Bcdedit.exe Advancedoptions

Some information relates to pre-released product which may be substantially modified before it's commercially released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here. You can suppress Windows elements that appear when Windows starts or resumes and can suppress the crash screen when Windows encounters an error that it cannot recover from. Customize the boot screen using Windows ICD The boot screen settings are available as Windows provisioning settings so you can configure these settings to be applied during the image. You can set one or all of the settings by creating a provisioning package using Windows Imaging and Configuration Designer (ICD) and then applying the provisioning package during image deployment time or runtime. Build a provisioning package in Windows ICD by following the instructions in. In the customization page, select Runtime settings SMISettings and then set the value for the boot screen settings.

Boot Options: numproc. To set the option at the Edit Boot. As “Number of processors” in the dialog box that is reached from the Advanced. These commands will boot Windows Vista/7 but will not add any advanced options such as resumeobject's or F8 Windows. Bcdedit.exe /store C: Boot BCD /set {guid.

The following values are just examples. HideAllBootUI=FALSE. HideBootLogo=FALSE. HideBootStatusIndicator=TRUE.

Advanced

HideBootStatusMessage=TRUE. Once you have finished configuring the settings and building the provisioning package, you can apply the package to the image deployment time or runtime.

Sp_configure Show Advanced Options

See the section “To apply a provisioning package to a Windows 10 for desktop editions image” in for more information. Note that the process for applying the image to a Windows 10 Enterprise is the same. In the following image, the BootLogo is identified by the green outline, the BootStatusIndicator is identified by the red outline, and the BootStatusMessage is identified by the blue outline. Customize the boot screen using Unattend You can also configure the Unattend settings in the component to add customized boot features to your image during the design or imaging phase. You can manually create an Unattend answer file or use Windows System Image Manager (Windows SIM) to add the appropriate settings to your answer file.

For more information about the boot settings and XML examples, see the settings in Microsoft-Windows-Embedded-BootExp. Customize the boot screen using BCDEdit BCDEdit, the primary tool for editing the startup configuration, should be on your development computer in the%WINDIR% System32 folder and you have administrator rights for it. BCDEdit is included in a typical Windows Preinstallation Environment (Windows PE). You can download it from. BCDEdit allows you to configure Unbranded Boot settings at runtime. Open a command prompt as an administrator. To disable the F8 key during startup to prevent access to the Advanced startup options menu, type the following.

Bcdedit Boot

Hello JohanHVM, The exact commands are dependant upon how you go about the limitation- using removememory or truncatememory. Note in the article provided that there are very subtle differences to how each method works. Let's presume that we have 8GB of memory and we want to limit it to 4 GB.