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Wednesday 26 June 2013

Creating a Windows 2 Go USB device

So our IT Director managed to break his Windows 2 Go (W2G) pen I created for him a few months back.  I kicked myself that I hadn't blogged the steps back then so as I've had to recreate it I'm taking the opportunity to blog it now.

The Windows 8 W2G GUI didn't let me see my .wim - I'm guessing this is due to the size of it.  I opted to build it via Powershell which worked a charm.

I used a Windows8 wim that I'd captured from our corporate build - I already have this so this is one of my assumptions that you will have it too.

I also have an approved Windows 2 Go USB pen (Kingston DataTraveler Workspace 32GB)

These are the devices currently supported by Microsoft:



Also you will need to change your BIOS boot order to boot to USB first.

Instructions

Assumptions:
  • You already have Windows 8 image (.wim) file - OOTB or captured.
  • You have an approved USB device from the list above.
1. From a Windows 8 machine fire up an elevated Powershell prompt.
2. The following commands will prepare your USB device to be used with W2G.  Type them in the Powershell window:

#The following command will set $Disk to all USB drives with >20 GB of storage

$Disk = Get-Disk | Where-Object {$_.Path -match "USBSTOR" -and $_.Size -gt 20Gb -and -not $_.IsBoot }

#Clear the disk. This will delete any data on the disk. (and will fail if the disk is not yet initialized. If that happens, simply continue with ‘New-Partition…) Validate that this is the correct disk that you want to completely erase.

#

# To skip the confirmation prompt, append –confirm:$False

Clear-Disk –InputObject $Disk[0] -RemoveData

# This command initializes a new MBR disk

Initialize-Disk –InputObject $Disk[0] -PartitionStyle MBR

# This command creates a 350 MB system partition

$SystemPartition = New-Partition –InputObject $Disk[0] -Size (350MB) -IsActive

# This formats the volume with a FAT32 Filesystem

# To skip the confirmation dialog, append –Confirm:$False

Format-Volume -NewFileSystemLabel "UFD-System" -FileSystem FAT32 `

-Partition $SystemPartition

# This command creates the Windows volume using the maximum space available on the drive. The Windows To Go drive should not be used for other file storage.

$OSPartition = New-Partition –InputObject $Disk[0] -UseMaximumSize

Format-Volume -NewFileSystemLabel "UFD-Windows" -FileSystem NTFS `

-Partition $OSPartition

# This command assigns drive letters to the new drive, the drive letters chosen should not already be in use.

Set-Partition -InputObject $SystemPartition -NewDriveLetter "S"

Set-Partition -InputObject $OSPartition -NewDriveLetter "W"

# This command toggles the NODEFAULTDRIVELETTER flag on the partition which

prevents drive letters being assigned to either partition when inserted into a different machine.

Set-Partition -InputObject $OSPartition -NoDefaultDriveLetter $TRUE


3. Now we need that Windows 8 image.  For the sake of this example we'll say the image is on C:\ and it's called windows8.wim.
We will use DISM (Deployment Image Servicing Management) to aplpy the image to the USB drive - it could take 30 mins or longer so time to sti back and enjoy a brew...

dism /apply-image /imagefile:c:\windows8.wim /index:1 /applydir:W:\

4. Now we will use BCDBOOT to move the boot componants to the sys partition.

W:\Windows\System32\bcdboot W:\Windows /f ALL /s S:

5. To prevent the native HDD from being fired up whilst within W2G we need a policy in place.  Here's one I prepared earlier - copy the san_policy.xml file to the root of your USB device: http://sdrv.ms/149ZHV1

6. Apply the policy file we just created by running this command:

Dism.exe /Image:W:\ /Apply-Unattend:W:\san_policy.xml

7. Create an answer file (unattend.xml) that disables the use of Windows Recovery Environment with Windows To Go. You can use the code from the sample here to create a new answer file or you can paste it into an existing answer file (or just use the file itself):

8. Once the answer file has been saved, copy unattend.xml into the sysprep folder on the Windows To Go drive (for example, W:\Windows\System32\sysprep\)
Note
Setup unattend files are processed based on their location. Setup will place a temporary unattend file into the %systemroot%\panther folder which is the first location that setup will check for installation information.  You should make sure that folder does not contain a previous version of an unattend.xml file to ensure that the one you just created is used.


Now boot to your new shiney Windows2Go boot device :)

docN


6 comments:

  1. I loved the content, I found it very relevant!
    Highly recommend!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I finally found what I was looking for! Many thanks and congratulations for the blog!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I liked the blog, thank you for sharing this content, very good

    ReplyDelete

Let me know if this helped.

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