tailieunhanh - Configuring Windows 7 (Training Kit) - Part 21
Configuring Windows 7 (Training Kit) - Part 21. This training kit is designed for IT professionals who operate in enterprise enviroments that use Windows 7 as a desktop operating system. You should have at least one year of experience in the IT field, as well as experience implementing and administering any Windows client operating system in a networked environment. | WDS can also capture an image on a reference computer and install it to multiple target computers. To do this the reference computer boots from a special type of boot image called a capture image. A capture image contains Windows PE and the Windows Deployment Services Image Capture Wizard. When the reference computer boots from a capture image after you prepare it with Sysprep the wizard creates an install image of the computer and saves it as a WIM file. This then becomes the install image that WDS deploys to the target computers after booting them with a standard boot image. Typically WDS works with PXE-enabled computers. PXE enables computers to boot from the network to a state that allows you to select a WDS boot image. If the target computers are not PXE-enabled WDS can deploy an operating system provided the computers are first booted with a discover image. When you boot a computer into a discover image the WDS client locates a valid WDS server and you can choose the image you want to deploy. NOTE WDS AND STANDARD WINDOWS PE IMAGES The WDS discover image contains a Windows PE image and WDS client software. You should not boot into Windows PE from a Windows PE boot disk for example to attempt to access a WDS server. You should not attempt to boot to Windows PE or from a discover image if your target computer is PXE-compliant. Booting a Target Computer Manually If a computer is not PXE-compliant and you need to boot it manually using a discover image you can use optical media or other removable media such as a USB hard disk or USB flash memory. You can use the BCDEdit and BCDBoot tools to create bootable media. Chapter 2 discussed the BCDEdit tool and used it to mark a VHD as bootable. You can use the same procedure for USB devices. BCDboot is a Windows AIK tool that you can use to set up a system partition or to repair the boot environment located on the system partition. The tool creates a system partition by copying a small set of boot environment files from
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