Michael,

 

Thanks - so will it be upgradable using the Windows Store release of Windows
8.1, or does this limitation cover that as well?

 

Cheers,

Trevor Sullivan 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Michael Niehaus
Sent: Friday, September 20, 2013 5:20 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [MDT-OSD] Windows 8.0 to 8.1: Native VHD Boot

 

You can't upgrade native VHDs or Windows To Go sticks.  

 

The VHD limitation is listed at the bottom of this page:

 

http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd440865%28WS.10%29.aspx#BKMK_res
t

 

Upgrading the operating system booted from a VHD. If you boot from a VHD,
you cannot upgrade the Windows version in the VHD to a newer version.

 

Thanks,

-Michael

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Trevor Sullivan
Sent: Friday, September 20, 2013 1:38 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [MDT-OSD] Windows 8.0 to 8.1: Native VHD Boot

 

Hey folks,

 

I'm a little confused with what's going on around the Windows 8.1 stuff.
Initially I thought this was going to be analogous to a Service Pack, since
after all, it's still called Windows 8. Unfortunately, I went to upgrade my
workstations when the RTM media became available, and got an error saying
that I couldn't upgrade a Native VHD boot system.

 

Has anyone else run into this problem? The Microsoft TechNet documentation
for Native VHD Boot doesn't say anything about the inability to perform
operating system upgrades, otherwise I probably would not have gone down
that route. Of course, since the information wasn't there, I couldn't have
possibly made that decision a year ago, when I initially installed Windows
8.

 

Cheers,

Trevor Sullivan

 

I realize this document is for Windows 7, but similarly applicable:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/gg318048(v=ws.10).aspx

 

Limitations

The following are limitations with native VHD boot in Windows 7 and Windows
Server 2008 R2:

*       BitLocker. Although you can place a VHD on a partition that is
enabled with BitLockerT Drive Encryption, it is not possible to boot from
that VHD. Enabling BitLocker on the operating system within the VHD is also
not a supported configuration.
*       Manual image creation. Creating VHD images is still a manual
process. However, you can configure VHDs to align with the existing image
engineering methods in your organization (creating a standard image, editing
its configuration, and so on). For example, you can apply an image to a VHD
with the same method as you would apply it to a hard disk drive. 
*       No setup configuration during deployment. There is no setup support
while deploying a Windows image to a VHD. That is, you can only apply an
image directly to a VHD; you cannot use setup to configure the operating
system to be installed on a specific partition. 
*       Location of differencing VHDs. When using differencing VHDs, all VHD
files (the parent files and the differencing VHD itself) must be stored on
the same partition.
*       Supported editions. You can only use VHDs that contain Windows 7
Enterprise or Windows 7 Ultimate edition for native VHD boot. However, all
editions of Windows Server 2008 R2 are supported. 
*       Hibernation. You cannot hibernate an operating system that runs on a
VHD. However, sleep functionality is available.
*       Windows Experience Index. The Windows Experience Index cannot be
calculated for VHDs that are configured for native boot because of the way
disk performance is measured. This means some features, such as the AeroR
desktop experience, will not be automatically configured based on the index
of the VHD's operating system. However, you can use the Winsat command-line
tool to manually configure these indexes, except for the index for the disk
data transfer rate. 

 


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