![]() Googling revealed that the Boot Camp software itself seems to be in MSI \ MSP format but drivers need to be extracted manually and installed by either DPInst or sysprep. The only downside was no built-in silent install switch (knew it was going too well!) so I set about looking at other options. I’d never seen the Boot Camp support software before so was pleasantly surprised that it seems to have been made with a bit of common sense (unlike some Windows-based Apple software I can think of!) and already has enough intelligence to install drivers for any Mac hardware it comes across via a single package. ![]() As with our PC imaging process the drivers need to go on before anything else in order to get a working NIC and needs to be hardware independent. This meant we’d have to build the base image again for the Macs (not a biggie as it’s very basic) but the question arose on how to automate the Boot Camp support software and drivers, followed by the usual ZCM scripts and Bundles. ![]() With that out the window our resident Mac expert Tristan Revell recommended sticking with the DeployStudio method we used successfully last year. Initially we did some brief experiments to see if ZCM could do the trick but that soon failed due to lack of PXE support on Macs (tried iPXE from CD with no success) plus the fact ZCM can’t process any sort of Mac file system. Having cracked the PC side of our Summer imaging project thoughts then turned to Macs and upgrading our existing dual-boot systems to match the nice shiny Windows 7 image deployed elsewhere.
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