In this section, you capture and modify images for deployment.
Prerequisites
- A Windows® PE RAM disk. You can create
this by using the process described in: Windows PE
Walkthroughs.
- Image-capturing tools. You can add some
image-capturing tools, such as ImageX, to the Windows PE
disk.
- A reference computer. You can create this by
using the process described in: Deploy Windows by Using
Windows Setup.
In This Section
These processes are described in the How-To topics in this section:
- Remove the computer-specific information from the reference
computer, and shut the computer down. This is also known as
generalizing the computer.
- Boot the computer by using Windows PE.
- Capture the hard disk partitions as images (example: fab.wim)
by using image-capturing tools.
- Modify the image, split the image, or create spanned media from
the image.
- Copy the images to a network share.
The following diagram shows how the fictitious OEM, Fabrikam, captures a customized Windows image as a file, fab.wim, of their reference computer, Fabrikam Model FNB1:
Prepare your Windows installation to be captured as an image. This includes:
|
|
If you do not use a Key Management Service, you can rearm the clock only a limited number of times. This topic includes information on the following:
|
|
Capture the images from your reference computer for deployment. |
|
Make changes to an image after it has been captured. |
|
Split Windows image (.wim) files into smaller files for spanning across multiple media. |
|
Prepare .iso files using the spanned media. |
Next steps
After the image is captured and stored, you can:
- Apply the images to a destination computer.
For information, see Apply Images by Using
ImageX.
- Set up network-based installation of Windows.
For information, see Deploy Windows Using
Windows Deployment Services.
- Set up Windows on a Virtual Hard Disk. For
information, see Deploy Windows on a
Virtual Hard Disk with Native Boot.
- Set up Windows using other deployment
options. For information, see Other Deployment
Options.
- Service the image. For information, see
Service an
Offline Image.