DriveThruRPG

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## Summary
How do I create packages? See https://chocolatey.org/docs/create-packages
If you are submitting packages to the community feed (https://chocolatey.org)
always try to ensure you have read, understood and adhere to the create
packages wiki link above.
## Automatic Packaging Updates?
Consider making this package an automatic package, for the best
maintainability over time. Read up at https://chocolatey.org/docs/automatic-packages
## Shim Generation
Any executables you include in the package or download (but don't call
install against using the built-in functions) will be automatically shimmed.
This means those executables will automatically be included on the path.
Shim generation runs whether the package is self-contained or uses automation
scripts.
By default, these are considered console applications.
If the application is a GUI, you should create an empty file next to the exe
named 'name.exe.gui' e.g. 'bob.exe' would need a file named 'bob.exe.gui'.
See https://chocolatey.org/docs/create-packages#how-do-i-set-up-shims-for-applications-that-have-a-gui
If you want to ignore the executable, create an empty file next to the exe
named 'name.exe.ignore' e.g. 'bob.exe' would need a file named
'bob.exe.ignore'.
See https://chocolatey.org/docs/create-packages#how-do-i-exclude-executables-from-getting-shims
## Self-Contained?
If you have a self-contained package, you can remove the automation scripts
entirely and just include the executables, they will automatically get shimmed,
which puts them on the path. Ensure you have the legal right to distribute
the application though. See https://chocolatey.org/docs/legal.
You should read up on the Shim Generation section to familiarize yourself
on what to do with GUI applications and/or ignoring shims.
## Automation Scripts
You have a powerful use of Chocolatey, as you are using PowerShell. So you
can do just about anything you need. Choco has some very handy built-in
functions that you can use, these are sometimes called the helpers.
### Built-In Functions
https://chocolatey.org/docs/helpers-reference
A note about a couple:
* Get-BinRoot - this is a horribly named function that doesn't do what new folks think it does. It gets you the 'tools' root, which by default is set to 'c:\tools', not the chocolateyInstall bin folder - see https://chocolatey.org/docs/helpers-get-tools-location
* Install-BinFile - used for non-exe files - executables are automatically shimmed... - see https://chocolatey.org/docs/helpers-install-bin-file
* Uninstall-BinFile - used for non-exe files - executables are automatically shimmed - see https://chocolatey.org/docs/helpers-uninstall-bin-file
### Getting package specific information
Use the package parameters pattern - see https://chocolatey.org/docs/how-to-parse-package-parameters-argument
### Need to mount an ISO?
https://chocolatey.org/docs/how-to-mount-an-iso-in-chocolatey-package
### Environment Variables
Chocolatey makes a number of environment variables available (You can access any of these with $env:TheVariableNameBelow):
* TEMP/TMP - Overridden to the CacheLocation, but may be the same as the original TEMP folder
* ChocolateyInstall - Top level folder where Chocolatey is installed
* ChocolateyPackageName - The name of the package, equivalent to the `<id />` field in the nuspec (0.9.9+)
* ChocolateyPackageTitle - The title of the package, equivalent to the `<title />` field in the nuspec (0.10.1+)
* ChocolateyPackageVersion - The version of the package, equivalent to the `<version />` field in the nuspec (0.9.9+)
* ChocolateyPackageFolder - The top level location of the package folder - the folder where Chocolatey has downloaded and extracted the NuGet package, typically `C:\ProgramData\chocolatey\lib\packageName`.
#### Advanced Environment Variables
The following are more advanced settings:
* ChocolateyPackageParameters - Parameters to use with packaging, not the same as install arguments (which are passed directly to the native installer). Based on `--package-parameters`. (0.9.8.22+)
* CHOCOLATEY_VERSION - The version of Choco you normally see. Use if you are 'lighting' things up based on choco version. (0.9.9+) - Otherwise take a dependency on the specific version you need.
* ChocolateyForceX86 = If available and set to 'true', then user has requested 32bit version. (0.9.9+) - Automatically handled in built in Choco functions.
* OS_PLATFORM - Like Windows, OSX, Linux. (0.9.9+)
* OS_VERSION - The version of OS, like 6.1 something something for Windows. (0.9.9+)
* OS_NAME - The reported name of the OS. (0.9.9+)
* USER_NAME = The user name (0.10.6+)
* USER_DOMAIN = The user domain name (could also be local computer name) (0.10.6+)
* IS_PROCESSELEVATED = Is the process elevated? (0.9.9+)
* IS_SYSTEM = Is the user the system account? (0.10.6+)
* IS_REMOTEDESKTOP = Is the user in a terminal services session? (0.10.6+)
* ChocolateyToolsLocation - formerly 'ChocolateyBinRoot' ('ChocolateyBinRoot' will be removed with Chocolatey v2.0.0), this is where tools being installed outside of Chocolatey packaging will go. (0.9.10+)
#### Set By Options and Configuration
Some environment variables are set based on options that are passed, configuration and/or features that are turned on:
* ChocolateyEnvironmentDebug - Was `--debug` passed? If using the built-in PowerShell host, this is always true (but only logs debug messages to console if `--debug` was passed) (0.9.10+)
* ChocolateyEnvironmentVerbose - Was `--verbose` passed? If using the built-in PowerShell host, this is always true (but only logs verbose messages to console if `--verbose` was passed). (0.9.10+)
* ChocolateyForce - Was `--force` passed? (0.9.10+)
* ChocolateyForceX86 - Was `-x86` passed? (CHECK)
* ChocolateyRequestTimeout - How long before a web request will time out. Set by config `webRequestTimeoutSeconds` (CHECK)
* ChocolateyResponseTimeout - How long to wait for a download to complete? Set by config `commandExecutionTimeoutSeconds` (CHECK)
* ChocolateyPowerShellHost - Are we using the built-in PowerShell host? Set by `--use-system-powershell` or the feature `powershellHost` (0.9.10+)
#### Business Edition Variables
* ChocolateyInstallArgumentsSensitive - Encrypted arguments passed from command line `--install-arguments-sensitive` that are not logged anywhere. (0.10.1+ and licensed editions 1.6.0+)
* ChocolateyPackageParametersSensitive - Package parameters passed from command line `--package-parameters-senstivite` that are not logged anywhere. (0.10.1+ and licensed editions 1.6.0+)
* ChocolateyLicensedVersion - What version is the licensed edition on?
* ChocolateyLicenseType - What edition / type of the licensed edition is installed?
* USER_CONTEXT - The original user context - different when self-service is used (Licensed v1.10.0+)
#### Experimental Environment Variables
The following are experimental or use not recommended:
* OS_IS64BIT = This may not return correctly - it may depend on the process the app is running under (0.9.9+)
* CHOCOLATEY_VERSION_PRODUCT = the version of Choco that may match CHOCOLATEY_VERSION but may be different (0.9.9+) - based on git describe
* IS_ADMIN = Is the user an administrator? But doesn't tell you if the process is elevated. (0.9.9+)
* IS_REMOTE = Is the user in a remote session? (0.10.6+)
#### Not Useful Or Anti-Pattern If Used
* ChocolateyInstallOverride = Not for use in package automation scripts. Based on `--override-arguments` being passed. (0.9.9+)
* ChocolateyInstallArguments = The installer arguments meant for the native installer. You should use chocolateyPackageParameters instead. Based on `--install-arguments` being passed. (0.9.9+)
* ChocolateyIgnoreChecksums - Was `--ignore-checksums` passed or the feature `checksumFiles` turned off? (0.9.9.9+)
* ChocolateyAllowEmptyChecksums - Was `--allow-empty-checksums` passed or the feature `allowEmptyChecksums` turned on? (0.10.0+)
* ChocolateyAllowEmptyChecksumsSecure - Was `--allow-empty-checksums-secure` passed or the feature `allowEmptyChecksumsSecure` turned on? (0.10.0+)
* ChocolateyCheckLastExitCode - Should Chocolatey check LASTEXITCODE? Is the feature `scriptsCheckLastExitCode` turned on? (0.10.3+)
* ChocolateyChecksum32 - Was `--download-checksum` passed? (0.10.0+)
* ChocolateyChecksumType32 - Was `--download-checksum-type` passed? (0.10.0+)
* ChocolateyChecksum64 - Was `--download-checksum-x64` passed? (0.10.0)+
* ChocolateyChecksumType64 - Was `--download-checksum-type-x64` passed? (0.10.0)+
* ChocolateyPackageExitCode - The exit code of the script that just ran - usually set by `Set-PowerShellExitCode` (CHECK)
* ChocolateyLastPathUpdate - Set by Chocolatey as part of install, but not used for anything in particular in packaging.
* ChocolateyProxyLocation - The explicit proxy location as set in the configuration `proxy` (0.9.9.9+)
* ChocolateyDownloadCache - Use available download cache? Set by `--skip-download-cache`, `--use-download-cache`, or feature `downloadCache` (0.9.10+ and licensed editions 1.1.0+)
* ChocolateyProxyBypassList - Explicitly set locations to ignore in configuration `proxyBypassList` (0.10.4+)
* ChocolateyProxyBypassOnLocal - Should the proxy bypass on local connections? Set based on configuration `proxyBypassOnLocal` (0.10.4+)
* http_proxy - Set by original `http_proxy` passthrough, or same as `ChocolateyProxyLocation` if explicitly set. (0.10.4+)
* https_proxy - Set by original `https_proxy` passthrough, or same as `ChocolateyProxyLocation` if explicitly set. (0.10.4+)
* no_proxy- Set by original `no_proxy` passthrough, or same as `ChocolateyProxyBypassList` if explicitly set. (0.10.4+)

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TODO
1. Determine Package Use:
Organization? Internal Use? - You are not subject to distribution
rights when you keep everything internal. Put the binaries directly
into the tools directory (as long as total nupkg size is under 1GB).
When bigger, look to use from a share or download binaries from an
internal location. Embedded binaries makes for the most reliable use
of Chocolatey. Use `$fileLocation` (`$file`/`$file64`) and
`Install-ChocolateyInstallPackage`/`Get-ChocolateyUnzip` in
tools\chocolateyInstall.ps1.
You can also choose to download from internal urls, see the next
section, but ignore whether you have distribution rights or not, it
doesn't apply. Under no circumstances should download from the
internet, it is completely unreliable. See
https://chocolatey.org/docs/community-packages-disclaimer#organizations
to understand the limitations of a publicly available repository.
Community Repository?
Have Distribution Rights?
If you are the software vendor OR the software EXPLICITLY allows
redistribution and the total nupkg size will be under 200MB, you
have the option to embed the binaries directly into the package to
provide the most reliable install experience. Put the binaries
directly into the tools folder, use `$fileLocation` (`$file`/
`$file64`) and `Install-ChocolateyInstallPackage`/
`Get-ChocolateyUnzip` in tools\chocolateyInstall.ps1. Additionally,
fill out the LICENSE and VERIFICATION file (see 3 below and those
files for specifics).
NOTE: You can choose to download binaries at runtime, but be sure
the download location will remain stable. See the next section.
Do Not Have Distribution Rights?
- Note: Packages built this way cannot be 100% reliable, but it's a
constraint of publicly available packages and there is little
that can be done to change that. See
https://chocolatey.org/docs/community-packages-disclaimer#organizations
to better understand the limitations of a publicly available
repository.
Download Location is Publicly Available?
You will need to download the runtime files from their official
location at runtime. Use `$url`/`$url64` and
`Install-ChocolateyPackage`/`Install-ChocolateyZipPackage` in
tools\chocolateyInstall.ps1.
Download Location is Not Publicly Available?
Stop here, you can't push this to the community repository. You
can ask the vendor for permission to embed, then include a PDF of
that signed permission directly in the package. Otherwise you
will need to seek alternate locations to non-publicly host the
package.
Download Location Is Same For All Versions?
You still need to point to those urls, but you may wish to set up
something like Automatic Updater (AU) so that when a new version
of the software becomes available, the new package version
automatically gets pushed up to the community repository. See
https://chocolatey.org/docs/automatic-packages#automatic-updater-au
2. Determine Package Type:
- Installer Package - contains an installer (everything in template is
geared towards this type of package)
- Zip Package - downloads or embeds and unpacks archives, may unpack
and run an installer using `Install-ChocolateyInstallPackage` as a
secondary step.
- Portable Package - Contains runtime binaries (or unpacks them as a
zip package) - cannot require administrative permissions to install
or use
- Config Package - sets config like files, registry keys, etc
- Extension Package - Packages that add PowerShell functions to
Chocolatey - https://chocolatey.org/docs/how-to-create-extensions
- Template Package - Packages that add templates like this for `choco
new -t=name` - https://chocolatey.org/docs/how-to-create-custom-package-templates
- Other - there are other types of packages as well, these are the main
package types seen in the wild
3. Fill out the package contents:
- tools\chocolateyBeforeModify.ps1 - remove if you have no processes
or services to shut down before upgrade/uninstall
- tools\LICENSE.txt / tools\VERIFICATION.txt - Remove if you are not
embedding binaries. Keep and fill out if you are embedding binaries
in the package AND pushing to the community repository, even if you
are the author of software. The file becomes easier to fill out
(does not require changes each version) if you are the software
vendor. If you are building packages for internal use (organization,
etc), you don't need these files as you are not subject to
distribution rights internally.
- tools\chocolateyUninstall.ps1 - remove if autouninstaller can
automatically uninstall and you have nothing additional to do during
uninstall
- Readme.txt - delete this file once you have read over and used
anything you've needed from here
- nuspec - fill this out, then clean out all the comments (you may wish
to leave the headers for the package vs software metadata)
- tools\chocolateyInstall.ps1 - instructions in next section.
4. ChocolateyInstall.ps1:
- For embedded binaries - use `$fileLocation` (`$file`/`$file64`) and
`Install-ChocolateyInstallPackage`/ `Get-ChocolateyUnzip`.
- Downloading binaries at runtime - use `$url`/`$url64` and
`Install-ChocolateyPackage` / `Install-ChocolateyZipPackage`.
- Other needs (creating files, setting registry keys), use regular
PowerShell to do so or see if there is a function already defined:
https://chocolatey.org/docs/helpers-reference
- There may also be functions available in extension packages, see
https://chocolatey.org/packages?q=id%3A.extension for examples and
availability.
- Clean out the comments and sections you are not using.
5. Test the package to ensure install/uninstall work appropriately.
There is a test environment you can use for this -
https://github.com/chocolatey/chocolatey-test-environment
6. Learn more about Chocolatey packaging - go through the workshop at
https://github.com/ferventcoder/chocolatey-workshop
You will learn about
- General packaging
- Customizing package behavior at runtime (package parameters)
- Extension packages
- Custom packaging templates
- Setting up an internal Chocolatey.Server repository
- Adding and using internal repositories
- Reporting
- Advanced packaging techniques when installers are not friendly to
automation
7. Delete this file.

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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!-- Read this before creating packages: https://chocolatey.org/docs/create-packages -->
<!-- It is especially important to read the above link to understand additional requirements when publishing packages to the community feed aka dot org (https://chocolatey.org/packages). -->
<!-- Test your packages in a test environment: https://github.com/chocolatey/chocolatey-test-environment -->
<!--
This is a nuspec. It mostly adheres to https://docs.nuget.org/create/Nuspec-Reference. Chocolatey uses a special version of NuGet.Core that allows us to do more than was initially possible. As such there are certain things to be aware of:
* the package xmlns schema url may cause issues with nuget.exe
* Any of the following elements can ONLY be used by choco tools - projectSourceUrl, docsUrl, mailingListUrl, bugTrackerUrl, packageSourceUrl, provides, conflicts, replaces
* nuget.exe can still install packages with those elements but they are ignored. Any authoring tools or commands will error on those elements
-->
<!-- You can embed software files directly into packages, as long as you are not bound by distribution rights. -->
<!-- * If you are an organization making private packages, you probably have no issues here -->
<!-- * If you are releasing to the community feed, you need to consider distribution rights. -->
<!-- Do not remove this test for UTF-8: if “Ω” doesnt appear as greek uppercase omega letter enclosed in quotation marks, you should use an editor that supports UTF-8, not this one. -->
<package xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/packaging/2015/06/nuspec.xsd">
<metadata>
<!-- == PACKAGE SPECIFIC SECTION == -->
<!-- This section is about this package, although id and version have ties back to the software -->
<!-- id is lowercase and if you want a good separator for words, use '-', not '.'. Dots are only acceptable as suffixes for certain types of packages, e.g. .install, .portable, .extension, .template -->
<!-- If the software is cross-platform, attempt to use the same id as the debian/rpm package(s) if possible. -->
<id>drivethrurpg</id>
<!-- version should MATCH as closely as possible with the underlying software -->
<!-- Is the version a prerelease of a version? https://docs.nuget.org/create/versioning#creating-prerelease-packages -->
<!-- Note that unstable versions like 0.0.1 can be considered a released version, but it's possible that one can release a 0.0.1-beta before you release a 0.0.1 version. If the version number is final, that is considered a released version and not a prerelease. -->
<version>2.0.2.9</version>
<packageSourceUrl>https://github.com/1kamma/ChocoPackages/tree/master/DriveThruRPG</packageSourceUrl>
<!-- owners is a poor name for maintainers of the package. It sticks around by this name for compatibility reasons. It basically means you. -->
<owners>DriveThruRPG</owners>
<!-- ============================== -->
<!-- == SOFTWARE SPECIFIC SECTION == -->
<!-- This section is about the software itself -->
<title>drivethrurpg (Install)</title>
<authors>thempb</authors>
<!-- projectUrl is required for the community feed -->
<projectUrl>https://www.drivethrurpg.com/</projectUrl>
<iconUrl>https://www.drivethrurpg.com/images/site_resources/DTRPG-logo-Cthulhu_650px.png</iconUrl>
<!-- <copyright>Year Software Vendor</copyright> -->
<!-- If there is a license Url available, it is required for the community feed -->
<licenseUrl>https://www.drivethrurpg.com/library_client.php</licenseUrl>
<requireLicenseAcceptance>false</requireLicenseAcceptance>-->
<projectSourceUrl>https://github.com/1kamma/ChocoPackages/tree/master/DriveThruRPG</projectSourceUrl>
<!--<docsUrl>At what url are the software docs located?</docsUrl>-->
<!--<mailingListUrl></mailingListUrl>-->
<!--<bugTrackerUrl></bugTrackerUrl>-->
<tags>drivethrurpg DTRPG RPG pdf</tags>
<summary>This app allows you to easily sync your Library to your compatible device.</summary>
<description>This app allows you to easily sync your Library to your compatible device.</description>
<!-- <releaseNotes>__REPLACE_OR_REMOVE__MarkDown_Okay</releaseNotes> -->
<!-- =============================== -->
<!-- Specifying dependencies and version ranges? https://docs.nuget.org/create/versioning#specifying-version-ranges-in-.nuspec-files -->
<!--<dependencies>
<dependency id="" version="__MINIMUM_VERSION__" />
<dependency id="" version="[__EXACT_VERSION__]" />
<dependency id="" version="[_MIN_VERSION_INCLUSIVE, MAX_VERSION_INCLUSIVE]" />
<dependency id="" version="[_MIN_VERSION_INCLUSIVE, MAX_VERSION_EXCLUSIVE)" />
<dependency id="" />
<dependency id="chocolatey-core.extension" version="1.1.0" />
</dependencies>-->
<!-- chocolatey-core.extension - https://chocolatey.org/packages/chocolatey-core.extension
- You want to use Get-UninstallRegistryKey on less than 0.9.10 (in chocolateyUninstall.ps1)
- You want to use Get-PackageParameters and on less than 0.11.0
- You want to take advantage of other functions in the core community maintainer's team extension package
-->
<!--<provides>NOT YET IMPLEMENTED</provides>-->
<!--<conflicts>NOT YET IMPLEMENTED</conflicts>-->
<!--<replaces>NOT YET IMPLEMENTED</replaces>-->
</metadata>
<files>
<!-- this section controls what actually gets packaged into the Chocolatey package -->
<file src="tools\**" target="tools" />
<file src="content\**" target="content" />
<!--Building from Linux? You may need this instead: <file src="tools/**" target="tools" />-->
</files>
</package>

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Note: Include this file if including binaries you have the right to distribute.
Otherwise delete. this file.
===DELETE ABOVE THIS LINE AND THIS LINE===
From: <insert applicable license url here>
LICENSE
<Insert License Here>

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Note: Include this file if including binaries you have the right to distribute.
Otherwise delete. this file. If you are the software author, you can change this
mention you are the author of the software.
===DELETE ABOVE THIS LINE AND THIS LINE===
VERIFICATION
Verification is intended to assist the Chocolatey moderators and community
in verifying that this package's contents are trustworthy.
<Include details of how to verify checksum contents>
<If software vendor, explain that here - checksum verification instructions are optional>

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# This runs in 0.9.10+ before upgrade and uninstall.
# Use this file to do things like stop services prior to upgrade or uninstall.
# NOTE: It is an anti-pattern to call chocolateyUninstall.ps1 from here. If you
# need to uninstall an MSI prior to upgrade, put the functionality in this
# file without calling the uninstall script. Make it idempotent in the
# uninstall script so that it doesn't fail when it is already uninstalled.
# NOTE: For upgrades - like the uninstall script, this script always runs from
# the currently installed version, not from the new upgraded package version.

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$ErrorActionPreference = 'Stop';
$toolsDir = "$(Split-Path -parent $MyInvocation.MyCommand.Definition)"
$url = 'http://watermark.drivethrurpg.com/DriveThruRPG-setup-win.exe'
$packageArgs = @{
packageName = $env:ChocolateyPackageName
unzipLocation = $toolsDir
fileType = 'EXE'
url = $url
softwareName = 'DriveThruRPG*'
checksum = 'EEB6DCC49272D8104108DFFD13F3163651C45F6911F9926CFC9A76F0B7E83A8A'
checksumType = 'sha256'
silentArgs = "/S"
validExitCodes= @(0, 3010, 1641)
}
Install-ChocolateyPackage @packageArgs

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cmd /c "C:\Program Files (x86)\DriveThruRPG\Uninstaller.exe" /S