4372ch02.fm

Draft Document for Review November 15, 2007 3:27 pm

2.1 Introduction

The first step is to choose what to deploy. With Tivoli Provisioning Manager for OS Deployment, you can either clone a machine or you can create an unattended setup profile. The former option copies the operating system together with the installed software from a source machine to a destination machine. The latter performs an automatic installation of an operating system as though you are at the machine with the installation CDs.

We start this chapter with the steps to perform an unattended installation of a Windows XP profile with some associated device drivers that will be deployed on a bare metal machine. This scenario is most likely the way a retail’s IT organization would start their automated deployment of terminals unless they already had a template image suitable for cloning. Next, we describe the cloning process of a Windows XP machine and the customization process of the captured image to prepare for the mass deployment of the clone.

For both the unattended set up and the cloning deployments, we use Windows XP, Service Pack 2. In terms of Tivoli Provisioning Manager for OS Deployment we will do the following

￿Create an unattended Windows XP installation profile using Windows XP SP2 installation CDs

￿Clone a machine having the Windows XP operating system

For a target machine, we are using several different IBM SurePOS system types. They all meet the following minimum requirements listed below:

￿PXE-compliant bootrom, version 2.00 or higher

￿Minimal CPU: PentiumR type level

￿Minimal RAM memory: 128 MB

￿Video Electronics Standarts Association (VESA) release 2.0 or later, compliant Video BIOS to get high resolution (VGA fallback is always possible in case of incompatibility). However, Tivoli Provisioning Manager for OS Deployment can also work on machines without a monitor attached.

￿Either a traditional Advanced Technology Attachment (ATA) drive with Ultra™ Direct Memory access (DMA) support if speed is required or any BIOS-supported hard drive.

￿Desktop Management Interface (DMI) support for collecting hardware information, such as model and serial number.

The machines we used had at least 8 GB of diskspace since the Windows XP installation and the hidden partition used by Tivoli Provisioning Manager for OS

18Tivoli Provisioning Manager for OS Deployment in a Retail Environment

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IBM REDP-4372-00 manual Introduction