Install SQL Server update silent: installing SQL Server cumulative updates is always a cumbersome, and quite daunting task. Unpacking and running the CU installer is a slow process, you have to click through a lot of screens, and it's hard to get it to install silently. But here is how!
Learn how to install SQL Server cumulative updates (CU) silently using PowerShell opposed to the cumbersome task of running the GUI installer.
Imagine you're installing Cumulative Update Package 13 for SQL Server 2019, or KB5005679. What you need to know is the file you downloaded (SQLServer2019-KB5005679-x64.exe
) is a wrapper around the update's setup.exe
program. So any setup parameter passed on the command line, isn't passed on to setup.exe! Therefore, the first step is to unpack the file into a temporary location from where you run the setup.
The following command unpacks SQLServer2019-KB5005679-x64.exe into the location Z:\sqlserver_cu\KB5005679
:
.\SQLServer2019-KB5005679-x64.exe /X:Z:\sqlserver_cu\KB5005679
In the folder KB5005679 you'll find the SQL Server cumulative update setup.exe file you so desperately need to install this update silently. Now only for the command line arguments...
All relevant command line arguments are in Microsofts online doc Installing Updates from the Command Prompt. For me, the minimal set I go with are:
- /action=patch
- /instancename=MSSQLSERVER
- /quiet
- /IAcceptSQLServerLicenseTerms
The /quiet switch runs the update in unattended mode, making the command to install SQL Server cumulative updates silent and unattended:
# silent and unattended install of a service pack to a specific SQL Server instance
Z:\sqlserver_cu\KB5005679\setup.exe /action=patch /instancename=MSSQLSERVER /quiet /IAcceptSQLServerLicenseTerms
In your deployment scenario, you can add some logic and checks to apply the update only if its ProductVersion property is higher than currently installed. You'll need Invoke-SqlCmd
for this too:
$sqlserver_version = New-Object System.Version $(Invoke-SqlCmd -Query "SELECT SERVERPROPERTY('ProductVersion') AS BuildNumber").BuildNumber
if($sqlserver_version -ne (New-Object System.Version $(Get-ItemProperty "Z:\sqlserver_cu\KB5005679\setup.exe\setup.exe").VersionInfo.ProductVersion)) {
Z:\sqlserver_cu\KB5005679\setup.exe /action=patch /instancename=MSSQLSERVER /quiet /IAcceptSQLServerLicenseTerms
}
Microsoft SQL Server Versions List
An unofficial build chart lists all of the known Service Packs (SP), Cumulative Updates (CU), patches, hotfixes and other builds of MS SQL Server 2022, 2019, 2017, 2016, 2014, 2012, 2008 R2, 2008, 2005, 2000, 7.0, 6.5 and 6.0 that have been released can be found on https://sqlserverbuilds.blogspot.com/. Microsoft maintains "Latest updates and version history for SQL Server" on https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/troubleshoot/sql/releases/download-and-install-latest-updates and you can download the most recent CU from https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=100809.
Thank you very much! <3 ❤️
Hi, my name is Jan. I am not a hacker, coder, developer or guru. I am merely an application manager / systems administrator, doing my daily thing at Embrace – The Human Cloud. In the past I worked at CLDIN (CLouDINfra) and Vevida. With over 20 years of experience, my specialties include Windows Server, IIS, Linux (CentOS, Debian), security, PHP, websites & optimization. I blog at https://www.saotn.org.
Pingback: Install Windows Updates using PowerShell
Nice. We were just looking to do something like this in our environment. I imagine you could change the local file path to a UNC share instead, right?
Hi Tom, yes you can use a UNC path or file share in your environment.