top tip: If you create a log file for your uninstall, you can locate problems in the log by searching for "value 3". REBOOT=R = prevent unexpected reboot of computerĪgain, how to find the product guid: How can I find the product GUID of an installed MSI setup? (for uninstall if you don't have the original MSI to specify in the uninstall command). There is also: MSI logging in depth here: msiexec.exe /x = product guid of app to uninstall Uninstall by Product GUID: ( find product GUID) - section 3 below for logging.