MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista Chapter 2 Installing Windows Vista.

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Presentation transcript:

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista Chapter 2 Installing Windows Vista

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista2 Objectives Describe the deployment enhancements in Windows Vista Choose a method for installation Choose a type of installation Use Windows Easy Transfer

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista3 Objectives (continued) Perform an attended installation of Windows Vista Perform an unattended installation of Windows Vista Use and manage Windows Imaging Format image files

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista4 Deployment Enhancements in Windows Vista Enhancement categories in corporate environments –Design improvements –Tool and technology improvements

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista5 Design Improvements Modularization –Implemented behind the scenes in Windows Vista code –Benefits Simplified addition of drivers and other updates Simplified development of service packs Simplified implementation of multiple languages Windows Imaging Format –Installation is done from a Windows Imaging Format (WIM) image file

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista6 Design Improvements (continued) Windows Imaging Format benefits –Add and remove components directly from image file –Add updates and service packs directly to image file –Add and remove files directly from image file –Single image for multiple hardware platforms –Single image file for multiple images with varying configurations

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista7 Design Improvements (continued) XML-Based Answer Files –Vista uses a single XML-based answer file to perform automated installations –Windows System Image Manager (WSIM) Create and edit answer files for Windows Vista installation Installation Scripts –Can be used to automate installation tasks Ensures they are performed same way each time

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista8 Design Improvements (continued) File and Registry Redirection –Some applications attempt to write information to the Windows folder or restricted parts of the registry –Requests are redirected to a virtual Windows folder or virtual registry location –“Tricks” the application into running Without requiring users to have elevated privileges

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista9 Tools and Technology Improvements Application Compatibility Toolkit –Helps organizations quickly identify which applications are compatible with Windows Vista User State Migration Tool –Moves desktop settings and applications from one computer to another ImageX –New command-line tool for managing WIM images –Included in the Windows Automated Installation Kit (WAIK)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista10 Tools and Technology Improvements (continued) Windows System Image Manager –Graphical tool for configuring unattended installs and updating WIM images Windows PE –Limited and non-GUI version of Windows based on Windows Vista technologies –Can be used for installing, troubleshooting, and repairing Windows Vista –Includes networking components Can use current Windows drivers for network connectivity

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista11 Tools and Technology Improvements (continued) Windows Deployment Services –Updated version of Remote Installation Services (RIS) –Server side component that can be used to manage the deployment of images over the network –Desktop computers can be booted to the network Using a Preboot eXecution Environment (PXE) network card to perform an installation

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista12 Windows Vista Installation Methods Most common installation Windows Vista methods –CD boot installation –Distribution share installation –Image-based installation

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista13 CD Boot Installation Primary distribution method is on DVD Least suitable method for large volume of computers Suitable for small organizations that only occasionally install Windows Vista Degree of customization is low –Includes only the drivers and components included on the Windows Vista installation DVD –You can add drivers using any external storage media

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista14 Distribution Share Installation Requires computers to be booted into Windows PE from removable storage –Then run installation from a distribution share Speed of a distribution share installation is slower than a CD boot installation Level of customization for a distribution share installation is higher than a CD boot installation –Distribution share can be customized by WSIM or ImageX

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista15 Image-Based Installation Requires the creation of a customized image that you apply to each computer –Customized image is created using ImageX And placed on a distribution share by using WSIM Requires computers to be booted into Windows PE –Then copying the customized image onto computer Fastest type of installation Highest level of customization is achieved by using image-based installations

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista16 Windows Vista Installation Types Types of installations –Upgrade installation –Clean installation

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista17 Clean Installations Most installations are clean installations A new computer always has a clean installation Network administrators in corporate environments often prefer clean installations –On existing computers Hard drive is usually wiped out and reformatted Clean installations can be performed by any installation method

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista18 Upgrade Installations Also referred to as an in-place migration Migrate the user settings, files, and applications that exist in the previous operating system –To the new operating system on the same computer Not all operating systems, or versions, can be upgraded to Windows Vista Main benefit is the time saved by automatic migration of user settings, files, and applications Potential downside is less stability on an upgraded computer

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista19 Migrating User Settings and Files Windows Vista stores user settings in user profiles –Stored as a folder in the C:\Users\directory During an upgrade to Windows Vista –Profiles are automatically upgraded and settings within the profile are retained Tools to migrate user settings and files –Windows Easy Transfer (graphical utility) Migrates settings and files from one computer at a time –User State Migration Tool (command-line utility) Uses scripts to migrate settings and files from many computers at the same time

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista20 Dual Boot Installations Dual boot installation –When two operating systems are installed on the same computer and you can switch between them Boot loader of an operating system must support dual boot installations Boot loader –First component loaded from the hard drive during the boot process –Responsible for starting the operating system

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista21 Dual Boot Installations (continued) Dual booting is typically required for two purposes –Using unsupported applications –Keeping configuration data separate Windows Vista can perform a dual boot with almost any operating system Main requirement –Disk partition separate from other operating systems Virtualization software –Uses the main operating system as a host to run as many guest operating systems as you need

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista22 Dual Boot Installations (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista23 Dual Boot Installations (continued) Virtualization software advantages –Faster access to other operating systems –Multiple virtual machines at the same time –Simpler disk configuration –Snapshots and undo disks –Virtualized hardware

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista24 Windows Easy Transfer Graphical application for migrating settings and files from one computer to another Windows Easy Transfer can migrate: –User accounts –Folders and files –Program settings –Internet settings and favorites – settings, contacts, and messages

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista25 Windows Easy Transfer (continued) Using Windows Easy Transfer requires four steps –Copy Windows Easy Transfer to the old computer –Select a transfer method –Select what to transfer –Transfer user settings and files to the new computer

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista26 Copy Windows Easy Transfer You can copy Windows Easy Transfer to –CD, DVD, USB flash drive, tape drive, external hard disk, or a shared network folder –Can be run directly from that location On the destination computer –Windows Easy Transfer stays up and running to accept information from the source computer Required if you are transferring user settings and files directly over the network or by using a USB cable

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista27 Copy Windows Easy Transfer (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista28 Select a Transfer Method You can run Windows Easy Transfer on Windows XP or Windows Vista –To migrate user settings and files Windows Easy Transfer can run on Windows 2000, but it can only transfer general folders and files Options for transferring user settings and files –Use an Easy Transfer Cable –Transfer directly, using a network connection –Use a CD, DVD, or other removable media

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista29 Select a Transfer Method (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista30 Select What to Transfer Options for what to transfer –All user accounts, files, and settings –My user account, files, and settings only –Advanced options After you select the user settings and files –Windows Easy Transfer shows the total amount of data to be migrated

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista31 Select What to Transfer (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista32 Transfer User Settings and Files Steps –Specify the location of the SaveData.MIG file –Enter the encryption password to protect the transferred data, if desired –Match the user accounts on the old computer with existing accounts on the new computer, or create new user accounts on the new computer –Begin the transfer

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista33 Attended Installation Manually start and perform the installation Start the installation by running Setup.exe Much improved over previous versions of Windows –Windows Vista minimizes user involvement during installation –You enter information only at the very beginning and very end of the installation

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista34 Product Activation Process put in place by Microsoft to reduce piracy If an installation is not activated within 30 days –Windows Vista no longer allows you to create new files or save changes to existing files Typically performed over the Internet during Windows Vista installation Additional activation options –Activate Windows by using a modem over a phone line –Activate Windows by voice using an automated phone system

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista35 Product Activation (continued) Additional activation options (continued) –Buy a new product key online –Retype your product key Product key used during installation is associated with the specific computer that is performing the activation –If you perform significant hardware changes to your computer, you may be forced to reactivate Windows Activation is not required for customers who have purchased Windows Vista through volume licensing

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista36 Product Activation (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista37 Product Activation (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista38 Unattended Installation Unattended installations do not require administrator intervention –Entire process can be automated using an answer file Answer file –XML file that contains settings used during the Windows installation process Unattended installations are faster than attended installations –More consistent because same answer file is used Gives you a wider range of configuration options

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista39 Answer File Names You can specify the name of the answer file –Or allow Setup to find the answer file automatically –Using the /unattend switch when you run setup Answer files cached in the %WINDIR%\panther directory are reused during later actions –That look for an answer file

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista40 Answer File Names (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista41 Answer File Names (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista42 Configuration Passes for a Basic Installation Windows Vista still has multiple phases of setup –Single answer file is used for all configuration passes The windowsPE Configuration Pass –Used at the start of the installation to: Partition and format the hard disk Specify a specific Windows image to install Specify credentials for accessing the Windows image Specify the local partition to install Windows Vista on Specify a product key, computer name, and administrator account name Run specific commands during Windows Setup

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista43 Configuration Passes for a Basic Installation (continued) offlineServicing Configuration Pass –Used to apply packages to a Windows Vista image After it is copied to hard drive, but before it is running –Benefits Faster installation Enhanced security specialize Configuration Pass –Applies a wide variety of settings related to the Windows interface, network configuration, and other Windows components

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista44 Configuration Passes for a Basic Installation (continued) oobeSystem Configuration Pass –Applied during the user out-of-box experience (OOBE) Portion of the installation where users are asked for information after the second reboot Information requested includes time zone, administrator name, and the administrator password Sysprep Configuration Passes –Sysprep utility is used to manage Windows Vista installations that are imaged

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista45 Configuration Passes for a Basic Installation (continued) Sysprep Configuration Passes (continued) –Configuration passes that can be triggered by Sysprep generalize configuration pass auditSystem configuration pass and auditUser configuration pass oobeSystem configuration pass

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista46 Configuration Passes for a Basic Installation (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista47 Windows System Image Manager Allows you to create and modify answer files that are used for unattended installations Common tasks you can perform with WSIM include: –Create or update an answer file –Add device drivers or applications to an answer file –Create a configuration set –Apply offline updates to a Windows image WSIM replaces the Setup Manager utility

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista48 Windows System Image Manager (continued) Create or Update an Answer File –WSIM allows you to create an answer file to control the installation of Windows Add Device Drivers or Applications –You must create a distribution share to hold a copy of device drivers you are installing –Distribution share folders for updating drivers $OEM$ Out-of-Box Drivers

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista49 Windows System Image Manager (continued) Create a Configuration Set –Configuration set Subset of files in a distribution share that are required for a particular answer file –Best to use a configuration set when workstations cannot access the distribution share Apply Offline Updates to a Windows Image –Offline updates are software packages containing drivers, service packs, or security updates That are applied to an image during the offlineServicing configuration pass of the installation

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista50 Image-Based Installation Corporate environments have been using imaging for many years –As a method to quickly deploy workstation operating systems and applications Sysprep has long been included as a deployment utility to support third-party imaging software

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista51 Image-Based Installation (continued) Overall imaging process –Install and configure Windows Vista and applications on a source workstation –Use Sysprep to generalize the source workstation for imaging –Boot the source workstation using WindowsPE –Use ImageX to capture the image from the source workstation and store it in a distribution share –On the destination workstation, use WindowsPE to connect to the distribution share –Use ImageX to apply the image in the distribution share to the destination workstation

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista52 Sysprep Generalization –Preparing workstations to capture an image –Removes system-specific data from Windows You can specify an answer file to use during generalization –Otherwise Sysprep will search for unattend.xml to use as an answer file System Cleanup Actions –You must select a system cleanup action –System cleanup action determines the behavior of Windows Vista after configuration

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista53 Sysprep (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista54 Sysprep (continued) System Cleanup Actions (continued) –Options Enter System Out-of-Box Experience (OOBE) Enter System Audit Mode Sysprep Limitations –Hardware Abstraction Layer (HAL) must be the same on the source and destination computers –Drivers must be available to support plug and play hardware of the destination computer –Sysprep generalization resets the activation clock a maximum of three times

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista55 Sysprep (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista56 Sysprep (continued) Sysprep Limitations (continued) –Sysprep does not perform imaging operations –If a computer is a member of a domain, running Sysprep removes the computer from the domain –Sysprep should only be run on clean installs, not upgraded computers –After running Sysprep, encrypted files and folders are unreadable Sysprep Command-Line Options –Sysprep has both a command-line interface and a graphical interface

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista57 Sysprep (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista58 ImageX Features and benefits –A single image file (.wim) can hold multiple images –File-based imaging lets you capture images from one partition type and restore them on another –Images can be taken from an entire partition or just a particular folder –Images can be applied to an existing hard drive without destroying the existing data –Using imaging for initial setup is significantly faster than the xcopy-based file copy

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista59 ImageX (continued) Features and benefits (continued) –Images can be compressed with either fast compression or maximum compression –Images can be mounted to a folder in an NTFS partition for modification –When ImageX is combined with Windows Deployment Services (WDS) Can completely automate the deployment process to include partitioning and formatting hard drives Image capture –Must shut down the computer before imaging

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista60 ImageX (continued) Image capture (continued) –Syntax ImageX /capture image_path image_file “description” Image modification –Modify images by adding and removing files from the image –Mount the image to a folder on an NTFS drive Need the WIM FS Filter driver on your workstation –Commit the changes to the image –Syntax ImageX /mount image_file [image_number | image_name] image_path

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista61 ImageX (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista62 ImageX (continued) Image application –Boot using WindowsPE and connect to the distribution share holding the image file –Use ImageX to apply an image to the local workstation –Syntax ImageX /apply image_file [image_number | image_name] image_path Other image management tasks –See Table 2-7

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista63 ImageX (continued)

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista64 Summary Windows Vista has many enhancements that make deployment easier Primary ways to install Windows Vista are CD boot, distribution share, and image-based Clean installations are preferred over upgrade installations by most network administrators Windows Vista can perform a dual boot with almost any other operating system

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista65 Summary (continued) Windows Easy Transfer is a graphical wizard that migrates user settings and files from an old computer to Windows Vista Attended installation requires you to answer questions during the installation Product activation must be performed for Windows Vista within 30 days Unattended installation uses an answer file to pass configuration to Setup

MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Vista66 Summary (continued) During a basic installation, the windowsPE, offlineServicing, specialize, and oobeSystem configuration passes are performed WSIM is used to create answer files, add device drivers or packages to an answer file, create a configuration set, or apply offline updates to a Windows Vista image Sysprep is used to prepare computers for imaging ImageX is used to capture, modify, and apply WIM images