https://store-images.s-microsoft.com/image/apps.61377.4c995daf-4172-4dea-a9e3-1feec19e78d7.2324a748-ff92-4f9d-b5aa-2028343e7cc1.ff8452de-277b-4dce-bad1-2fd48441f01c

Turbo Studio

Turbo.net

(9 classificaties)

Turbo Studio

Turbo.net

(9 classificaties)

Authoring environment for creating containerized applications and components.

Turbo Studio is a desktop application that allows you to convert any Windows application into a self-contained virtual application container. Virtual applications can be delivered as Turbo images to be used by the Turbo Client or Turbo Server as well as standalone executables.

The GUI allows users to easily edit complex configurations for applications that may require complicated settings. Whereas Turbo's command line tool builds images from containers, Turbo Studio uses static XML files (.xappl) to build images. More information about the XAPPL file format is available in the XAPPL reference.

Once created with Turbo Studio, the command-line interface builds these XAPPL files into images that you can push to the Turbo Hub. Click here for a specific example.

Turbo Studio provides three methods for creating images and virtual applications:

  1. Setup Capture: In this method, file and registry changes are recorded during the installation process of an application and these changes are applied to the configuration. This is the recommended method of image creation.

  2. Snapshot an application or component: In this method, snapshots capture the system state before and after an application is installed. Based on the observed system changes, the virtual application settings are automatically configured.

  3. Install application into a container: With this method, you would run the application installer in a clean container environment. When the installer completes, the contents of the container will be used to generate the application configuration.

Turbo Studio offers a user interface to manage custom images and virtual applications as well as additional creation methods not available in the command-line interface.