How to save a chrome extension as .exe file? - google-chrome

I have implemented a chrome extension project but I need to install it by running a .exe file.
I tried many ways like extracting files to C:\Users\user\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Extensions automatically using iExpress(i gave the id of extension to the folder),
i tried creating ExtensionInstallForceList under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\WOW6432Node\Google\Chrome\ and creating new string value "1" giving it value "id;https://clients2.google.com/service/update2/crx"
and lots of other ways but still I couldn't make it. I would appreciate a little help

The only programmatic way to install an extension on Windows (assuming you're not a Windows Domain sysadmin, which seems to be a safe assumption) is as follows:
Upload your extension to Chrome Web Store and publish.
This is mandatory, but the extension can be specified to be unlisted.
Create an installer that adds a registry entry as described here.
Upon next browser restart, Chrome will:
Download the extension from Web Store (and nowhere else)
Ask a confirmation from the user to allow that extension.
If the user agrees, you're done. If the user does not agree, the extension is blacklisted and you can't try again on this install unless the user installs directly from Web Store.
ExtensionInstallForceList is only for enterprise deployments via group policy. Chrome will ignore local registry values and query the domain policy directly.

Related

How to create installer for a Google Chrome Extension

I have developed a Google Chrome Extension that I need to automate installation for my users.
I have published it in Google Web Store but I don't want a user to search for it in order to install, because this extension is part of other development, including a C# application.
I am creating an installer that installs the C# application but I need to add the automatic installation for my extension. How can I do it?
Yes, you can. The procedure is described in the docs.
Summary:
The installer adds a registry entry that contains the extension ID.
Upon next Chrome restart (you may want to ask the user to do it), the extension will be downloaded and then the user will be prompted whether he/she wants to install it.
If yes, you live happily ever after, with the extension bearing "Installed by a third-party" mark in the extension list.
If no, the extension will be disabled, and you cannot enable it yourself (you have to ask the user to do that by going to chrome://extensions/ or the CWS listing)
If the user ever uninstalls the extension, it will be blacklisted from ever attempting that install procedure on this Chrome profile; if the user changes his mind, he'll have to install it directly from the Store.
Leave clear instructions for your users: that they must restart the browser and expect/accept the prompt.
The best way to do this is the way that Xan wrote in his answer.
If you need to force install Chrome extensions in your company without user interaction. You can do this with ExtensionInstallForcelist policy or with master_preferences file. Both ways described here.

install chrome extension outside the chrome extension market

As I know you can install an extension outside the market without expected limitations, for example, autoupdate. You need to be in develop mode.
You can read this thread to understand the problem:
Install chrome extension as external extensions
The think is, anyone know another way to install an extension in your chrome (internal use in a company o class). I like to think that I can sign the extension with a shared certificate or something like that. And send the extension to the users.
Google no longer allows it.
Protecting Chrome users from malicious extensions
Continuing to protect Chrome users from malicious extensions
There are 4 types of extension install still available:
Direct installation from Webstore or inline install from a website, but hosted on Web Store.
Indirect installation through registry manipulation (e.g. companion extension for a native app), but it still must be hosted in the Webstore.
Local development installs; will nag on every Chrome restart and no autoupdate mechanism.
For Enterprise only, policy-based installs. Note that on Windows that requires computers joined to a domain. In this case there are no restrictions on where the extension is hosted.

What is the easiest way to find Chrome extension's id in a setup application?

I need to setup a native application which talks to a Chrome extension.
For that I am creating a setup, but I need the extension's id to be added in the native application's manifest file. That id says which extensions are allowed to talk with that native application.
How to get the extension id, assuming the user manually installs the extension by dragging and dropping.
Btw, To my knowledge installing an external chrome extension (no chrome web store) silently is close to impossible. I highly appreciate if someone has any solution for that, too.
The recommended flow would be to keep the extension in the Web Store (possibly unlisted if it does not work without the module), silently queue it for installation using the registry or other platform-specific method, and then warn the user to accept the install in the dialog on next browser restart. This is as close to "silent" as it gets.
If you absolutely have to distribute the extension externally (and drag&drop install will probably not work), you can pin the ID by setting the "key" field in the manifest. See this question for ways of doing so.

Is it possible to create a custom Chrome installer with specific extentions that will be installed automatically?

I'm looking to be able to provide a Chrome installer that as they go through the wizard it installs Google Chrome as per normal, however it will also automatically install specific extentions from the App Store that will be there when they first open the browser.
Is there a tool available that would allow me to do this easily? I've done a number of searches on the topic but I have been successful.
You can configure a list of extensions to be installed on first run of every new profile by using https://developer.chrome.com/extensions/external_extensions
So you'd just need to write a program that first lays this configuration down, and then runs the regular chrome installer.

Installing External Extension

I want to create a Chrome extension and install it as part of a larger desktop software install. This is on Windows XP/Vista/7 etc. I've used the method described here and it works.
However, the extension is installed in a disabled state. The user has to explicitly enable it from the Chrome menu (the user has 3 chances to do that before the menu badge disappears) or from the extensions page. Enabling the extension brings up a prompt in which Chrome informs the user of the permissions the extension is requesting and asks the user to reject or accept the extension.
I understand that Google wants to ensure that users have a chance to reject external extensions. I also understand that Google prefers installs via its Web Store (for various logistical reasons, that is not a preferred option for this app). In fact, our application specifically asks the user for permission before installing the extension.
My issue is that the member has to affirmatively ask for the extension to be enabled before the permissions dialog comes up. Is there any programmatic/command line way to get Chrome to bring the permissions dialog up? The user still has the choice of rejecting the extension, but I would like to present the user with this choice, rather than relying on him/her to try and enable the extension later.
[ I realize that editing the Chrome Preferences file in the installation script will install the extension without any user intervention, but I don't want to do that.]
It's possible to trigger an install from a webpage. Have your installer open chrome with a small webpage that brings up this dialog to the user.