I want to create a template of the freshly build VM. It's Win2003 R2 64bit if it matters. I have copied the MS sysprep files to the 1.1 directory and have extracted and copied the deply.cab files from the Windows media to the svr2003-64 directory.
Do I need to or should I run sysprep on my VM prior to creating a template? What is best practice? I've seen references to a document called "Template Usage and Best Practices". The link no longer valid. Where can I find this document?
Thanks,
Patrick
Hi Patrick ,
You need not run Sysprep manually on the VM if you have copied it to the Exact path in Virtual Center.
However , One more way to do a sysprep is to run it within a VM and Reseal it . Then convert the VM to a template . Now every time you deploy from this Template , the VM will automatically be syspreped .
Hope this helps
Thanks
Sudharsan
Hi Patrick ,
You need not run Sysprep manually on the VM if you have copied it to the Exact path in Virtual Center.
However , One more way to do a sysprep is to run it within a VM and Reseal it . Then convert the VM to a template . Now every time you deploy from this Template , the VM will automatically be syspreped .
Hope this helps
Thanks
Sudharsan
Thanks. I ended up running the SysInternals SID changer and changing the IP settings to DHCP just in case.
--Patrick
That is good to know. I have all the sysprep files in the right places for the OSes I run.
All that is missing is Windows Server 2008. Why are there no folders for 2008?
--Patrick
There are no sysprep files for W2K8, it's built into the VMware Customization process. So, create your gold image for W2k8, shut it down and convert it to a template. When you deploy off that template, "Customize using the Customization Wizard", then save it. For future deployments off template you would "Customize using an existing customization specification".
It make deploying W2K8, W7 and Vista guests a breeze!
That is good to know.