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Installing Windows 10 is done in three phases:
- Automate Windows 10 In-Place Upgrades From the Command Line. 31 thoughts on “Automate Windows 10 In-Place Upgrades From the Command Line”. I made a powershell script that I put into a task sequence command line in SCCM that robo copies a zipped folder of the ISO contents of Win 10 and then the install.cmd after everything gets copied.
- In this Windows 10 guide, we walk you through the steps to create an autounattend.xml answer file containing all the necessary settings to perform a basic unattended installation of the OS.
- Boot from install media, run Windows Setup
- Configure hardware devices
- Windows Welcome (OOBE)
Create Zero-Touch Windows 10 ISO. I have uploaded a sample file to my Gist profile that you can download, to get started pretty quick and easily. This Autounattend.xml has been tested on version 1511, 1607, and 1709, using x64 architecture. Create media for automated unattended install of Windows 10:Hey Kari, Great article! The Original ISO from where we copied the files? Cross stitcher magazine free download site. Windows 10 Forums. Windows 10 Forums > Windows 10 Tutorials > Create media for automated unattended install of Windows 10. What is Windows PE? Use, Limitations, Download and more.
In normal install, user interaction is required in phases 1 and 3, phase 2 being run automatically without user interaction. In phase 1 user selects language and keyboard layout settings for system accounts, enters product key for specific edition or selects edition manually if product key is not entered at this stage, and selects disk and partition to install Windows. When phase 1 is done, Windows restarts to phase 2 which is done without user interaction and when ready automatically restarts to phase 3.In phase 3 user selects region and language settings for user accounts, creates initial admin user account, chooses OneDrive and privacy settings and finally boots to desktop.
In this tutorial we will create two answer files to automate phases 1 and 3. An answer file is set of commands and instructions in XML format to tell Windows setup what to do and how to proceed. We will need two answer files:
- autounattend.xml to automate phase 1, Windows Setup
- unattend.xml to automate phase 3, OOBE
When done we will create a custom USB flash drive install media for unattended install. To install Windows 10 using this USB will be totally unattended, 'Hands Free'; simply boot from USB and forget it, take a break, come back to PC to find everything is done, Windows fully installed without a single key press or mouse click, without any user interaction.
The process as described in tutorial requires two computers, one or both of them can be virtual machines:
- A technician machine
- A computer or virtual machine with existing Windows 10 installation, any version and edition. Technician machine will be used to prepare answer files and other assets for custom install image
- In this tutorial I will use my W10 PRO Insider Preview Build 17025 laptop as technician machine
- A reference machine
- A computer or virtual machine which has no operating system installed. Reference machine will be used to clean install Windows 10, customize it in Audit Mode, sysprep it and finally capture Windows install image (install.wim file) from it
- If reference machine you want to use already contains an installed OS, existing installation must be wiped and replaced with a fresh clean install, or alternatively Windows 10 clean installed on another partition or disk on that machine (dual boot)
- In this tutorial I will use a new Hyper-V virtual machine created specifically for this purpose as reference machine
Both technician and reference machines can be either BIOS/MBR or UEFI/GPT machines, regardless for what partitioning system you are preparing answer files and USB install media.
Tutorial is quite long, not because topic is complicated (it's not!) but rather because it is somewhat unfamiliar for most average users. I wanted to make this tutorial as easy to follow as possible for users who have never done anything like this, which requires quite a lot explaining and screenshots.
Do not hesitate to post your questions and issues in this thread.
Use links below to go to any step, back button of your browser to return to this list.
Step One: | Install Windows System Image Manager |
Step Two: | Create a catalog file |
Step Three: | Create answer file for Windows Setup |
Step Four: | Create answer file for OOBE |
Step Five: | Prepare assets |
Step Six: | Install Windows 10 on reference machine |
Step Seven: | Customize and capture Windows image |
Step Eight: | Create USB install media |
To save some time: Step Six, installing Windows on reference machine takes some time. I suggest you start with it, and do steps One through Five on technician machine (= another computer) while Windows is installing.
1.1)Windows System Image Manager (SIM) is part of Windows Assessment and Deployment Kit (ADK). On technician machine, download Windows ADK from Windows ADK downloads - Windows Hardware Dev Center
If you are creating answer files for unattended install of Windows Insider build, download Windows Insider Preview ADK instead: Download Windows Insider Preview ADK
1.2) Run the installer on technician machine, select Install to this computer. Don't panic when you see installer to tell it requires almost 7 GB, we will only need under 100 MB part of it:
1.3) For purpose of this tutorial, we will only need Deployment Tools. You can unselect everything else:
1.4) When installed, Windows SIM can be found and started from Start > W > Windows Kits > Windows System Image Manager:
If you are creating answer files for unattended install of Windows Insider build, download Windows Insider Preview ADK instead: Download Windows Insider Preview ADK
1.2) Run the installer on technician machine, select Install to this computer. Don't panic when you see installer to tell it requires almost 7 GB, we will only need under 100 MB part of it:
1.3) For purpose of this tutorial, we will only need Deployment Tools. You can unselect everything else:
1.4) When installed, Windows SIM can be found and started from Start > W > Windows Kits > Windows System Image Manager:
Following steps require you are signed in on technician machine with an administrator account!
2.1) Mount Windows 10 ISO on technician machine (tutorial)
2.2) Copy ISO contents to a folder on hard disk (CTRL + A to select all in Explorer, CTRL + C to copy). I will use folder D:ISO_Files for this and paste ISO content there (CTRL + V). When copied, unmount ISO (tutorial)
Please notice, to continue we will need install.wim file. If your Windows 10 ISO is ESD based (Media Creation Tool ISO), you must first convert install.esd to install.wim as told in this tutorial: Convert ESD file to WIM using DISM in Windows 10 Tutorials
When done, delete install.esd file in your ISO_FilesSources folder, replace it with converted install.wim file and continue from 2.3.
When done, delete install.esd file in your ISO_FilesSources folder, replace it with converted install.wim file and continue from 2.3.
2.3) Start Windows SIM (see 1.4). To create an answer file, Windows SIM needs a so called catalog file which will be based on install.wim file for a specific edition of Windows 10
2.4) In Windows SIM, select File > New Answer File. You will be asked if you want to open a Windows image. Select Yes:
2.5) Browse to and select install.wim in ISO_FilesSources folder (or any other folder you used to copy ISO content for instance I_Copied_ISO_files_HereSources)
Creating a catalog file will take quite some time. Luckily you only need to create catalog file once. It will be created in same folder where install.wim file used to create it is located, in this example case now in my D:ISO_FilesSources folder. The filename will be install_Windows 10 XXX.clg where XXX is edition in question.
Copy the catalog file to another folder to keep it for future needs:
In the future you can open catalog file instead of creating a new one, Select a Windows Image dialog (see 2.5) accepts both WIM and CLG (catalog) files:
Copy the catalog file to another folder to keep it for future needs:
In the future you can open catalog file instead of creating a new one, Select a Windows Image dialog (see 2.5) accepts both WIM and CLG (catalog) files:
2.6) In case your ISO is a multi edition one, select correct edition:
2.7) If creating a new catalog file, Windows SIM will tell it must create one. Click Yes:
2.8) Catalog will be created:
Notice that this part is only required if you want the complete Windows Setup process to be automatized, plugging in USB and boot to it then take a break and come back later to sign in to desktop.
If you prefer a standard installation, boot to Windows Setup region and keyboard selection and partitioning Windows system disk manually with Windows Setup, you can skip this part.
If you prefer a standard installation, boot to Windows Setup region and keyboard selection and partitioning Windows system disk manually with Windows Setup, you can skip this part.
3.1) Windows installation and setup is done in so called configuration passes. More information about configuration passes on Microsoft TechNet: How Configuration Passes Work.
An answer file is made by adding components to various configuration passes, each component containing settings for that pass. There are seven different configuration passes, here shown in Answer File pane in Windows SIM:
Configuration passes 5 auditSystem and 6auditUser are not needed in normal Windows setup.
3.2) Answer file autounattend.xml, first of two answer files we will prepare is the one that takes care of setup phase containing information about regional settings, accepting EULA, how to partition hard disk and in which partition Windows will be installed. It only contains components in pass 1 windowsPE
3.3) In Windows SIM, expand Components in Windows Image pane bottom left:
3.4) Component names start with amd64_Microsoft-Windows if you are working with catalog file for 64 bit Windows, and with x86_Microsoft-Windows for 32 bit Windows, and end with build number of the install.wim file used to create the catalog. In this tutorial I will omit these two parts when telling about which components need to added.
To add region and language settings to answer file, right click component International-Core-WinPE, select Add Setting to Pass 1 windowsPE:
Be sure to add International-Core-WinPE component, the one just above it has almost the same name without WinPE part. Adding the wrong component makes the answer file invalid!
3.5) You will see that selected component was added to Answer File pane. Select it and enter required settings in Properties pane:
- InputLocale: Your preferred default keyboard layout
- SystemLocale: Your country or region
- UILanguage: Windows language
- UserLocale: PC location
UILanguageFallback is the language to be used for resources, notifications and system messages that are not localized (translated) to current Windows system language. US English (en-US) can and should be used for all partially localized languages. Arabic (ar-SA) and Chinese Hong Kong (zh-HK) are exceptions, in addition to en-US in Arabic fallback language can also be French (fr-FR) and in Chinese Hong Kong Chinese Taiwan (zh-TW).
As I am using British English Windows 10 and Finnish keyboard layout, in my case I set location and language to en-GB (Great Britain), fallback to en-US and keyboard layout to Finnish (040b:0000040b).
Some other keyboard / region codes:
- Brazil - Portuguese > 0416:00000416, pt-BR
- Canada - English > 1009:00000409, en-CA
- Canada - French > 0c0c:00011009, fr-CA
- France - French > 040c:0000040c, fr-FR
- Germany - German > 0407:00000407, de-DE
- UK - English > 0809:00000809, en-GB
- USA - English > 0409:00000409, en-US
Complete list: Default Input Profiles (Input Locales) in Windows | Microsoft Docs
You can check current regional settings on technician machine in elevated PowerShell with following command and use them if answer file and USB install media you are creating will be used to install Windows 10 with the same settings:
dism /online /get-intl
3.6) Expand component International-Core-WinPE in Answer File pane, select SetupUILanguage, enter the Windows language in Properties pane. In this example as the install media is British English I enter en-GB:
3.7) In Windows Image pane, browse to and select Setup, add it to Pass 1 winPE:
3.8) Expand Setup component, select UserData, set AcceptEula to true, add organisation name (optional). Notice that in some settings which only accept preset values like AcceptEula here (it can only be true or false), selection is made from drop down list:
This is a good example about what we are doing: If AcceptEula was left empty or set to false, setup would stop waiting user to accept EULA. When the whole point is to automate the setup, it is important to set it to true.
3.9) Expand UserData, select ProductKey, add a generic product key:
Generic product keys:
- Windows 10 Home Single Language: 7HNRX-D7KGG-3K4RQ-4WPJ4-YTDFH
- Windows 10 Home: TX9XD-98N7V-6WMQ6-BX7FG-H8Q99
- Windows 10 Pro: VK7JG-NPHTM-C97JM-9MPGT-3V66T
Education, Enterprise and Server editions, see following support article for generic install keys: Appendix A: KMS Client Setup Keys
3.10) Time to configure and partition Windows system disk. In this example I will configure a single disk which will be partitioned to use all capacity after system partitions have been created for Windows partition C:.
Right click Setup > DiskConfiguration in Answer File pane, select Insert New Disk:
3.11) Select the disk you added in Answer File pane, set DiskID to be 0 and WillWipeDisk to true:
When setup is run, this will wipe primary HDD, doing the same than DISKPART > SELECET DISK 0 > CLEAN.
3.12) Expand disk in Answer File pane, right click Create Partitions and select Insert New CreatePartition to create first partition:
If you are creating answer file for unattended install on BIOS / MBR based machines which require two partitions (System reserved, Windows), repeat this step and create one more partition. If you are creating answer file for UEFI / GPT based machines requiring at least four partitions (WinRe, EFI, MSR, Windows), repeat this step three more times. As I am preparing install media for UEFI / GPT, I need four partitions now:
3.13) Select a partition (CreatePartition) in Answer File pane, set Order 1, Size 450, Type Primary:
This creates the first partition, WinRE in GPT partitioning scheme or System Reserved in MBR scheme.
3.14)GPT disk only: Repeat step 3.13 three more times to create EFI, MSR and Windows partitions. Set partition properties as shown in below table. All four partitions are required:
PARTITION | EXTEND | ORDER | SIZE (MB) | TYPE |
WinRE | False | 1 | 450 | Primary |
EFI | False | 2 | 100 | EFI |
MSR | False | 3 | 16 | MSR |
Windows | True | 4 | Leave empty | Primary |
MBR disk only: Repeat step 3.13 once and create Windows partition. Set partition properties as shown in below table. Both partitions are required:
PARTITION | EXTEND | ORDER | SIZE (MB) | TYPE |
System Reserved | False | 1 | 450 | Primary |
Windows | True | 2 | Leave empty | Primary |
In both examples above, you will notice that we set the last partition (Windows in this case) to use all available space by setting Extend property to True instead of defining a size for the partition, leaving Size property empty (it must be left empty if Extend = True, do not enter any value!):
If we would like to create additional data partitions, we would set Extend property for Windows partition to False and set a Size property for it instead (size in MB), then add additional partitions setting their size as preferred, extending the last partition to use all available space. You can only use Extend True for the last partition on disk.
In below table example properties for partitioning HDD to have a 128 GB (131,072 MB) Windows partition, a 200 GB (204,800 MB) Data partition, and finally use rest of the disk for Games partition:
PARTITION | EXTEND | ORDER | SIZE (MB) | TYPE |
WinRE | False | 1 | 450 | Primary |
EFI | False | 2 | 100 | EFI |
MSR | False | 3 | 16 | MSR |
Windows | False | 4 | 131072 | Primary |
Data | False | 5 | 204800 | Primary |
Games | True | 6 | Leave empty | Primary |
3.15) In steps 3.13 and 3.14 we only created raw partitions. Each of them needs to modified. To do that, right click ModifyPartitions and select Insert New ModifyPartition:
Repeat this to create a ModifyPartition setting for each partition you created in 3.13 and 3.14:
3.16) GPT disk only: Set properties for each partition as shown below
Only set a value for a setting when told so! Leave all other value fields empty.
First the WinRE partition. Set it as follows:
- Format = NTFS
- Label = WinRE
- Order = 1
- PartitionID = 1
- TypeID = DE94BBA4-06D1-4D40-A16A-BFD50179D6AC
WinRE partition is the only one requiring specific TypeID. The ID must be exactly as shown above!
Repeat the above three times, selecting a not yet modified ModifyPartition in Answer File pane and setting the properties for it. Below the properties for each of four GPT partitions:
- ModifyPartition 1 (WinRE):
- Format = NTFS
- Label = WinRE
- Order = 1
- PartitionID = 1
- TypeID = DE94BBA4-06D1-4D40-A16A-BFD50179D6AC
- ModifyPartition 2 (EFI):
- Format = FAT32
- Label = System
- Order = 2
- PartitionID = 2
- ModifyPartition 3 (MSR):
- Order = 3
- PartitionID = 3
- ModifyPartition 4 (Windows):
- Format = NTFS
- Label = Windows
- Letter = C
- Order = 4
- PartitionID = 4
Remember: only modify properties to settings as told above, leaving other fields empty! Notice that small 16 MB MSR partition will not be formatted nor does it get a label.
When done, you should have four CreatePartition components to create partitions, and four ModifyPartition components to configure them:
3.17) MBR disk only: For MBR disk you only need two ModifyPartitions. Set their properties as shown below:
- ModifyPartition 1 (System Reserved):
- Active = True
- Format = NTFS
- Label = System
- Order = 1
- PartitionID = 1
- ModifyPartition 2 (Windows):
- Format = NTFS
- Label = Windows
- Letter = C
- Order = 2
- PartitionID = 2
3.18)GPT disk only: Expand ImageInstall > OSImage component in Answer File pane, select InstallTo, set DiskID = 0 and PartitionID = 4 to tell Windows setup to install Windows on partition 4:
MBR disk only: Expand ImageInstall > OSImage component in Answer File pane, select InstallTo, set DiskID = 0 and PartitionID = 2 to tell Windows setup to install Windows on partition 2
3.19) Answer file has now all components and settings it needs. It also contains something not needed; before proceeding, delete all unused components (light blue icon) in Answer File pane under Setup main component, only leaving the three we've modified (dark blue icon: DiskConfiguration, ImageInstall, UserData).
You can delete an unused component by selecting it and pressing DEL or right clicking it and selecting Delete:
When done, your fully expanded Answer File pane should look like this:
Windows 10 Unattended Iso Download 64
3.20) Validate answer file to check for possible errors (Tools > Validate Answer File):3.21) Save answer file as autounattend.xml in D:ISO_Files folder (the folder where ISO content was copied to in step 2.2):
3.22) The autounattend.xml answer file we created:
The sample answer file above is for GPT disk on a UEFI machine.
Notice that this answer file is for installing a 64 bit Windows 10 because the catalog file was based on a 64 bit install.wim file. If you want to use same answer file in installing 32 bit Windows, you must change all ProcessorArchitecture='amd64' references in answer file to ProcessorArchitecture='x86.'Windows 10 Unattended Iso Download Free
4.1) The second answer file is to take care of OOBE, to automate it bypassing region and keyboard selection and user account creation. To start, open Windows SIM and create a new answer file as you did in steps 2.3 through 2.5. Because the catalog file is already created, use it instead of install.wim to speed up process
4.2) In step 3.4 you saw how to add components to answer file. Add required components now from Windows Image pane bottom left in Windows SIM to answer file as you did making the first answer file. First, add component International-Core to Pass 7 oobeSystem:
In Windows Image pane, expand component Shell-Setup and add components as told below:
- Add OEMInformation to Pass 4 Specialize
- Add Shell-Setup > OOBE to Pass 7 oobeSystem
- Add Shell-Setup > UserAccounts to Pass 7 oobeSystem
Answer File pane should look like this after you have added necessary components:
4.3) In Answer File pane, select Shell-Setup in pass 4 specialize. Set CopyProfile = true, OEMName as you wish, RegisteredOrganization as you wish, RegisteredOwner as you wish, and TimeZone if required (see explanation below screenshot). Leave all other property value fields empty:
About TimeZone value: If no value given, Windows defaults to time zone according to language of the install media. US English Windows defaults to Pacific time, Finnish Windows to time in Finland, UK English Windows to UK time, Japanese Windows to time in Japan. In my case as I use UK English Windows which would default to UK time but I live in Germany, I want to set time zone accordingly to CET or as Windows understands it, to W. Europe Standard Time.
In same way, if answer file and USB install media we are preparing would be used in East Coast USA, it would be a good idea to set time zone to EST / EDST setting TimeZone value Eastern Standard Time.
Full list of valid time zone names: Microsoft Time Zone Index Values
4.4) Select Shell-Setup > OEMInformation in Answer file pane, add Manufacturer, SupportHours, SupportPhone and SupportURL as you wish. If you want to add an OEM logo later (see step 5.1) when we prepare assets and install Windows on reference machine, add logo path and filename as C:WindowsSystem32oemlogo.bmp:
Notice that OEMInformation is optional, not required. When added, if set the OEM logo image will be shown in Control Panel > System, and OEM info + link to given support URL in both Control Panel > System and Settings > System > About:
4.5) Select International-Core in Answer File pane, set all values exactly as we did for the first answer file in step 3.5:
4.6)Select Shell-Setup in Answer File pane in pass 7 oobeSystem, set the same RegisteredOrganization, RegisteredOwner and TimeZone as in step 4.3:
4.7) Select OOBE in Answer File pane, set HideEULAPAge = True, set HideOEMRegistrationScreen = True, set HideOnlineAccountScreen = True, set HideWirelessSetupInOOBE = True, set ProtectYourPC = 1, set UnattendEnableRetailDemo = False:
ProtectYourPC (read more) value can be 1, 2 or 3:
- 1 = Recommended (default) level of protection
- 2 = Only updates are installed.
- 3 = Automatic protection is disabled.
4.8) Expand UserAccounts, right click LocalAccounts, select Insert New LocalAccount:
Fill in Description, DisplayName (as shown in login screen, Start etc.), Group (Administrators for admin accounts, Users for standard accounts), and Name (user profile folder name). I will first setup an admin account, I want all my machines to have a local admin account simply named as Admin:
When done, I'll expand new account in Answer File pane and set password (optional):
Don't worry; although shown in Windows SIM, when we save answer file the password will be encoded, not shown. Be sure to remember the password if you set one here!
I will repeat the above steps once because I also want to make a standard account for myself. Creating both accounts now they already exists on each machine on which I will install my custom Windows image:
I will not set a password for this standard account. When not set, a user (myself in this case) can create a new password when signing in first time.
4.9) Validating my answer file (see step 3.20) shows no errors:
4.10) Create a new folder on technician machine to store assets for reference machine. I use folder UsersKariOneDriveAssets to allow easy transfer using OneDrive. Save this answer file to your Assets folder as unattend.xml:
If you will use a physical PC as reference machine, you can save your assets on a USB flash drive instead
Close Windows SIM
4.11) The unattend.xml answer file we created:
5.1) Save optional OEM logo image to Assets folder. It must be a 120 * 120 pixels bitmap image (.bmp). Prepare and save custom Windows theme files to same folder, when we will customize reference machine in Audit Mode you can't use Personalize options to change colors and wallpaper but you can apply a theme pack file to do it for you.
5.2) On technician machine, open Notepad, copy following code and paste in Notepad, save in Assets folder as RunOnce.bat:
Do not run the batch file, it deletes itself! If you want to test it, make a copy and run it instead.
This file will be copied to default user profile on reference machine, and from there to every user profile. It runs itself every time any user signs in first time clearing This PC, Quick Access and Recent files views, then deletes itself. Without it, some leftovers from reference machine's built-in administrator account would be shown in Quick Access.
5.3) If you have installers for software you would like to include in your custom Windows image, save them, too, in Assets folder.
5.4) In this example my Assets folder contains the unattend.xml answer file, an OEM logo image, RunOnce.bat from step 5.2, two themepack files and as an example of software installers, installer for VLC Player:
5.2) On technician machine, open Notepad, copy following code and paste in Notepad, save in Assets folder as RunOnce.bat:
Do not run the batch file, it deletes itself! If you want to test it, make a copy and run it instead.
This file will be copied to default user profile on reference machine, and from there to every user profile. It runs itself every time any user signs in first time clearing This PC, Quick Access and Recent files views, then deletes itself. Without it, some leftovers from reference machine's built-in administrator account would be shown in Quick Access.
5.3) If you have installers for software you would like to include in your custom Windows image, save them, too, in Assets folder.
5.4) In this example my Assets folder contains the unattend.xml answer file, an OEM logo image, RunOnce.bat from step 5.2, two themepack files and as an example of software installers, installer for VLC Player:
6.1) Any PC or virtual machine can be used as reference machine. In this example I created a Generation 2 Hyper-V virtual machine with a 50 GB virtual hard disk
6.2) If using a Hyper-V VM as reference machine, open its settings before booting and disable (unselect) automatic checkpoints (yellow highlight in screenshot). Be sure you are using Standard checkpoints:
6.3) Install Windows 10 normally until OOBE starts and region settings screen is shown. Do not select anything, just press CTRL + SHIFT + F3 to restart to Audit Mode (press and hold down both CTRL and SHIFT keys, press F3, release all three keys):
6.4) Windows will restart and sign you in to Audit Mode with built-in administrator account. Sysprep Prompt will be shown on screen. Click Cancel to close it:
6.5) Connect reference machine to network
6.2) If using a Hyper-V VM as reference machine, open its settings before booting and disable (unselect) automatic checkpoints (yellow highlight in screenshot). Be sure you are using Standard checkpoints:
6.3) Install Windows 10 normally until OOBE starts and region settings screen is shown. Do not select anything, just press CTRL + SHIFT + F3 to restart to Audit Mode (press and hold down both CTRL and SHIFT keys, press F3, release all three keys):
6.4) Windows will restart and sign you in to Audit Mode with built-in administrator account. Sysprep Prompt will be shown on screen. Click Cancel to close it:
6.5) Connect reference machine to network
In this example case I am using OneDrive to transfer assets from technician machine to reference machine. You can of course transfer assets in any way you want to, for instance if your reference machine is a physical PC, you can save assets to a USB flash drive and use it for transfer.
Network cannot be used, sharing being disabled in Audit Mode.
7.1) If you saved the assets to OneDrive as I did, open Internet Explorer (WIN + R > type iexplore > press Enter, Edge can't be used in Audit Mode), go to onedrive.live.com and open the Assets folder:Network cannot be used, sharing being disabled in Audit Mode.
7.2) Save answer file unattend.xml in C:WindowsSystem32Sysprep folder:
7.3) Save oemlogo.bmp in C:WindowsSystem32 folder
7.4) Save RunOnce.bat
in C:UsersAdministratorAppDataRoamingMicrosoftWindowsStart MenuProgramsStart-up folder
The AppData folder is hidden. A practical way to open it in Save as dialog is to type %appdata% in address field and press Enter. This opens the AppDataRoaming folder and you can now click yourself deeper to target folder:
7.5) Theme files do not have to be saved, just open them to apply. If you want to install multiple themes to your custom image, open the one you want to be default theme for all user accounts last (you can't change themes in Audit Mode, just apply them):
7.6) Run possible software installers without saving them:
7.7) Create two new folders on root of C: drive, name them C:Image and C:Scratch. These folders will be needed when we capture the image
If you are using a Hyper-V VM as reference machine, create a checkpoint now. It allows you to return to this point in few seconds if something goes wrong with image capture or to make changes in image before it's captured.
7.8) When done, press WIN + R to open Run prompt, type following command and press Enter:
C:WindowsSystem32Sysprepsysprep.exe /generalize /oobe
7.9) Sysprep will run and generalize Windows image. When ready, Windows will shut down:
7.10) Boot the reference machine from WinPE or Windows install media. In any case do not let it boot from hard disk!. In my case now, as I am using Generation 2 Hyper-V VM, I first changed the boot order in VM settings:
Hyper-V can be a bit tricky, you have to press a key to boot from install media or WinPE but the VM window opens slowly. If you miss the key press, reset VM as soon as it starts booting from VHD (Action menu > Reset) and try again.
I repeat: do not let reference machine boot from HDD or in case of VM, from VHD!
I repeat: do not let reference machine boot from HDD or in case of VM, from VHD!
7.11) When booted from install media, press SHIFT + F10 to open Command Prompt. Type diskpart and press Enter (#1 in screenshot below), type list vol and press Enter (#2), type exit and press Enter (#3)
Check drive letter for Windows partition (#4), all drives are listed under list vol command. In most cases it will be C: but occasionally, depending on hardware and connected disks, booting to WinPE or install media changes drive letters.
Enter the following command and press Enter to capture Windows image (#5). Replace drive letter C: if necessary in /imagefile, /capturedir and /ScratchDir switches:
Dism will capture the image. Wait until it's done (#6), restart reference machine and let it boot normally from hard disk. Notice that boot will take quite some time because reference machine goes through automated OOBE.
7.12) When reference machine has booted to desktop, sign in to your administrator account using password you set in answer file in step 4.8
7.13) On technician machine, delete ISO_FilesSourcesinstall.wim file
7.14) When reference machine has booted to desktop, copy newly captured Windows image (install.wim file) from C:Image folder to technician machine to ISO_FilesSources folder, same folder from where you deleted the original install.wim in previous step. In my case now I shared ISO_FIles folder on technician machine and mapped it on reference machine, copying new install.wim directly to target folder:
You can of course copy the file in any way you prefer. Shut down reference machine when file has been copied
8.1) The ISO_Files folder on technician machine now contains everything needed to create a 'hands free' ISO:
- Windows 10 install files copied from original ISO (step 2.2)
- Original install.wim in Sources folder replaced with custom one (step 7.14)
- Custom autounattend.xml answer file to take care of Windows setup (step 3.21)
8.2) Create custom USB flash drive from ISO_Files folder by running PowerShell script as told in following tutorial: PowerShell Scripting - Create USB Install Media for Windows 10 Installation Upgrade Tutorials
Alternatively, you can make an ISO image as told in Part Five in following tutorial, the tool used (Deployment and Imaging Tools Environment) was installed on your technician machine together with Windows SIM in step 1.2 and you do not have to download it again: Create Windows 10 ISO image from Existing Installation Installation Upgrade Tutorials
When you have created new ISO, use your preferred tool / method to create USB or DVD install media
That's it geeks! Happy computing :)
Kari