New
#220
I am studying the UUPtoESD.cmd script.
Why are we doing this at line 177?:
when we already have a fresh copy of WinRe in the .esd file as sub-image 2? Can't we just use index 2 instead of copying files from the active system?Code:"%wimlib%" update ISOFOLDER\sources\install.wim 1 --command="add 'ISOFOLDER\sources\boot.wim' '\windows\system32\recovery\winre.wim'" 1>nul 2>nul
Code:<WIM> <TOTALBYTES>467237366</TOTALBYTES> <IMAGE INDEX="1"> <DIRCOUNT>98</DIRCOUNT> <FILECOUNT>1705</FILECOUNT> <TOTALBYTES>262771049</TOTALBYTES> <HARDLINKBYTES>0</HARDLINKBYTES> <CREATIONTIME> <HIGHPART>0x01D28FEA</HIGHPART> <LOWPART>0x948DB57E</LOWPART> </CREATIONTIME> <LASTMODIFICATIONTIME> <HIGHPART>0x01D28FEA</HIGHPART> <LOWPART>0x948DB57E</LOWPART> </LASTMODIFICATIONTIME> <WIMBOOT>0</WIMBOOT> <NAME>Windows Setup Media</NAME> <DESCRIPTION>Windows Setup Media</DESCRIPTION> </IMAGE> <IMAGE INDEX="2"> <DIRCOUNT>3477</DIRCOUNT> <FILECOUNT>16624</FILECOUNT> <TOTALBYTES>1972713018</TOTALBYTES> <HARDLINKBYTES>865925786</HARDLINKBYTES> <CREATIONTIME> <HIGHPART>0x01D28FB8</HIGHPART> <LOWPART>0x165FC507</LOWPART> </CREATIONTIME> <LASTMODIFICATIONTIME> <HIGHPART>0x01D28FEB</HIGHPART> <LOWPART>0x02744090</LOWPART> </LASTMODIFICATIONTIME> <WIMBOOT>0</WIMBOOT> <WINDOWS> <ARCH>9</ARCH> <PRODUCTNAME>Microsoft® Windows® Operating System</PRODUCTNAME> <EDITIONID>WindowsPE</EDITIONID> <INSTALLATIONTYPE>WindowsPE</INSTALLATIONTYPE> <PRODUCTTYPE>WinNT</PRODUCTTYPE> <PRODUCTSUITE></PRODUCTSUITE> <LANGUAGES> <LANGUAGE>en-US</LANGUAGE> <DEFAULT>en-US</DEFAULT> </LANGUAGES> <VERSION> <MAJOR>10</MAJOR> <MINOR>0</MINOR> <BUILD>15046</BUILD> <SPBUILD>0</SPBUILD> <SPLEVEL>0</SPLEVEL> </VERSION> <SYSTEMROOT>WINDOWS</SYSTEMROOT> </WINDOWS> <NAME>Microsoft Windows Recovery Environment (x64)</NAME> <DESCRIPTION>Microsoft Windows Recovery Environment (x64)</DESCRIPTION> </IMAGE> <IMAGE INDEX="3"> <DIRCOUNT>19635</DIRCOUNT> <FILECOUNT>101821</FILECOUNT> <TOTALBYTES>15405344842</TOTALBYTES> <HARDLINKBYTES>7162163115</HARDLINKBYTES> <CREATIONTIME> <HIGHPART>0x01D28FE8</HIGHPART> <LOWPART>0x4298CB2A</LOWPART> </CREATIONTIME> <LASTMODIFICATIONTIME> <HIGHPART>0x01D28FEB</HIGHPART> <LOWPART>0x562305A8</LOWPART> </LASTMODIFICATIONTIME> <WIMBOOT>0</WIMBOOT> <WINDOWS> <ARCH>9</ARCH> <PRODUCTNAME>Microsoft® Windows® Operating System</PRODUCTNAME> <EDITIONID>Professional</EDITIONID> <INSTALLATIONTYPE>Client</INSTALLATIONTYPE> <SERVICINGDATA> <GDRDUREVISION>0</GDRDUREVISION> <PKEYCONFIGVERSION>10.0.15046.0;2016-01-01T00:00:00Z</PKEYCONFIGVERSION> </SERVICINGDATA> <PRODUCTTYPE>WinNT</PRODUCTTYPE> <PRODUCTSUITE>Terminal Server</PRODUCTSUITE> <LANGUAGES> <LANGUAGE>en-US</LANGUAGE> <DEFAULT>en-US</DEFAULT> </LANGUAGES> <VERSION> <MAJOR>10</MAJOR> <MINOR>0</MINOR> <BUILD>15046</BUILD> <SPBUILD>0</SPBUILD> <SPLEVEL>0</SPLEVEL> </VERSION> <SYSTEMROOT>WINDOWS</SYSTEMROOT> </WINDOWS> <NAME>Windows 10 Pro Insider Preview</NAME> <DESCRIPTION>Windows 10 Pro Insider Preview</DESCRIPTION> <FLAGS>Professional</FLAGS> <DISPLAYNAME>Windows 10 Pro Insider Preview</DISPLAYNAME> <DISPLAYDESCRIPTION>Windows 10 Pro Insider Preview</DISPLAYDESCRIPTION> </IMAGE> </WIM>
Just a thought ... :)
EDIT: Now I see I misinterpreted the command. Therefore this post is irrelevant.