win: Allow for selection specific image

This is useful if the install.wim contains multiple Windows versions
(e.g., Home, Pro, ..), because the autounattend file will always select
index 1. With this mechanism, a variant different from the first one can
be automatically selected. imageSelection can be either an index (1-N)
or the image name wiminfo can list all images contained in a given WIM
file.

The default case is index 1, which has the same effect as before, with
the possibility of having a slightly smaller install.wim file because
all unwanted variants are discarded.
master
Markus Partheymüller 2021-02-25 10:06:54 +01:00
parent 90cc7b14a4
commit e8232ab89a
1 changed files with 14 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -5,6 +5,8 @@
, impureMode ? false , impureMode ? false
, installCommands ? [] , installCommands ? []
, users ? {} , users ? {}
# autounattend always installs index 1, so this default is backward-compatible
, imageSelection ? "1"
, ... , ...
}@attrs: }@attrs:
@ -106,10 +108,20 @@ let
mkdir -p win/nix-win mkdir -p win/nix-win
7z x -y ${windowsIso} -owin 7z x -y ${windowsIso} -owin
# Split image so it fits in FAT32 partition # Extract desired variant from install.wim
wimsplit win/sources/install.wim win/sources/install.swm 3072 # This is useful if the install.wim contains multiple Windows
# versions (e.g., Home, Pro, ..), because the autounattend file
# will always select index 1. With this mechanism, a variant different
# from the first one can be automatically selected.
# imageSelection can be either an index (1-N) or the image name
# wiminfo can list all images contained in a given WIM file
wimexport win/sources/install.wim "${imageSelection}" win/sources/install_selected.wim
rm win/sources/install.wim rm win/sources/install.wim
# Split image so it fits in FAT32 partition
wimsplit win/sources/install_selected.wim win/sources/install.swm 3072
rm win/sources/install_selected.wim
cp ${autounattend.autounattendXML} win/autounattend.xml cp ${autounattend.autounattendXML} win/autounattend.xml
virt-make-fs --partition --type=fat win/ usbimage.img virt-make-fs --partition --type=fat win/ usbimage.img