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I have an MSI-packaged application that is being deployed via Group Policy Objects (GPO) from a Windows 2003 Domain Server to all the XP client machines in the network.

This application reads two environment variables for its configuration (which server IPs to talk to) and it seems like we'd also want to push this configuration via a GPO style setting or Login script to all the desktops.

What is the best approach for setting environment variables across a network of desktops?

A: 

My research says there are four ways to do this. I started at the Microsoft Logon Script documentation pages and fanned out from there.

Login Script Batch File

Windows Server 2000, 2003, 2008

Login batch file (.BAT) scripts are just a temporary instance of a CMD window, and the environment variables set in there go away as soon as the login window closes.

set MYVAR=MyValue

Won't work for the aforementioned reason.

So, alternatively, I can try to set the variable via directly writing to the registry like so for a System Environment Variable:

reg add "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\Environment" /v MYVAR /t REG_EXPAND_SZ /d MyValue

or to the User Environment Variables like so:

reg add HKCU\Environment /v MYVAR /t REG_EXPAND_SZ /d MyValue

The drawback here is that the variables, though written to registry, are not read until the next login for all I can see. A new CMD window shows no trace of them until the user re-logs-in.


Login Script WSH VBS File

Windows Server 2000, 2003, 2008

With a Visual Basic Script (VBS) login script, you can use a more programmatic method to access the environment variables. This is looking like my most viable approach. This example would append to the end of PATH.

Set WSHShell = WScript.CreateObject("WScript.Shell")
Set WshEnv = WshShell.Environment("SYSTEM")
WshEnv("Path") = WshEnv("Path") & ";M:\DB\whatever\"

This example would just set the variable.

Set WSHShell = WScript.CreateObject("WScript.Shell")
Set WshEnv = WshShell.Environment("SYSTEM")
WshEnv("MYVAR") = "MyNewValue"

This approach yields variables that are immediately available via a CMD window. No reboot is required like the batch file registry writes.


ADM File

Windows Server 2000, 2003, 2008

ADM files are a way to expose custom functionality of settings to the Group Policy Editor. It seems tricky to get them installed and visible on the domain controller so I'm jumping over this option.

Microsoft Support TechNet Reference on ADM File Locations.
Another article about ADM files and using them to set Registry settings.
Tom's Hardware on ADM Files.

---- set.adm ---- 
CLASS MACHINE 
CATEGORY "Environment" 
POLICY "Self dfined variables" 
KEYNAME "SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\Environment" 
PART "Set MyVar1 =" EDITTEXT 
DEFAULT "MyValue1" 
VALUENAME MyVar1 ; EXPANDABLETEXT 
; add expandabletext if it can contain Variables itself 
END PART 
END POLICY 
END CATEGORY 
---- set.adm ----


Group Policy Preferences (GPP)

Windows Server 2008

Windows Server 2008 has a new feature called the Environment Extensions for the Group Policy Preferences. It allows you to conveniently set what otherwise required complex batch scripts. The new items exposed include registry values, environment variables, and more. A quick how-to guide is available here.

I can't use this option because my clients don't have Windows Server 2008.


Summary

Please tell me based on your experiences as Windows Administrators which of these works best and why. I'm just a desktop developer, and need an admin's insight.

Matthew McCullough
Actually, GPP Works in a windows 2003 domain as well if all the clients are at least xp sp2 with gpp client installed. You must use Vista, Windows 7 or Windows 2008 to administer it.
Bård
+1  A: 

Why can't you embed this configuration into the Property table of the MSI (post-build, using a transform) and then read from there? This would make much more sense... fire up Orca, add a couple of properties, save a transform and deploy via GPO with transform applied.

Edit: Just re-read this question... then deploy settings to the registry and have the application read from there, rather than setting environment variables. Setting global environment variables for one application doesn't make sense for an administrators point of view.

sascha
I've done just as you said to expose yet another way to set these env vars. In InstallShield, I built entries for these three vars so that they can be "addressed" via an MST (Transform). Good idea.
Matthew McCullough
The reason we can't use the registry is the app has to be cross platform. Thus, I can't/don't want to put registry reading libs into the app's 3p JARs. The environment variable makes it cross platform. Just sharing the motivations. The MST/Transform worked well for us. Thanks for the inspiration!
Matthew McCullough
A: 

Set WSHShell = WScript.CreateObject("WScript.Shell") Set WshEnv = WshShell.Environment("SYSTEM") WshEnv("MYVAR") = "MyNewValue"

This works well with 2003 server and Group Policy. Does anyone know how I can get this to only run for users of a certain AD Group?

Regards Jason

Install the Group Policy Management Console from http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2003/gpmc/default.mspx It's a free add on util for Windows Server 2003. It allows you to more easily apply a GPO to a given group of AD users.
Matthew McCullough