How to customize Click-to-Run for Office 365 products

Summary: Provides a summary of Click-to-Run for Office 365 customization and discusses how to use AppLocker and AppHelp for customization at the application level.

Click-to-Run is a streaming and virtualization technology that is designed to significantly reduce the time that is required to download and use Office client products. Streaming allows users to begin to use a Click-to-Run product before the complete product is downloaded.

Click-to-Run for Office 365 products are based on core virtualization and streaming Microsoft Application Virtualization (App-V) technologies. Click-to-Run resources run in an isolated virtual environment on the local operating system.

To customize Click-to-Run for Office 365 installation settings for an on-premises deployment of Office 365 ProPlus, administrators who have signed up for Office 365 can use the Office Deployment Tool. You download the Office Deployment Tool from the Microsoft Download Center site. The download includes a sample Configuration.xml file. To customize a Click-to-Run for Office 365 installation, you run the Office Deployment Tool and provide a custom Configuration.xml configuration file. The Office Deployment Tool performs the tasks that are specified by using the optional properties in the configuration file.

You can specify the following Click-to-Run installation options in the Configuration.xml file:

  • Product and languages to install or remove
  • Source path
  • Level of user interface to display
  • Logging options
  • Product updates behavior

For more information, see Customization overview for Click-to-Run.

Managing user and computer settings for Click-to-Run for Office 365

To manage the user and computer settings that you want to enforce in Click-to-Run for Office 365, you must use Group Policy. It is the recommended tool for enforcing user and computer settings in both Windows Installer-based Office 2013 (MSI) and Click-to-Run for Office 365.

note Note:

If you want to set initial default settings for Office 2013 volume licensed MSI installations, you can use the Office Customization Tool (OCT) to customize features and configure user settings. Users can change most of the settings after the installation.

In an Active Directory environment, administrators apply policy settings to groups of users and computers in a site, domain, or organizational unit to which a Group Policy object is linked. True policy settings are written to the approved registry key locations for policy, and these settings have access control list (ACL) restrictions that prevent non-administrator users from changing them. Administrators use Group Policy to create highly restricted or lightly managed desktop configurations, which depends on their specific business and security requirements. Group Policy settings have precedence over Office Customization Settings user settings. The OCT is used to customize Windows Installer-based installations.

For information about Group Policy and Administrative Templates for Office 2013, see the following resources:   

You can download the Administrative Templates here: Office 2013 Preview Administrative Template files (ADMX/ADML) and Office Customization Tool. The download includes an Excel spreadsheet (office2013grouppolicyandoctsettings.xslx) that describes all the Group Policy and OCT settings.

About application level customization for Click-to-Run installations

Click-to-Run is not customizable at the application level. However, there are some options:

  • Administrators can use AppLocker to prevent an application from running. For more information about AppLocker, see: Windows 7 AppLocker Executive Overview and AppLocker (Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2), and AppLocker Overview (Windows 8, Windows Server 2012).
  • If possible, purchase an Office 2013 product version that contains only the applications that you want to deploy. For more information about Office 2013 versions, see Office 365 Preview.
  • Delete the shortcuts to the applications that you don’t want to install on the client computers.
  • Purchase the Windows Installer-based (MSI) version of Office 2013. For more information, please visit the Volume Licensing Service Center.

Using AppLocker to block Click-to-Run applications

You can use AppLocker to control which applications and files users can run. These include executable files, scripts, Windows® Installer files, DLLs, Packaged apps and Packaged app installers. For example, you can use AppLocker to prevent users from running Access 2013 Click-to-Run.

In an Active Directory environment, if you are using and Group Policy to manage user settings, AppLocker is ideal for managing your Windows-based computers. AppLocker relies on Group Policy for authoring and deployment. To see a list of supported Windows operating system and system requirements, see "Versions, interoperability, and differences in functionality" in AppLocker Technical Overview. AppLocker is included with enterprise-level editions of Windows.

For detailed information about using AppLocker, see the following resources:

Resource

Applies to:

AppLocker Step-by-Step Guide

Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2012

AppLocker Policies Design Guide

Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2012

AppLocker Policies Deployment Guide

Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2012

Administering AppLocker

Windows 8, Windows Server 2012

Manage Packaged Apps with AppLocker

Windows 8, Windows Server 2012

Use the AppLocker Windows PowerShell Cmdlets

Windows 8, Windows Server 2012

AppLocker

Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2

Using the AppLocker Windows PowerShell Cmdlets

Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2

AppLocker Operations Guide

Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2

Using the AppLocker Windows PowerShell Cmdlets

 

Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2

Video: AppLocker Demo

Windows 7

Using AppHelp blocking messages in Compatibility Administrator

For organizations without Windows Enterprise versions, you can use AppHelp hard block messages to prevent individual Office 365 ProPlus applications from running. This is the internal mechanism that Windows uses to block known incompatible or otherwise problematic applications from launching. You can use the Compatibility Administrator tool as part of the Application Compatibility Toolkit to enable hard blocks.

The Compatibility Administrator tool helps you resolve potential application-compatibility issues before you deploying a new version of Windows to your organization. Compatibility Administrator provides the following:

  • Compatibility fixes, compatibility modes, and AppHelp messages that you can use to resolve specific compatibility issues. An AppHelp text message is a blocking or non-blocking message that appears when a user starts an application that you know has major functionality issues on the Windows® operating system.
  • Tools for creating customized compatibility fixes, compatibility modes, AppHelp messages, and compatibility databases.
  • A query tool that you can use to search for installed compatibility fixes on your local computers.

A blocking AppHelp message prevents the application from starting and displays a message to the user. You can define a specific URL where the user can download an updated driver or other fix to resolve the issue. When you use a blocking AppHelp message, you must also define the file-matching information to identify the version of the application and enable the corrected version to continue.

To learn about using the Compatibility Administrator tool and creating AppHelp messages, see the following resources:

 For more information about Office 365 ProPlus, see Office 365 ProPlus.