MKWINPEIMG(1) | User Commands | MKWINPEIMG(1) |
mkwinpeimg - Make a customized bootable image of Windows PE
mkwinpeimg [OPTIONS] IMAGE
mkwinpeimg is able to make a bootable image of Windows PE by taking files from a mounted Windows installation ISO image (Vista or later) or the mounted ISO image for the Windows Automated Installation Kit (WAIK) or the WAIK supplement. The --windows-dir and --waik-dir options are used to specify the locations of these mounted ISOs. You only need one or the other. The files that mkwinpeimg will retrieve are boot.wim, bootmgr, boot.sdi, and bcd. If making an ISO image, the file etfsboot.com is also retrieved. Microsoft owns the rights to these files and they are not distributed with wimlib.
mkwinpeimg can make two types of bootable images. The default is to make a bootable disk image. The image is not partitioned and is formatted into a FAT filesystem. syslinux(1) is required to make this type of image, as it is used to chainload bootmgr. Also, mtools(1) is required so that the FAT filesystem can be created without root privileges.
The other type of bootable image that mkwinpeimg can make is a bootable ISO image. To make this type of image, give the --iso option. mkisofs(1) is required to make this type of image. In --iso mode, you can specify IMAGE as "-" to write the ISO image to standard output.
If you make a disk image, you could put it on a USB drive, and if you make an ISO image, you could put it on a CD. In addition, both types of images can be loaded by the SYSLINUX or PXELINUX bootloaders using the MEMDISK module.
Windows PE itself is contained in the boot.wim file. mkwinpeimg can modify this file before embedding it in a bootable image. The most useful modification is to specify an executable or batch file for Windows PE to execute as soon as it starts up. Use the --start-script FILE option to specify such a file. You may also add arbitrary files to boot.wim by putting them in a directory, then specifying the --overlay DIR option. However, for more extensive modifications, consider modifying the boot.wim file separately using wimmountrw(1) or wimupdate(1), then providing it to mkwinpeimg using the --wim option.
mkwinpeimg can also make only a modified boot.wim, rather than a bootable ISO or disk image, if the --only-wim option is given.
Create a bootable disk image of Windows PE from the Windows (Vista or later) installation media mounted on /media/windows:
mkwinpeimg --windows-dir=/media/windows winpe.img
Create a bootable ISO of Windows PE from the WAIK (or WAIK supplement) mounted on /media/waik, and add all the files in "winpe_overlay" to Windows PE's filesystem:
mkwinpeimg --iso --waik-dir=/media/waik --overlay=winpe_overlay winpe.iso
Create a bootable image of Windows PE from the Windows installation media mounted on /media/windows, add and make it execute "install.cmd" when it starts up. In this example the image is created in the root directory of the TFTP server for network booting.
mkwinpeimg --start-script=install.cmd --windows-dir=/media/windows /var/tftpboot/winpe.img
Microsoft's licenses may limit the things that Windows PE can be used for, and they may limit your rights to redistribute customized versions of Windows PE.
Report bugs to https://wimlib.net/forums/.
September 2022 | wimlib 1.13.6 |