For unattended installation on Windows, create an option file
      named options.server.txt. The following is an
      example of what the contents of an option file might be.
    
debugtrace=C:\Program Files\MySQL\Enterprise\install.debugtrace.log mode=unattended installdir=C:\Program Files\MySQL\Enterprise tomcatport=8080 tomcatshutdownport=8005 tomcatsslport=8443 adminpassword=myadminpassword dbport=3300
      This file identifies a directory and file name for a log file,
      sets the mode to unattended,
      and uses the installdir option to specify an
      installation directory. The meaning of the other options is fairly
      self-evident.
    
        Set the installdir and
        debugtrace options to values appropriate to
        your locale and operating system.
      
        The only options that must be specified in an option file when
        installing the MySQL Enterprise Service Manager are mode (if
        not specified at the command line),
        installdir, and
        adminpassword.
      
Check the options in your option file closely before installation; no warnings will be issued if there are errors.
      Ensure that the monitor installer file and the options file are in
      the same directory and, if you saved the options file as
      options.server.txt, you can invoke an
      unattended installation from the command line by typing:
    
  C:\ mysqlmonitor-version-windows-installer.exe --optionfile options.server.txt
      You can install the MySQL Enterprise Monitor Agent in exactly the same fashion.
      Create an agent option file and call the agent installer using the
      optionfile option.
    
      As a minimum for the agent installation, you must specify the
      mode (if not specified at the command line),
      mysqluser, installdir,
      mysqlpassword, installdir,
      managerhost, and
      agentpassword options. Create a file containing
      these values and use it with the optionfile
      option for unattended agent installation.
    
      If you wish, you can create one script that calls both the Service
      Manager and the Monitor Agent programs passing appropriate
      optionfile options.
    

