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In this article. Overview of Windows Autopilot. This topic provides an overview of Windows Autopilot deployment, a new zero-touch method for deploying Windows 10 in the enterprise. Windows 10 upgrade paths. This topic provides information about support for upgrading directly to Windows 10 from a previous operating system.
Windows 10 edition upgrade. This topic provides information about support for upgrading from one edition of Windows 10 to another. Feedback will be sent to Microsoft: By pressing the submit button, your feedback will be used to improve Microsoft products and services.
Privacy policy. Windows Deployment Services WDS is a suite of components that enable the deployment of Windows operating systems, particularly Windows Vista and later and Windows Server and later.
You can use it to set up new computers using network-based installations. The PXE server contains the core networking capability. This provider model enables development of custom PXE solutions while continuing to use the core PXE server networking code base. This phase is very resource-intensive and may fail if insufficient resources are available on your server running Hyper-V. The Windows Deployment Services server service is not cluster-aware.
However, you can run multiple WDS servers in a network to provide fault-tolerance and load balancing. You can manage Windows Deployment Services remotely by installing the Windows Deployment Services server role on a local server and then using that server to connect to the remote server in the data center or you can use the Windows PowerShell cmdlets for Windows Deployment Services to manage a remote server.
We recommend that you deploy two WDS servers at a minimum and then additional servers to increase redundancy for higher availability. This version of DISM supports servicing Windows Server and earlier boot images but does not support later versions of boot images. Fabrikam, Inc. It is a small business with a single office. The computers are linked by a MBps Ethernet connection. Monica is given the task of moving all of the client computers to the Windows 7 or Windows 8.
It is important that she makes the switch as quickly as possible so that office workers can continue their work. In the past, she deployed a new operating system one computer at a time. This took her around 45 minutes per computer almost 19 hours to set up the operating system on all the client computers. For almost three days, Monica was unavailable to work on anything else.
Then she would spend almost as much time installing the applications on each computer. Monica is the only IT professional at Fabrikam, which means that she also must help teach users about the new operating system. Therefore, it is important that she minimizes the amount of time she spends on deployment.
To accomplish this, Monica chooses to use Windows Deployment Services because she can:. Adds the Boot. Adds the Install. Uses the MMC snap-in to create a capture image from the boot image she added in step 3. This image contains Windows PE and a wizard that will capture her custom image into a. All users at Fabrikam have the same desktop hardware, which was purchased from a single vendor.
To deploy a standard image to the computers, Monica does the following:. Boots a reference computer from the network and installs the Install. Uses the Image Capture Wizard to recapture the operating system and upload it directly to the Windows Deployment Services server. Now, Monica is ready to install the new operating systems. She does not need to migrate any user data, because all of the employees store their user data on a server rather than on their hard disks.
She reboots a client computer and then presses F12 to perform a network boot. This boots her into the Boot. She selects the disk partition and image she wants, and then the installation begins. While waiting for the image to be applied to the first computer, Monica boots another computer and starts the same process on that one. Northwind Traders is a shipping firm with three offices: a central office in Tooth City, and branch offices in the towns of Brushville and Flosston.
His responsibility is maintaining the client computers used by the company's employees. These are mostly desktop computers, but the sales force uses laptops for customer presentations. There are computers in the central office in Tooth City, and 25 each in the Brushville and Flosston offices. Each site has an internal network running at MB per second MBps , and the branch sites are connected to the Tooth City office by a T1 line.
Ron has three Windows Deployment Services servers at the Tooth City office and one in each of the branch offices, which are administered remotely.
Previously, this would have involved many expensive trips to Brushville and Flosston, and it would have taken Ron several weeks to complete. He wants to use Windows Deployment Services to deploy Windows remotely; however, company policy dictates that there can be only one DHCP server on the corporate network, and this server is located at the Tooth City office.
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