INTRODUCTION
-This is wimlib version 1.8.1 (May 2015). wimlib is a C library for
+This is wimlib version 1.8.3-BETA (September 2015). 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,
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 SourceForge
-(http://sourceforge.net/projects/wimlib/files).
+All official wimlib releases are available from http://wimlib.net.
WIM FILES
IMAGEX IMPLEMENTATION
wimlib itself is a C library, and it provides a documented public API (See:
-http://wimlib.sourceforge.net) for other programs to use. However, it is also
+http://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
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, Windows 7, or Windows 8) 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 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
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 DVD for Windows Vista, Windows 7, or
-Windows 8, in 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.
+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