Ah, top stuff, let me have a look at that, cheers!

Sent from my Blackberry, which may be an antique but delivers email RELIABLY

-----Original Message-----
From: Webster <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 7 Mar 2013 15:34:22 
To: NT System Admin Issues<[email protected]>
Reply-To: "NT System Admin Issues" 
<[email protected]>Subject: RE: Normalizing a disk image

http://support.citrix.com/servlet/KbServlet/download/24559-102-647700/XD%20-%20Top%2010%20Mistakes%20Identified%20When%20Doing%20Desktop%20Virtualization.pdf

Item #6, page 8 is about Antivirus.

I have still not found anything about booting multiple times before sealing the 
image.


Carl Webster
Consultant and Citrix Technology Professional
http://www.CarlWebster.com<http://www.carlwebster.com/>


From: Webster [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, March 07, 2013 5:43 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Normalizing a disk image

The AV one, yes, that is recommended.

Boot 6 time, never heard of it.  BUT I have heard of booting and waiting a long 
time so .net stuff has time to compile in the background but that was several 
years ago.

Carl Webster
Consultant and Citrix Technology Professional
http://www.CarlWebster.com<http://www.carlwebster.com/>


From: James Rankin [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, March 07, 2013 5:32 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Normalizing a disk image

Been doing a lot of work recently with Citrix Provisioning Services - for those 
of you that aren't familiar with it, it allows servers or desktops to boot from 
a "gold" or "master" read-only disk image that returns to the initial state at 
reboot time.
Obviously prior to "sealing" a gold image you have to normalize it to make sure 
that software doesn't fail and optimize it for best performance. I've gone 
through a lot of the usual optimizations, defrag, flush DNS, etc., but came 
across another two possible optimizations online and was wondering if they were 
actually worth doing.
One I heard about was running a full AV scan prior to sealing so that all files 
are already "known" to the antivirus software? Is this actually relevant, or 
does it depend on the AV in use?
The other possible optimization was rebooting the system six times and waiting 
120 seconds between each reboot to allow for boot prefetching. Again, is this 
something that would help a system run better?
Thanks for any insights,




--
James Rankin
Technical Consultant (ACA, CCA, MCTS)
http://appsensebigot.blogspot.co.uk

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
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