Fog Imaging Dell XPS 13
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While I haven’t imaged any XPS 13 yet, I can say that if these are uefi firmware with gpt disks and deploying Win10 (more or less) you have the requirement to use the trunk build, since 1.2.0 stable doesn’t support the mentioned conditions very well at all.
The other thing missing is what capture format did you use, single disk resizeable, single disk non resizable, raw??
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@Sebastian-Roth
I used this USB type C NIC: https://www.cdwg.com/shop/products/Dell-network-adapter/3977707.aspx?enkwrd=470-ABND&pfm=srhI had to use the legacy boot to get it to PXE boot to undionly.kpxe.
I was able to image a XPS with a Multiple Partition Image - All Disks but the device was reporting the error code 0xc0000225. I did manage to recover this by booting into a recovery disk and running bcdboot C:\WINDOWS /s Z: /f UEFI.
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@paused Your post made me read about the error code again. Possibly the BCD file we use is not working with your Dell XPS 13 device. Would you mind testing a full deploy again but use debug mode this time (schedule a deploy task as usual but just before creating the task tick “Schedule task as a debug task”). Start the deploy with the command
fog
and step through. When it’s done please runlsblk
to show the partitions (take a picture and upload here) and see if you can find the windows boot partition - usually either a 100 MB primary partition or the boot files are within the windows system partition. Mount the partition like this and see if you can find the backup BCD file:mkdir -p /mnt ntfs-3g -o force,rw /dev/sda1 /mnt cd /mnt/Boot/ ls -al BCD* mv BCD BCD.fog mv BCD.bak BCD cd / umount /mnt ... reboot
Not sure if this will fix it for you but it’s a good try and we might learn from it. Is this a vendor pre-installed system or did you install windows from scratch? Just wondering why our BCD file would not work for you…
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Observation:
I had to use the legacy boot to get it to PXE boot to undionly.kpxe.
AND
bcdboot C:\WINDOWS /s Z: /f UEFI.
While I didn’t lookup this exact command but doesn’t it appear you are fixing the UEFI boot files, yet you imaged the system in bios mode? Not sure if this could be the issue where images in bios mode but the deployed image is uefi??
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@george1421 Network booting legacy mode while still using hdd boot in UEFI is 100% feasible. It’s probably simpler (at least from my programming mindset currently) that it actually DOES do this as I can much more simply program around the MBR methods than I can for UEFI methods.
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@paused I tried to find out which NIC chip is in that USB NIC dongle but it seems impossible to get any detailed information. While you are in the debug shell, could you please run
lsusb
as well. Maybe we can find out more if we have the USB IDs. Thanks in advance! -
@Tom-Elliott Interesting. bios boot to lay down a uefi image. Then I would have to ask what happened to the uefi boot files that were restored with bcdboot (open question)?
The error code 0xc0000225 basically means it (the firmware) can’t hand of the booting process to the uefi boot files on the hard drive.Would this be a image capture or image deployment issue? Its too bad we don’t have a tool like ghost explorer or some way of mounting the image files to see what’s inside…
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@Sebastian-Roth
The NIC is a Realtek RTL8153
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@george1421
Re: Fog Imaging Dell XPS 13
Thanks for everyone’s input. I managed to image this particular model.I had to put the laptop into legacy mode and create a RAW image to capture the GPT partitions properly. It took six hours to upload do but it imaged successfully.
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@paused Hey its great you got this worked out.
From the FOG Project standpoint, I don’t think this is a success since you had to jump through many hoops to get a so-so results. But, since you are using fog 1.2.0 stable, I can understand why you are having issues. It would be interesting to see if you could spin up a new vm with fog 1.2.0 trunk on it and test again. My guess is that it will work correctly in efi mode, with gpt disks and win10.
But anyway good going with your capture.
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I also wouldn’t call a RAW image a success. It’s more of a stalemate.