It's really strange. When I use start run.bat here on my own PC, I can close the terminal afterwards because a new command line window is opened. But on the remote machine (SSH), when I even close the terminal without terminating the SSH session and even having other terminal windows open, everything I started on that terminal is killed.
@Luttinger whoa whoa, back up... what machine are you trying to install what on? give me operating system names. Specific ones. Like "Windows 7" or "Ubuntu Linux 16.04" or something. For both the computer you're running now and the computer you're SSH'ed in to.
@Luttinger that's not strange at all; on Linux at least, when you close an SSH connection, SIGHUP is passed to all the child processes, which causes most processes to terminate, unless they catch and ignore SIGHUP
@allquixotic but there are ways to detach the process from the terminal on Linux.
but on Windows, ....
So, back to the original question, is it possible to install something just from the command line on Win7? When I use .\setup.exe it just opens the graphical installer
@Luttinger certain specific installer products MIGHT have non-interactive ways of installing them, but in the general case, there is absolutely no way to force a Windows executable to operate in a console-only or non-interactive way; if the program wants to start a GUI and wait for you to respond to that GUI, and you can't, then you are absolutely, completely, 100% stuck with zero recourse
you can attempt to use SendKeys or virtual mouse clicks to simulate a user interacting with the GUI, if you can run arbitrary code on the account
but I think I remember you asking a similar question a long time ago, and the real answer here is that you should never have a Windows system that you don't have graphical remote desktop access to; if you do have one configured like that, perform the required socio-political or administrative functions necessary to gain remote desktop access
if you have a Windows system that isn't just a Windows Server Core server running headless processes like IIS or Hyper-V, and you don't have remote desktop access, you're doing it wrong
Looks like a pass for 3.95 GHz at 1.3625V after 4.5 hours of Prime95 blend testing. I'll do some more testing later on, but I'd like to get back to gaming. I'm going to set the voltage a tiny bit higher to ensure stability until I finish stress testing.
I've bought stuff from dx.com that took six months to arrive. Most of those in the country.
We don't have anything similar to UPS (well, AFAIK. I might be wrong), and the official mail is government-owned. And it's slow and confused. Imported items is much more complex, customs have some sort of black-hole where they run a rand() if it will disappear or not.
Regarding stolen items, the mail simply won't deliver certain items in certain neighborhoods, or so I heard.
I heard a game console importer saying he stopped declaring "xbox" on the package tags or it would always become "missing".
He changed to "entertainment device" or similar and it stopped disappearing.
There's a youtube video from a few years ago, can't find it.
That said, it's a huge, huge exaggeration saying that "you can't export to Brazil".
Granted, those things happen, but it's like saying you can't ever go out or you'll be robbed at gunpoint, period.
So... one last check with the processor at 3.95 GHz, 1.36875V with LLC4. IntelBurnTest (by far the hottest stress test I have) is producing peak processor power of about 167W, well within the capabilities of the Corsair H100i v2 liquid cooler (temperatures peaking at 70 °C).