- WIMLIB
-
-This is wimlib version 0.6.3 (May 2012). wimlib can be used to read, write,
-and mount files in the Windows Imaging Format (WIM files). These files are
-normally created by using the `imagex.exe' utility on Windows, but this library
-provides a free implementetion of imagex for UNIX-based systems.
-
-The main use of this library is to create customized images of Windows PE, the
-Windows Preinstallation Environment, without having to rely on Windows. Windows
-PE is a lightweight version of Windows that can run entirely from memory and can
-be used to install Windows from local media or a network drive or perform
-maintenance. Windows PE is the operating systems runs when you boot from the
-Windows DVD.
-
-You can find Windows PE on the ISO filesystem on the installation DVD for both
-Windows 7 and Windows 8. I don't have a DVD for Vista but it should be on there
-too. The Windows PE image a WIM file, `sources/boot.wim', on the ISO
-filesystem. Windows PE can also be found in the Windows Automated Installation
-Kit (WAIK), which is free to download from Microsoft, inside the `WinPE.cab'
-file, which you can extract if you install the `cabextract' program.
-
-wimlib provides a public API for other programs to use, but also comes with two
-programs: `imagex' and `mkwinpeimg'.
-
-`imagex' is intended to be like the imagex.exe program from Windows. `imagex'
-can be used to create, extract, and mount WIM files. Both read-only and
-read-write mounts are supported. See the man page `doc/imagex.1' for more
-details.
-
-`mkwinpeimg' is shell script that makes it easy to create a customized bootable
-image of Windows PE that can be put on a CD or USB drive, or published on a
-server for PXE booting. See the main page `doc/mkwinpeiso.1' for more details.
-
-Wimlib can also be used to handle larger WIM files such as the `install.wim'
-file that comes on the Windows DVD; however, this has not been well tested.
-
-An earlier version of Wimlib is being used to deploy Windows 7 from the Ultimate
-Deployment Appliance. For more information see
-http://www.ultimatedeployment.org/.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CONFIGURATION
-
-Besides the various well-known options, the following options can be passed to
-wimlib's `configure' script:
+ INTRODUCTION
+
+This is wimlib version 1.9.2 (June 2016). wimlib is a C library for
+creating, modifying, extracting, and mounting files in the Windows Imaging
+Format (WIM files). wimlib and its command-line frontend 'wimlib-imagex'
+provide a free and cross-platform alternative to Microsoft's WIMGAPI, ImageX,
+and DISM.
+
+ INSTALLATION
+
+To install wimlib and wimlib-imagex on UNIX-like systems, you can compile from
+source (e.g. './configure && make && sudo make install'). Alternatively, check
+if a package has already been prepared for your operating system. Example files
+for Debian and RPM packaging are in the debian/ and rpm/ directories.
+
+To install wimlib and wimlib-imagex on Windows, just download and extract the
+ZIP file containing the latest binaries. See README.WINDOWS for more details.
+
+All official wimlib releases are available from https://wimlib.net.
+
+ WIM FILES
+
+A Windows Imaging (WIM) file is an archive designed primarily for archiving
+Windows filesystems. However, it can be used on other platforms as well, with
+some limitations. Like some other archive formats such as ZIP, files in WIM
+archives may be compressed. WIM archives support multiple compression formats,
+including LZX, XPRESS, and LZMS. All these formats are supported by wimlib.
+
+A WIM archive contains one or more "images", each of which is a logically
+independent directory tree. Each image has a 1-based index and usually a name.
+
+WIM archives provide data deduplication at the level of full file contents. In
+other words, each unique "file contents" is only stored once in the archive,
+regardless of how many files have that contents across all images.
+
+A WIM archive may be either stand-alone or split into multiple parts.
+
+An update of the WIM format --- first added by Microsoft for Windows 8 ---
+supports solid-mode compression. This refers to files being compressed together
+(e.g. as in a .tar.xz or .7z archive) rather than separately (e.g. as in a .zip
+archive). This usually produces a much better compression ratio. Solid
+archives are sometimes called "ESD files" by Microsoft and may have the ".esd"
+file extension rather than ".wim". They are supported in wimlib since v1.6.0.
+
+ IMAGEX IMPLEMENTATION
+
+wimlib itself is a C library, and it provides a documented public API (See:
+https://wimlib.net/apidoc) for other programs to use. However, it is also
+distributed with a command-line program called "wimlib-imagex" that uses this
+library to implement an imaging tool similar to Microsoft's ImageX.
+wimlib-imagex supports almost all the capabilities of Microsoft's ImageX as well
+as additional capabilities. wimlib-imagex works on both UNIX-like systems and
+Windows, although some features differ between the platforms.
+
+Run `wimlib-imagex' with no arguments to see an overview of the available
+commands and their syntax. For additional documentation:
+
+ * If you have installed wimlib-imagex on a UNIX-like system, you will find
+ further documentation in the man pages; run `man wimlib-imagex' to get
+ started.
+
+ * If you have downloaded the Windows binary distribution, you will find the
+ documentation for wimlib-imagex in PDF format in the "doc" directory,
+ ready for viewing with any PDF viewer. Please note that although the PDF
+ files are converted from UNIX-style "man pages", they do document
+ Windows-specific behavior when appropriate.
+
+ COMPRESSION
+
+wimlib (and wimlib-imagex) can create XPRESS, LZX, and LZMS compressed WIM
+archives. wimlib's compression codecs usually outperform and outcompress their
+closed-source Microsoft equivalents. Multiple compression levels and chunk
+sizes as well as solid mode compression are supported. Compression is
+multithreaded by default. Detailed benchmark results and descriptions of the
+algorithms used can be found at https://wimlib.net/compression.html.
+
+ NTFS SUPPORT
+
+WIM images may contain data, such as alternate data streams and
+compression/encryption flags, that are best represented on the NTFS filesystem
+used on Windows. Also, WIM images may contain security descriptors which are
+specific to Windows and cannot be represented on other operating systems.
+wimlib handles this NTFS-specific or Windows-specific data in a
+platform-dependent way:
+
+ * In the Windows version of wimlib and wimlib-imagex, NTFS-specific and
+ Windows-specific data are supported natively.
+
+ * In the UNIX version of wimlib and wimlib-imagex, NTFS-specific and
+ Windows-specific data are ordinarily ignored; however, there is also special
+ support for capturing and extracting images directly to/from unmounted NTFS
+ volumes. This was made possible with the help of libntfs-3g from the
+ NTFS-3G project.
+
+For both platforms the code for NTFS capture and extraction is complete enough
+that it is possible to apply an image from the "install.wim" contained in recent
+Windows installation media (Vista or later) directly to an NTFS filesystem, and
+then boot Windows from it after preparing the Boot Configuration Data. In
+addition, a Windows installation can be captured (or backed up) into a WIM file,
+and then re-applied later.
+
+ WINDOWS PE
+
+A major use for wimlib and wimlib-imagex is to create customized images of
+Windows PE, the Windows Preinstallation Environment, on either UNIX-like systems
+or Windows without having to rely on Microsoft's software and its restrictions
+and limitations.
+
+Windows PE is a lightweight version of Windows that can run entirely from memory
+and can be used to install Windows from local media or a network drive or
+perform maintenance. It is the operating system that runs when you boot from
+the Windows installation media.
+
+You can find Windows PE on the installation media for Windows (Vista or later)
+as the file `sources/boot.wim'. Windows PE can also be found in the Windows
+Automated Installation Kit (WAIK), which is free to download from Microsoft,
+inside the `WinPE.cab' file, which you can extract natively on Windows, or on
+UNIX-like systems if you install either the `cabextract' or `p7zip' programs.
+
+In addition, Windows installations and recovery partitions frequently contain a
+WIM containing an image of the Windows Recovery Environment, which is similar to
+Windows PE.
+
+A shell script `mkwinpeimg' is distributed with wimlib on UNIX-like systems to
+ease the process of creating and customizing a bootable Windows PE image.
+
+ DEPENDENCIES
+
+This section documents the dependencies of wimlib and the programs distributed
+with it, when building for a UNIX-like system from source. If you have
+downloaded the Windows binary distribution of wimlib and wimlib-imagex then all
+dependencies were already included and this section is irrelevant.
+
+* libxml2 (required)
+ This is a commonly used free library to read and write XML documents.
+ Almost all Linux distributions should include this; however, you may
+ need to install the header files, which might be in a package named
+ "libxml2-dev" or similar. For more information see http://xmlsoft.org/.
+
+* libfuse (optional but recommended)
+ Unless configured --without-fuse, wimlib requires a non-ancient version
+ of libfuse. Most Linux distributions already include this, but make
+ sure you have the libfuse package installed, and also libfuse-dev if
+ your distribution distributes header files separately. FUSE also
+ requires a kernel module. If the kernel module is available it should
+ automatically be loaded if you try to mount a WIM image. For more
+ information see http://fuse.sourceforge.net/.
+
+* libattr (optional but recommended)
+ Unless configured --without-fuse, wimlib also requires libattr. Almost
+ all Linux distributions should include this; however, you may need to
+ install the header files, which might be in a package named "attr-dev",
+ "libattr1-dev", or similar.
+
+* libntfs-3g (optional but recommended)
+ Unless configured --without-ntfs-3g, wimlib requires the library and
+ headers for libntfs-3g to be installed. The minimum required version is
+ 2011-4-12, but newer versions contain important bug fixes.
+
+* OpenSSL / libcrypto (optional)
+ wimlib can use the SHA-1 message digest implementation from libcrypto
+ (usually provided by OpenSSL) instead of compiling in yet another SHA-1
+ implementation.
+
+* cdrkit (optional)
+* mtools (optional)
+* syslinux (optional)
+* cabextract (optional)
+ The `mkwinpeimg' shell script will look for several other programs
+ depending on what options are given to it. Depending on your Linux
+ distribution, you may already have these programs installed, or they may
+ be in the software repository. Making an ISO filesystem requires
+ `mkisofs' from `cdrkit' (http://www.cdrkit.org). Making a disk image
+ requires `mtools' (http://www.gnu.org/software/mtools) and `syslinux'
+ (http://www.syslinux.org). Retrieving files from the Windows Automated
+ Installation Kit requires `cabextract' (http://www.cabextract.org.uk).
+
+ CONFIGURATION
+
+This section documents the most important options that may be passed to the
+"configure" script when building from source:
+
+--without-ntfs-3g
+ If libntfs-3g is not available or is not version 2011-4-12 or later,
+ wimlib can be built without it, in which case it will not be possible to
+ capture or apply WIM images directly from/to NTFS volumes.
+
+ The default is --with-ntfs-3g when building for any UNIX-like system,
+ and --without-ntfs-3g when building for Windows.