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    Utilizing Postscripts (Rename, JoinDomain, Drivers, Snapins)

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    • Lee RowlettL
      Lee Rowlett Developer
      last edited by

      your fog.postdownload is missing: #!/bin/sh

      also you’ve changed path in fog.drivers to /images (sensible option using existing fileshare!)

      but your fog.postdownload is still trying to mount /fog so you can hash out/remove that, i can’t remember without checking but /images is still mounted so don’t even need “remount” it.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • M
        Mikael
        last edited by

        Thanks, I just saw that! Sorry. I will run some more tests now

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Lee RowlettL
          Lee Rowlett Developer
          last edited by

          remove/hash these lines:

          mkdir /fog &>/dev/null
          mount -o nolock,proto=tcp $storageip:/fog/ /fog
          dots “Mounting Device”;

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • M
            Mikael
            last edited by

            yeah, I was using the already mounted images folder for my drivers. I see now that those other lines are not in use either, thanks

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • G
              gwhitfield
              last edited by gwhitfield

              I’m attempting to use this in our image deployment to push drivers and am having some trouble that is hopefully not difficult to overcome, I’m just not real script savvy. 😞 I have placed my drivers in the /images/Drivers folder and my fog.postdownload is as follows:

              
              #!/bin/sh
              if [ $osid == "5" -o $osid == "6" -o $osid == "7" ]; then #only handling Win7/8/8.1
                  clearScreen;
                  mkdir /ntfs &>/dev/null
                  ntfs-3g -o force,rw $part /ntfs
                  # mkdir /fog &>/dev/null
                  # mount -o nolock,proto=tcp $storageip:/fog/ /fog 
                  # dots "Mounting Device";
                  if [ "$?" = "0" ]; then
                      echo "Done";
                      . ${postdownpath}fog.drivers 
                    # . ${postdownpath}fog.ad 
                    # . ${postdownpath}fog.snapins
                      umount /ntfs; # unmount when all is done :-)
                  else
                      echo "Failed To Mount Device";
                      sleep 30;
                  fi
              fi
              

              The computer responds with :

              ntfs-3g: No mountpoint is specified

              gives lots of usage instructions and options then

              Failed to mount device

              then restarts after about 30 seconds.

              My fog.drivers file is as follows:

              #!/bin/sh
               
              ceol=`tput el`;
              machine=`dmidecode -s system-product-name`; # Gets machine model
              machine="${machine%"${machine##*[![:space:]]}"}" #Removes Trailing Space
              #system64="/ntfs/Windows/SysWOW64/regedit.exe"; # dirty way to determine if it's 64bit or not
              #if [ -f "$system64" ]; then
              #    setarch="x64"
              #else
              #    setarch="x86"
              #fi
              #############################################
              #this is not section necessary needed, it's just to make the path "human readable"
              #rather than using osid for filepath
              if [ $osid == "5" ]; then
                  osn="Win7"
              elif [ $osid == "7" ]; then
                  osn="Win8.1"
              elif [ $osid == "9" ]; then
                  osn="Win10"
              fi
              #############################################
              dots "Preparing Drivers";
              # below creates local folder on imaged pc
              #this can be anywhere you want just remember
              #to make sure it matches throughout!
              mkdir /ntfs/Windows/DRV &>/dev/null;
              echo -n "In Progress";
               
              #there's 3 ways you could handle this,
              #driver cab file, extracted driver files or both
              #so on the server put extracted driver files to match below folder tree
              #i.e. Model Latitude E5410, Windows 7 x86 image would be:
              #/images/Drivers/Win7/Latitude E5410/x86
              rsync -aqz "/images/Drivers/$osn/${machine}/*.*" /ntfs/Windows/DRV &>/dev/null;
               
              #if you wanted to use driver.cab use this line below.
              #i.e. /images/Drivers/Win7/Latitude E5410/E5410-Win7-A07-KTT4G.CAB
              #cabextract -d /ntfs/Windows/DRV "/images/Drivers/$osn/${machine}"/*.CAB &>/dev/null;
               
              #if you wanted to mix both cab and extracted use these next two lines:
              # rsync -aqz --exclude='*.CAB' "/images/Drivers/$osn/${machine}/$setarch" /ntfs/Windows/DRV &>/dev/null;
              # cabextract -d /ntfs/Windows/DRV "/images/Drivers/$osn/${machine}"/*.CAB &>/dev/null;
               
              #this next bit adds driver location on pc to devicepath in registry (so sysprep uses it to reference)
              # remember to make devicepath= match the path you've used locally
              #also do not remove %SystemRoot%\inf
              #and to add more locations just use ; in between each location
              regfile="/ntfs/Windows/System32/config/SOFTWARE"
              key="\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\DevicePath"
              devpath="%SystemRoot%\inf;%SystemRoot%\DRV";
              reged -e "$regfile" &>/dev/null <<EOFREG
              ed $key
              $devpath
              q
              y
              EOFREG
              echo -e "\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b${ceol}Done"; # this just removes "In Progress and replaces it with done :-)"
              

              Would you be able to assist?
              Thanks,
              Gregg W.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Lee RowlettL
                Lee Rowlett Developer
                last edited by

                Hi Gregg,

                What version of fog are you using?

                G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • G
                  gwhitfield @Lee Rowlett
                  last edited by

                  @Lee-Rowlett Sorry,trunk version 7709 i believe

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • Lee RowlettL
                    Lee Rowlett Developer
                    last edited by Lee Rowlett

                    @gwhitfield as you’re using /images as your driver location you do not need to mount a share as it’s already mounted, so /fog mount is irrelevant to you. as you’re only doing one arch or having both drivers on the image, i’m assuming as you commented it out, make sure your folder layout for drivers matches this for example a Windows 7 build OptiPlex 7010 would be:
                    “/images/Drivers/Win7/OptiPlex 7010” and all your drivers for the 7010 would be within that folder

                    Try these and let me know how you get on 🙂

                    fog.postdownload:

                    #!/bin/bash
                    case $osid in
                        [5-7]|9)
                    	clearScreen
                    	getHardDisk
                    	getPartitions $hd
                    	if [[ ! -d /ntfs ]]; then
                    	    mkdir -p /ntfs >/dev/null 2>&1
                    	    [[ ! $? -eq 0 ]] && echo " * Failed to Mount Device"
                    	fi
                    	for part in $parts; do
                    	    umount /ntfs >/dev/null 2>&1
                    	    ntfs-3g -o remove_hiberfile,rw $part /ntfs >/dev/null 2>&1
                    	    [[ ! $? -eq 0 ]] && continue
                    	done
                    	. ${postdownpath}fog.drivers
                    	umount /fog /ntfs /images >/dev/null 2>&1
                    	;;
                    esac
                    

                    fog.drivers:

                    #!/bin/bash
                    ceol=`tput el`;
                    machine=`dmidecode -s system-product-name`;
                    machine="${machine%"${machine##*[![:space:]]}"}"
                    if [ $osid == "5" ]; then
                        osn="Win7"
                    elif [ $osid == "7" ]; then
                        osn="Win8.1"
                    elif [ $osid == "9" ]; then
                        osn="Win10"
                    fi
                    dots "Preparing Drivers";
                    mkdir /ntfs/Windows/DRV &>/dev/null;
                    echo -n "In Progress";
                    rsync -aqz "/images/Drivers/$osn/${machine}" /ntfs/Windows/DRV &>/dev/null;
                    regfile="/ntfs/Windows/System32/config/SOFTWARE"
                    key="\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\DevicePath"
                    devpath="%SystemRoot%\inf;%SystemRoot%\DRV";
                    reged -e "$regfile" &>/dev/null <<EOFREG
                    ed $key
                    $devpath
                    q
                    y
                    EOFREG
                    echo -e "\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b${ceol}Done";
                    
                    G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • G
                      gwhitfield @Lee Rowlett
                      last edited by gwhitfield

                      @Lee-Rowlett Seems like I’m very close. The image task completes and I get the following just before the machine restarts. Unfortunately no drivers are copied so the image fails to bootup since there’s no drivers in it:

                      /images/postdownloadscripts/fog.postdownload: line 2: syntax error near unexpected token '$' in\r''
                      
                      'images/postdownloadscripts/fog.postdownload: line 2: 'case $osid in
                      * Mounting directory ............................Done
                      * Mounting directory ............................Done
                      * Changing hostname .............................Done
                      * Task complete
                      * Updating Database..............................Done
                      * Rebooting system as task is complete
                      Reboot: Restarting system
                      
                      
                      Lee RowlettL 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Lee RowlettL
                        Lee Rowlett Developer @gwhitfield
                        last edited by Lee Rowlett

                        can you send me both your fog.postdownload and fog.drivers file and i’ll take a look - (i mean physically send, not paste the code on here :-))

                        G 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • G
                          gwhitfield @Lee Rowlett
                          last edited by gwhitfield

                          @Lee-Rowlett Sure, here’s the goods:

                          Screenshot of folders in /images
                          0_1464287477451_upload-d7bd4017-8d6d-4290-9f0e-8f3f288559ed

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • G
                            gwhitfield @Lee Rowlett
                            last edited by

                            @Lee-Rowlett 1_1464287927234_fog.postdownload 0_1464287927232_fog.drivers

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • G
                              gwhitfield @Lee Rowlett
                              last edited by gwhitfield

                              @Lee-Rowlett Success!! Evidently my fog.postdownload and fog.drivers files got corrupted by editing in Notepad. Thank you for sending me a clean version! Working like a champ. Also for purpose of posterity or future users, the name of the folder for each individual hardware type needs to exactly match the spelling and case of the “System Product” field in the “Inventory” for that machine (or type of machine):
                              0_1464350550359_upload-6cb5345e-fa39-41cf-b8da-32753a7d9c810_1464350652931_upload-02508467-b071-4c00-82b5-4abe5b337023

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • Greg PlamondonG
                                Greg Plamondon Testers @Lee Rowlett
                                last edited by

                                @Lee-Rowlett

                                I gotten this to make the edits to the unattend.xml but it still doesnt join the domain. Do you have a Windows10 Unattend.xml that i can compare where I went wrong?

                                Lee RowlettL 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • Lee RowlettL
                                  Lee Rowlett Developer @Greg Plamondon
                                  last edited by

                                  @Greg-Plamondon where are you calling the unattend.xml from and how are u verifying the unattend.xml is beinf edited correctly? Also are is it x86 or x64?

                                  Tom ElliottT Greg PlamondonG 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • Tom ElliottT
                                    Tom Elliott @Lee Rowlett
                                    last edited by

                                    @Lee-Rowlett I remoted in and took a look. Cleaned up the scripts a lot, with Gregs help (-- @Greg-Plamondon I grabbed some credit but it still mostly goes to you --). I asked Greg to post the finished scripts after generalizing them so his environment is safe. Hopefully you will like them, and others as well.

                                    Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG! Get in contact with me (chat bubble in the top right corner) if you want to join in.

                                    Web GUI issue? Please check apache error (debian/ubuntu: /var/log/apache2/error.log, centos/fedora/rhel: /var/log/httpd/error_log) and php-fpm log (/var/log/php*-fpm.log)

                                    Please support FOG if you like it: https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php/Support_FOG

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • Greg PlamondonG
                                      Greg Plamondon Testers @Lee Rowlett
                                      last edited by Greg Plamondon

                                      @Lee-Rowlett The unattend.xml is in the C:\Windows\Panther directory. I removed the option from my setupcomplete.cmd that deletes the unattend.xml, so after it boots I can take a look at it and the edits were made to it. Should I be editing the C:\Windows\Sytstems32\Sysprep\unattend.xml instead of the Windows\Panther ?

                                      george1421G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • george1421G
                                        george1421 Moderator @Greg Plamondon
                                        last edited by

                                        @Greg-Plamondon it should be in one or the other place. Panther is checked first. When you sysprep’d where did you tell sysprep to look for the file?

                                        Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!

                                        Greg PlamondonG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • Greg PlamondonG
                                          Greg Plamondon Testers @Lee Rowlett
                                          last edited by Greg Plamondon

                                          @Lee-Rowlett Thanks for the base scripts and ideas behind them.
                                          @Tom-Elliott Thanks for helping me adjusting them for my needs.
                                          @Junkhacker Thanks for the fog log script, you dont know how many time I have forgotten to delete the damn fog.log
                                          Here are the scripts that @Tom-Elliott helped me with.

                                          fog.postdownload:

                                          #!/bin/bash
                                          . /usr/share/fog/lib/funcs.sh
                                          [[ -z $postdownpath ]] && postdownpath="/images/postdownloadscripts/"
                                          case $osid in
                                              5|6|7|9)
                                                  clear
                                                  [[ ! -d /ntfs ]] && mkdir -p /ntfs
                                                  getHardDisk
                                                  if [[ -z $hd ]]; then
                                                      handleError "Could not find hdd to use"
                                                      
                                                  fi
                                                  getPartitions $hd
                                                  for part in $parts; do
                                                      true
                                                  done
                                                  dots "Mounting partition $part"
                                                  ntfs-3g -o force,rw $part /ntfs >/dev/null 2>&1
                                                  if [[ ! $? -eq 0 ]]; then
                                                      echo "Failed"
                                                      debugPause
                                                      handleError "Failed to mount $part ($0)\n    Args: $*"
                                                  fi
                                                  echo "Done"
                                                  debugPause
                                                  . ${postdownpath}fog.log
                                                  . ${postdownpath}fog.drivers
                                                  . ${postdownpath}fog.ad
                                                  umount /ntfs
                                                  ;;
                                              *)
                                                  echo "Invalid OS"
                                                  debugPause
                                                  return
                                                  ;;
                                          esac
                                          

                                          fog.ad :

                                          #!/bin/bash
                                          hostadpwd="ADPASSWDHERRE"; #only downside to this method- this is the plain ad password
                                          unattend="/ntfs/Windows/Panther/unattend.xml";
                                          [[ ! -f $unattend ]] && return
                                          dots "Preparing Sysprep File"
                                          rm -f /ntfs/Windows/System32/sysprep/unattend.xml >/dev/null 2>&1
                                          if [[ ! $? -eq 0 ]]; then
                                              echo "Failed"
                                              debugPause
                                              handleError "Failed to remove original unattend file"
                                          fi
                                          echo "Done"
                                          debugPause
                                          dots "Writing Computer Name"
                                          sed -i "/ComputerName/s/*/$hostname/g" $unattend >/dev/null 2>&1
                                          if [[ ! $? -eq 0 ]]; then
                                              echo "Failed"
                                              debugPause
                                              handleError "Failed to update originating unattend file"
                                          fi
                                          echo "Done"
                                          echo "ComputerName set to $hostname"
                                          debugPause
                                          [[ -z $addomain ]] && return
                                          dots "Set PC to join the domain"
                                          sed -i "/<JoinWorkgroup>/d" $unattend >/dev/null 2>&1
                                          if [[ ! $? -eq 0 ]]; then
                                              echo "Failed"
                                              debugPause
                                              handleError "Failed to remove the Workgroup setter"
                                          fi
                                          sed -i \
                                              -e "s|<Password></Password>|<Password>${hostadpwd}</Password>|g" \
                                              -e "s|<Username></Username>|<Username>${addomain}\\\\${aduser}</Username>|g" \
                                              -e "s|<MachineObjectOU></MachineObjectOU>|<MachineObjectOU>${adou}</MachineObjectOU>|g" \
                                              -e "s|<JoinDomain></JoinDomain>|<JoinDomain>${addomain}</JoinDomain>|g" $unattend >/dev/null 2>&1
                                          if [[ ! $? -eq 0 ]]; then
                                              echo "Failed"
                                              debugPause
                                              handleError "Failed to update user, pass, ou, and domain setter"
                                          fi
                                          echo "Done"
                                          debugPause
                                          

                                          fog.drivers:
                                          For some reason Lenovo doesn’t play like most PC manufactures. I had to use the dmidecode variable of system-version to populate what the actual model of the PC was, with system-product-name it was returning the numerical machine type or serial number?

                                          #!/bin/bash
                                          ceol=`tput el`;
                                          manu=`dmidecode -s system-manufacturer`;
                                          case $manu in
                                              [Ll][Ee][Nn][Oo][Vv][Oo])
                                                  machine=$(dmidecode -s system-version)
                                                  ;;
                                              *[Dd][Ee][Ll][Ll]*)
                                                  machine=$(dmidecode -s system-product-name) #pruduct is typo, just realized sorry :(
                                                  ;;
                                              *)
                                                  machine=$(dmidecode -s system-product-name) # Technically, we can remove the dell one as it's the "default"
                                                  ;;
                                          esac
                                          [[ -z $machine ]] && return #assuming you want it to break if it is not lenovo or dell?
                                          machine="${machine%"${machine##*[![:space:]]}"}" #Removes Trailing Spaces
                                          system64="/ntfs/Windows/SysWOW64/regedit.exe" # sloppy detect if 64bit or not
                                          [[ ! -f $system64 ]] && setarch="x86" || setarch="x64"
                                          #############################################
                                          #this is not section necessary needed, it's just to make the path "human readable"
                                          #rather than using osid for filepath
                                          case $osid in
                                              5) osn="Win7" ;;
                                              6) osn="Win8" ;;
                                              7) osn="Win8.1" ;;
                                              9) osn="Win10" ;;
                                          esac
                                          #############################################
                                          dots "Preparing Drivers"
                                          # below creates local folder on imaged pc
                                          # this can be anywhere you want just remember
                                          # to make sure it matches throughout!
                                          clientdriverpath="/ntfs/Windows/DRV"
                                          remotedriverpath="/images/drivers/$osn/$machine"
                                          [[ ! -d $clientdriverpath ]] && mkdir -p "$clientdriverpath" >/dev/null 2>&1
                                          echo -n "In Progress"
                                          #there's 3 ways you could handle this,
                                          #driver cab file, extracted driver files or both
                                          #so on the server put extracted driver files to match below folder tree
                                          #i.e. Model Latitude E5410, Windows 7 x86 image would be:
                                          #/fog/Drivers/Win7/Latitude E5410/x86
                                          rsync -aqz "$remotedriverpath" "$clientdriverpath" >/dev/null 2>&1
                                          [[ ! $? -eq 0 ]] && handleError "Failed to download driver information"
                                          
                                          #if you wanted to use driver.cab use this line below.
                                          #i.e. /fog/Drivers/Win7/Latitude E5410/E5410-Win7-A07-KTT4G.CAB
                                          #cabextract -d "$clientdriverpath" "$remotedriverpath/*.CAB" >/dev/null 2>&1
                                          
                                          #if you wanted to mix both cab and extracted use these:
                                          #rsync -aqz --exclude='*.CAB' "$remotedriverpath" "$clientdriverpath" >/dev/null 2>&1
                                          #[[ ! $? -eq 0 ]] && handleError "Failed to sync cab and non-cab drivers"
                                          #cabextract -d "$clientdriverpath" "$remotedriverpath/*.CAB" >/dev/null 2>&1
                                          #[[ ! $? -eq 0 ]] && handleError "Failed to extract cab files"
                                          
                                          #this next bit adds driver location on pc to devicepath in registry (so sysprep uses it to reference)
                                          # remember to make devicepath= match the path you've used locally
                                          #also do not remove %SystemRoot%\inf
                                          #and to add more locations just use ; in between each location
                                          regfile="/ntfs/Windows/System32/config/SOFTWARE"
                                          key="\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\DevicePath"
                                          devpath="%SystemRoot%\inf;%SystemRoot%\DRV";
                                          reged -e "$regfile" &>/dev/null <<EOFREG
                                          ed $key
                                          $devpath
                                          q
                                          y
                                          EOFREG
                                          echo -e "\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b${ceol}Done"; # this just removes "In Progress and replaces it with done :-)"
                                          

                                          fog.log:

                                          #!/bin/bash
                                          #deletes fog.log for Windows 7, 8, or 8.1 or 10
                                          #Greg Grammon (Junkhacker)
                                          #
                                           
                                          #funcs.sh allows us to use the functions that are used in the rest of
                                          #fog i.e. "dots" and use the vars already in place i.e. "$part" and "$osid"
                                          . /usr/share/fog/lib/funcs.sh;
                                          case $osid in
                                              [5-7]|9)
                                                  [[ -f /ntfs/fog.log ]] && rm /ntfs/fog.log >/dev/null 2>&1 || true
                                                  if [[ ! $? -eq 0 ]]; then
                                                      echo "Failed"
                                                      debugPause
                                                      handleError "Failed to remove original fog.log file"
                                                  fi
                                                  ;;
                                              *) return ;;
                                          esac
                                          

                                          Thanks For all the Help Tom and Lee

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • Greg PlamondonG
                                            Greg Plamondon Testers @george1421
                                            last edited by

                                            @george1421 said in Utilizing Postscripts (Rename, JoinDomain, Drivers, Snapins):

                                            @Greg-Plamondon it should be in one or the other place. Panther is checked first. When you sysprep’d where did you tell sysprep to look for the file?

                                            i didnt i just ran sysprep.exe /oobe /generalize /reboot

                                            george1421G Q 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
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