Imaging Windows 10
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Is it possible to clone a windows 10 operating system at this time? If not, is there any news about when it may be possible. Has anyone tried it yet?
I have attempted to but it seems to want to just copy the recovery image which tends to be about 12gigs large. I tried all 4 types of images and I was able to start a RAW image, but I noticed that it was 256GB large, and take a whole lot of time to image. I am also concerned that this will make the new drive unusable since all 256GB will be “taken up”.
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@Andrew-Farney said:
whole lot of time to image. I am also concerned that this will make the new drive unusable since all 256GB will
What version of FOG are you on?
Win 10 imaging is not supported in 1.2.0 but should be fully supported in the 1.3.0 release (pending).
In FOG Trunk, there is an option for Windows 10 but I haven’t had the opportunity to try it out yet.
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I am using 1.2, I do not have Trunk, though.
Thanks for the information about the new release, definitely appreciated! If anyone else has any insight to offer, I am happy to hear it.
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@Andrew-Farney You can upgrade to FOG Trunk and try out the new feature? You’ll probably be pretty impressed with the majorly improved deployment times, too.
https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php/Upgrade_to_trunk
https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php/SVNI would suggest that you first export your db and hosts for safe keeping. This is just good practice, none of the developers are ever concerned about data loss… but, again… good practice…
FOG Configuration -> Configuration Save -> Export
Host Management -> Export -
testing with the available pre-release versions of Windows 10 have at this time had no issue with compatibility with fog.
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@Junkhacker said:
testing with the available pre-release versions of Windows 10 have at this time had no issue with compatibility with fog.
Same here, I’ve tested it today.
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Is there any update on Windows 10 capability, or version 1.3.0 being released?
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@dallenqns I don’t know when 1.3.0 will be released yet. I’m hoping to have everything much more stable, though I believe it’s pretty stable right now. Windows 10, however, should work by default even for 1.2.0 out of the box.
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Just checking in. My company (including myself and the rest of the IT crew) are discussing moving to FOG as our imaging deployment. One of the items of discussion is will it work with Windows 10. I found this question in your forum. Is there an answer for this?
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@eddiestuder I depends! I uploaded and deployed Win 10 using FOG 1.2.0 and FOG trunk without any issues BUT we have a pretty simple partition layout. MBR with only four primary partitions and using “non-resizable” image type. Having the same kind of simple setup you will be fine I am sure. But things like recovery partitions, GPT and other stuff might mess up. But if you are happy to give it a try and let us know if things go wrong (proper error report so we can reproduce the issue) we should be able to fix things pretty soon.
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@Sebastian-Roth Awesome. Ok I will let you know. Like I said we are still in the discussion process of moving to a new environment for imaging. I can say though it looks like we will at least give it the old college try with Fog. We have received positive feedback form the offices that have tried it out.
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@eddiestuder I’ve deployed re-sizable image types with GPT disks and Windows 8.1 from-scratch images without much trouble. As @Sebastian-Roth said, if you try with a manufacturer base image that you’ve simply modified, you will likely run into issues.
I personally can not understand why anyone would risk a security breach (lookup lenovo Superfish) just because they don’t want to build an image from scratch. I always build from scratch, and I never let manufacturer software manage manufacturer drivers, I install them manually through Windows (but that’s another story).
There are some tips here: https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php/Windows_8_UEFI_Imaging_Tips
I would bet those steps will apply verbatim to Windows 10. -
Hi all…
I’m about to attempt to image a Surface Pro 3 that’s been upgraded to Windows 10 from Windows 8.1. It has multiple partitions (5 in total) on the drive and the Disk format in Disk Management is showing as Basic.
Do I set the Image type in FOG to be Single Disk - Resizable? Or Multiple Partition Image - Disk Disk (Not Resizable)?
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@Toby777 said:
Resizable? Or Multiple Partition Image - Disk Disk (Not Resizable)?
Either can work - but you need FOG Trunk to make it work. See this thread: https://forums.fogproject.org/topic/5800/help-with-surface-pro-3-pxe
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Thanks @Wayne-Workman
I am currently running a trunk version so will test it out. -
@Toby777 Also, you might want to check out this thread. It’s pretty long, but in my opinion - this is one of the best threads we have in the entire FOG Forums.
https://forums.fogproject.org/topic/5732/dell-venue-8-pro-imaging-emmc/20?page=4
I would imagine that the things learned in there will apply to many tablet devices.
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@Wayne-Workman In relation to your manual installation of drivers… Windows 10 is able to automatically identify and install drivers for so many devices anymore, its hard to want to bother even adding drivers manually for most workstations.
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@need2 except lan. If windows doesn’t have drivers for network, you need to provide them something otherwise it can’t identify and download latest
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@Tom-Elliott True, if you are imaging odd systems, you absolutely want to specify LAN drivers. However the Windows Driver Framework supports so many classes of LAN adapters, chances are yours are already supported by built in Windows drivers. You should of course test a few systems before rolling out a new image.
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Is the FOG-Windows-Client compatible with Windows 10?