3 This is wimlib version 1.0.4 (October 2012). wimlib can be used to read,
4 write, and mount files in the Windows Imaging Format (WIM files). These
5 files are normally created by using the `imagex.exe' utility on Windows,
6 but this library provides a free implementation of imagex for UNIX-based
11 A Windows Imaging (WIM) file is an archive. Like some other archive formats
12 such as ZIP, files in WIM archives may be compressed. WIM archives support two
13 Microsoft-specific compression formats: LZX and XPRESS. Both are based on LZ77
14 and Huffman encoding, and both are supported by wimlib.
16 Unlike ZIP files, WIM files can contain multiple independent toplevel directory
17 trees known as images. While each image has its own metadata describing a
18 directory tree and file access modes, files are not duplicated for each image;
19 instead, each file is included only once in the entire WIM. Microsoft did this
20 so that in one WIM file, they could do things like have 5 different versions of
21 Windows that are almost exactly the same.
23 Microsoft provides documentation for the WIM file format, XPRESS compression
24 format, and LZX compression format. The XPRESS documentation is acceptable, but
25 the LZX documentation is not entirely correct, and the WIM documentation itself
26 is very incomplete and is of unacceptable quality.
28 A WIM file may be either stand-alone or split into multiple parts.
32 wimlib provides a public API for other programs to use, but also comes with two
33 programs: `imagex' and `mkwinpeimg'.
35 `imagex' is intended to be like the imagex.exe program from Windows. `imagex'
36 can be used to create, extract, and mount WIM files. Both read-only and
37 read-write mounts are supported. See the man page `doc/imagex.1' for more
40 `mkwinpeimg' is shell script that makes it easy to create a customized bootable
41 image of Windows PE that can be put on a CD or USB drive, or published on a
42 server for PXE booting. See the main page `doc/mkwinpeimg.1' for more details.
46 wimlib can create XPRESS or LZX compressed WIM archives. As of wimlib v1.0.3,
47 the XPRESS compression ratio is slightly better than that provided by
48 Microsoft's software, while the LZX compression ratio is approaching that of
49 Microsoft's software but is not quite there yet. Running time is as good as or
50 better than Microsoft's software.
52 The following tables compare the compression ratio and performance for creating
53 a compressed Windows PE image (disk usage of about 524 MB, uncompressed WIM size
58 XPRESS Compression LZX Compression
59 wimlib imagex (v1.0.2): 145,283,871 bytes 139,288,293 bytes
60 wimlib imagex (v1.0.3): 139,288,293 bytes 131,379,869 bytes
61 Microsoft imagex.exe: 140,406,981 bytes 127,249,176 bytes
63 Table 2. Time to create WIM
65 XPRESS Compression LZX Compression
66 wimlib imagex (v1.0.2): 18 sec 49 sec
67 wimlib imagex (v1.0.3): 19 sec 30 sec
68 Microsoft imagex.exe: 25 sec 89 sec
72 As of version 1.0.0, wimlib supports capturing and applying images directly to
73 NTFS volumes. This was made possible with the help of libntfs-3g from the
74 NTFS-3g project. This feature supports capturing and restoring NTFS-specific
75 data such as security descriptors, alternate data streams, and reparse point
78 The code for NTFS image capture and image application is complete enough that it
79 is possible to apply an image from the "install.wim" contained in recent Windows
80 installation media (Vista, Windows 7, or Windows 8) directly to a NTFS volume,
81 and then boot Windows from it after preparing the Boot Configuration Data. In
82 addition, a Windows installation can be captured (or backed up) into a WIM file,
83 and then re-applied later.
87 A major use for this library is to create customized images of Windows PE, the
88 Windows Preinstallation Environment, without having to rely on Windows. Windows
89 PE is a lightweight version of Windows that can run entirely from memory and can
90 be used to install Windows from local media or a network drive or perform
91 maintenance. Windows PE is the operating system that runs when you boot from
92 the Windows installation media.
94 You can find Windows PE on the installation DVD for Windows Vista, Windows 7, or
95 Windows 8, in the file `sources/boot.wim'. Windows PE can also be found in the
96 Windows Automated Installation Kit (WAIK), which is free to download from
97 Microsoft, inside the `WinPE.cab' file, which you can extract if you install
98 either the `cabextract' or `p7zip' programs.
100 In addition, Windows installations and recovery partitions frequently contain a
101 WIM containing an image of the Windows Recovery Environment, which is similar to
107 This is a commonly used free library to read and write XML files. You
108 likely already have it installed as a dependency for some other program.
109 For more information see http://xmlsoft.org/.
111 * libfuse (optional but highly recommended)
112 Unless configured with --without-fuse, wimlib requires a non-ancient
113 version of libfuse to be installed. Most GNU/Linux distributions
114 already include this, but make sure you have the libfuse package
115 installed, and also libfuse-dev if your distribution distributes header
116 files separately. FUSE also requires a kernel module. If the kernel
117 module is available it will automatically be loaded if you try to mount
118 a WIM file. For more information see http://fuse.sourceforge.net/.
119 FUSE is also available for FreeBSD.
121 * libntfs-3g (optional but highly recommended)
122 Unless configured with --without-ntfs-3g, wimlib requires the library
123 and headers for libntfs-3g version 2011-4-12 or later to be installed.
124 Versions dated 2010-3-6 and earlier do not work because they are missing
125 the header xattrs.h (and the file xattrs.c, which contains functions we
128 * OpenSSL / libcrypto (optional)
129 wimlib can use the SHA1 message digest code from OpenSSL instead of
130 compiling in yet another SHA1 implementation. (See LICENSE section.)
134 * syslinux (optional)
135 * cabextract (optional)
136 The `mkwinpeimg' shell script will look for several other programs
137 depending on what options are given to it. Depending on your GNU/Linux
138 distribution, you may already have these programs installed, or they may
139 be in the software repository. Making an ISO filesystem requires
140 `mkisofs' from `cdrkit' (http://www.cdrkit.org). Making a disk image
141 requires `mtools' (http://www.gnu.org/software/mtools) and `syslinux'
142 (http://www.syslinux.org). Retrieving files from the Windows Automated
143 Installation Kit requires `cabextract' (http://www.cabextract.org.uk).
147 Besides the various well-known options, the following options can be passed to
148 wimlib's `configure' script:
151 If libntfs-3g is not available or is not version 2011-4-12 or later, we
152 can build without it. wimlib will then not be able to apply or capture
153 images directly to NTFS volumes.
156 If libfuse or the FUSE kernel module is not available, wimlib can be
157 compiled with --without-fuse. This will remove the ability to mount and
158 unmount WIM files. wimlib_mount() and wimlib_unmount() will fail with
159 WIMLIB_ERR_UNSUPPORTED.
162 Build in functions for SHA1 rather than using external SHA1 functions
163 from libcrypto (part of OpenSSL). The default is to use libcrypto if it
164 is found on the system.
166 --enable-xattr, --disable-xattr
167 Enable or disable support for the extended-attributes interface to NTFS
168 alternate data streams in mounted WIMs. To support these, we require
169 the setxattr() function and the attr/xattr.h header be available. The
170 default is to autodetect whether support is possible.
173 Use a very fast assembly language implementation of SHA1 from Intel.
174 Only use this if the build target supports the SSSE3 instructions.
176 --disable-custom-memory-allocator
177 If this option is given, MALLOC(), FREE(), CALLOC(), and STRDUP() will
178 directly call the appropriate functions in the C library.
179 wimlib_set_memory_allocator() will fail with WIMLIB_ERR_UNSUPPORTED.
181 --disable-verify-compression
182 Unless this option is given, every time wimlib compresses a data block
183 it will decompress it into a temporary buffer and abort() the program
184 with an error message if the decompressed data does not exactly match
185 the original data. This is to find bugs.
187 --disable-error-messages
188 Removes all error messages from the library. If left in, they still
189 have to explicitly turned on with wimlib_set_print_errors() in order to
190 see them. Also, error codes will still be returned regardless of
191 whether error messages are printed or not.
193 If --disable-error-messages is given, wimlib_set_print_errors() will
194 fail with WIMLIB_ERR_UNSUPPORTED if the action is to turn error messages
198 Remove all assertions. Without this option, wimlib will abort() the
199 program if an assertion fails. An assertion failure should only occur
200 if there is a bug in the library.
203 Include debugging messages. Only use this option if you have found a
207 Include more debugging messages. Only use this option if you have found
208 a bug in the library.
212 wimlib has mostly been developed and tested on x86_64 (64-bit) GNU/Linux.
214 It has been tested on x86 (32-bit) GNU/Linux occasionally.
216 wimlib may work on FreeBSD. However, this is not well tested. If you do not
217 have libntfs-3g 2011-4-12 or later available, you must configure with
218 --without-ntfs-3g. Also, GNU coreutils is needed to run the test suite. Before
219 mounting a WIM you need to load the POSIX message queue module (run `kldload
222 wimlib should work on big endian machines but it has not been tested.
224 There are no plans to port wimlib to Windows since the programming interface on
225 Windows is very different and Microsoft's imagex.exe is already available.
229 The WIM file format is specified in a document that can be found in the
230 Microsoft Download Center. There is a similar document that specifies the LZX
231 compression format, and a document that specifies the XPRESS compression format.
232 However, many parts of these formats are poorly documented, and some parts have
233 no documentation whatsoever. Some particularly poorly documented parts of the
234 formats have had comments added in various places in the library. Please see
235 the code and/or ask me if you have any questions about the WIM file format as it
236 exists in reality and not as it exists in Microsoft's poorly written
239 The code in ntfs-apply.c and ntfs-capture.c uses the NTFS-3g library, which is a
240 library for reading and writing to NTFS filesystems (the filesystem used by
241 recent versions of Windows). See
242 http://www.tuxera.com/community/ntfs-3g-download/ for more information.
244 lzx-decomp.c, the code to decompress WIM file resources that are compressed
245 using LZX compression, is originally based on code from the cabextract project
246 (http://www.cabextract.org.uk).
248 lzx-comp.c, the code to compress WIM file resources using LZX compression, is
249 originally based on code written by Matthew Russotto (www.russotto.net/chm/).
251 lz.c, the code to find LZ77 matches (used for both XPRESS and LZX compression),
252 is based on code from zlib.
254 A very limited number of other free programs can handle some parts of the WIM
255 file format. 7-zip is able to extract and create WIMs (as well as files in many
256 other archive formats). However, wimlib is designed specifically to handle WIM
257 files and provides features previously only available in Microsoft's imagex.exe,
258 such as the ability to mount WIMs read-write as well as read-only, and the
259 ability to create LZX or XPRESS compressed WIMs.
261 An earlier version of wimlib is being used to deploy Windows 7 from the Ultimate
262 Deployment Appliance. For more information see
263 http://www.ultimatedeployment.org/.
265 You can see the documentation about Microsoft's version of the imagex program at
266 http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc749447(v=ws.10).aspx, so you can
269 GNU/Linux equivalents of WIM format
271 What's the equivalent way to capture the filesystem of a GNU/Linux operating
272 system into an archive file? You have a few options:
275 SquashFS (http://squashfs.sourceforge.net/) provides a compressed,
276 read-only filesystem for Linux, and it's probably the closest equivalent
277 of the WIM format and better designed. Although you can't mount
278 SquashFS read-write, when wimlib does this for WIM files it's really an
279 illusion since the WIM isn't actually modified until the image is
280 unmounted. Multiple top-level images in SquashFS files are not
281 supported, although nothing stops you from just putting each image in a
285 FSArchiver (http://www.fsarchiver.org/Main_Page) is not widely used, but
286 it appears to have some features quite similar to the WIM format.
289 The well-known tar format can usually capture a UNIX filesystem just
290 fine, and compressing the tar file produces a good compression ratio
291 (better than WIM, especially if using XZ compression), but there is no
292 support for random access, file deduplication, multiple images per
293 archive, or extended attributes.
296 Zip shares some features with WIM but is not designed to store entire
300 The 7z format has some nice features but is unfortunately not designed
305 See the manual pages for `imagex', the manual pages for the subcommands of
306 `imagex', and the manual page for `mkwinpeimg'.
308 As of version 0.5.0, wimlib's public API is documented. Doxygen is required to
309 build the documentation. To build the documentation, run `configure', then
310 enter the directory `doc' and run `doxygen'. The HTML documentation will be
311 created in a directory named `html'.
315 As of version 1.0.0, wimlib is released under the GNU GPL version 3.0 or later.
316 This includes the files in the `programs' directory as well as the files in the
319 wimlib is independently developed and does not contain any code, data, or files
320 copyrighted by Microsoft. It is not known to be affected by any patents.
322 By default, wimlib will be linked to the system library "libcrypto", which
323 probably will be OpenSSL. Some people believe that GPL code cannot be linked to
324 OpenSSL without a linking exception. As far as I know, I cannot officially
325 include a linking exception with the license of this library because several
326 files could be considered derived works of LGPL code copyrighted by others. If
327 you believe this to be a problem, configure with --without-libcrypto to avoid
328 linking with OpenSSL. There is no difference in functionality--- there will
329 just be stand-alone SHA1 message digest code built into the library.
333 wimlib is experimental. Use Microsoft's `imagex.exe' if you want to make sure
334 your WIM files are made correctly (but beware: Microsoft's version contains some
337 Please submit a bug report (to ebiggers3@gmail.com) if you find a bug in wimlib.
339 Some parts of the WIM file format are poorly documented or even completely
340 undocumented, so I've just had to do the best I can to read and write WIMs that
341 appear to be compatible with Microsoft's software.