Sysprep

Sysprep is Microsoft's System Preparation Tool for Microsoft Windows operating system deployment.

Sysprep icon

History

Sysprep was originally introduced for use with Windows NT 4.0. Later versions introduced for Windows 2000 and Windows XP are available for download from Microsoft and included in the Windows CD. Windows Vista marks the first version of Microsoft's NT operating system to include a hardware abstraction layer (HAL) independent version of Sysprep in the "out of box" installation.

Purpose

Desktop deployment is typically performed via disk cloning applications. Sysprep can be used to prepare an operating system for disk cloning and restoration via a disk image.

Windows operating system installations include many unique elements per installation that need to be "generalized" before capturing and deploying a disk image to multiple computers. Some of these elements include:

Sysprep seeks to solve these issues by allowing for the generation of new computer names, unique SIDs, and custom driver cache databases during the Sysprep process.

Administrators can use tools such as SetupMgr.exe (Windows XP) or the Windows Automated Installation Kit (Windows Vista/7/Server 2008) to generate answer files that Sysprep will process on new computer deployments.

Alternatives to Sysprep

Mark Russinovich of Sysinternals created a partial alternative to Sysprep, named NewSID, in 1997. However, after his own further analysis and research, Russinovich concluded that the issue with having duplicate SIDs was unnecessary and arranged NewSID's retirement.[2]

References

  1. "Force Sysprep to Prompt for a Computer Name During Mini-Setup in Windows XP". Capitalhead. Retrieved June 16, 2009. External link in |publisher= (help)
  2. Russinovich, Mark (November 3, 2009). "The Machine SID Duplication Myth (and Why Sysprep Matters)". Mark's Blog. Microsoft. Retrieved February 21, 2012. External link in |work= (help)

External links

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