If you're having problems with Windows 10 on your PC, you can try to refresh, reset, or restore it.
By default, here's what happens when you
refresh your PC:
- Your files and personalization setting won't change.
- Your PC settings will be changed back to their defaults.
- Apps from the Windows Store will be kept.
- Apps you installed from discs or websites will be removed. Basically all installed desktop apps.
The
recimg.exe command line tool lets you configure a
custom recovery image for Windows to use when you refresh your PC. When you create a custom recovery image, it will
contain the desktop apps you've installed, and the
Windows system files in their current state. Recovery images do not contain your documents, personal settings, user profiles, or apps from Windows Store, because that information is automatically preserved at the time you refresh your PC.
Basically, a custom recovery image let's you refresh Windows 10 as usual with your current Windows, but also lets you keep your desktop apps and Windows system files as they were when the recovery image was created.
When you create a custom recovery image, recimg will store it in the specified directory, and set it as the
active recovery image. If a custom recovery image is set as the active recovery image, Windows will use it when you
refresh your PC instead of the default OEM recovery image (if present) or Windows installation media. All recovery images have the filename
CustomRefresh.wim. If no CustomRefresh.wim file is found in the active recovery image directory, Windows will fall back to using the OEM recovery image or Windows installation media when you refresh your PC.
This tutorial will show you how to create a
custom recovery image that is set to be used to refresh
Windows 10 to the state it was at when the recovery image was created when you
refresh your PC.