SUMMARY
With Remote Installation Services, you can set up new
client computers remotely by using a Remote Installation Services (RIS) network
shared folder as the source of the Windows 2000 Professional files. You can
install operating systems on remote boot-enabled client computers by connecting
the computer to the network, starting the client computer, booting off a PXE
ROM or Remote Boot Disk, and logging on with a valid user account. This
document outlines the steps necessary to install, configure, and use Remote
Installation Services (RIS).
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Hardware and Software Requirements
Remote Installation Server Hardware Requirements
- Pentium or Pentium II 200 megahertz (MHz) recommended (166
MHz minimum).
- 64 megabyte (MB) RAM minimum. If additional services such
as the Active Directory, DHCP, and DNS services are installed, the minimum
amount of RAM is 96 or 128 MB.
- 2-gigabyte (GB) drive dedicated to the Remote Installation
Service's directory tree on the RIS server.
- 10 or 100 megabits per second (Mbps) network adapter card.
(100 Mbps preferred.) NOTE: You should dedicate an entire hard drive or partition
specifically to the Remote Installation Services directory tree. (SCSI-based
disk controller/disks are preferred.)
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Client Hardware Requirements
- Pentium 166 MHz or greater NetPC client computer.
- 32 MB of RAM.
- 1.2-GB drive minimum
- PXE DHCP-based boot ROM version .99c or greater or a
network adapter supported by the RIS boot floppy. Always check with the
manufacturer of your network adapter to get the latest version of the PXE ROM.
The drive on the server where you choose to install RIS must be
formatted with the NTFS file system. RIS requires a significant amount of disk
space and cannot be installed on the same drive or partition on which Windows
2000 Server is installed. Ensure that the chosen drive contains enough free
disk space for at least one full set of the Windows 2000 Professional
installation files--a minimum of approximately 800 MB to 1 GB.
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Software Requirements
Using Remote Installation Services requires several components
that are included as part of the Windows 2000 Server operating system. The
following services can be installed either on individual servers or on the same
server. They must be active and available:
- Domain Name System (DNS Service)
- Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)
- Active Directory
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Prerequisites for Client Installations
Ensure that the client computer's network card has been set as
the primary boot device within the system BIOS. When the client computer boots
and is configured with the network card as the primary boot device, it requests
a network service boot from the remote installation server on the network.
After it is contacted, the RIS server prompts users to press the F12 key to
download the Client Installation wizard. Users should be instructed to press
F12 only if prompted, and only if they need a new OS installation or access to
maintenance and troubleshooting tools. Once the OS has been installed via RIS,
the user can ignore the request to press F12 during future client computer
reboots or reset the primary boot device back to the floppy a:\ drive or the
hard drive c:\.
If you are using the remote RIS boot floppy disk,
simply insert the boot floppy into the drive and start the client computer. The
computer boots from the floppy disk, and the user is requested to press F12 to
initiate the network service boot. When the RIS boot floppy disk is used, the
user must remove the boot floppy at some point after pressing F12 and before
the text mode portion of Windows 2000 Professional setup completes.
NOTE: Compaq computers provide the ability to press the F12 key during
power-up on PC98 or Net PC-based systems. In this case, the user is required to
press F12 on the Compaq splash screen, and then press F12 again when prompted
by the RIS server.
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Installing the Windows 2000 Remote Installation Services
- On a Windows 2000 Server computer, click Start, point to Settings, and then click Control Panel.
- Double-click Add/Remove Programs.
- Click Add/Remove Windows Components.
- Scroll down and select Remote Installation Services, and then click Next.
- Insert the Windows 2000 Server CD-ROM into the CD drive,
and then click OK.
The necessary files are copied to the server. NOTE: After the CD is inserted, a dialog box asks if you want to
upgrade to the operating system. Click No and exit this screen.
- Click Finish to end the wizard.
- Click Yes when you are prompted to restart your computer.
- When the server is finished rebooting, log on as a local
administrator.
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To set up remote installation services
- Click Start, click Run, and type RISetup.exe. This starts the Remote Installation Services (RIS) Setup Wizard.
- The Welcome screen appears, indicating some of the
requirements to successfully install RIS. Click Next.
- The next screen prompts you to enter the RIS server drive
letter and directory where you would like to install the RIS files. In our
example, this would be E:\RemoteInstall. Click Next.
The Setup Wizard prompts you to either enable RIS at
the end of setup, or disable the service to allow modification of specific
server options before servicing client computers. The two options are:
- Respond to client computers requesting
service. If you select this option, Remote Installation Services is
enabled and will respond to client computers requesting service.
- Do not respond to unknown client
computers. If you select this option, Remote Installation Services
will respond only to known client computers.
- For the purpose of this guide, select Respond to
client computers requesting service, and then click Next.
- The Setup Wizard prompts you for the location of the
Windows 2000 Professional installation files. RIS
supports the remote installation of Windows 2000 Professional. RIS also
supports the installation of Microsoft Windows 2000 Server and Microsoft
Windows XP Professional if the RIS server has Service Pack 3 or later applied.
For additional information about a related topic, click the following article
number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
308508
Unable to Create Windows 2000 Server Image on RIS Server
Insert the Windows 2000
Professional CD into the server's CD-ROM drive and type the drive letter
that contains the CD (or browse to a network share that contains the installation
source files). Click Next. - The wizard prompts you to enter the directory name that
will contain the Windows 2000 Professional installation files on the RIS
server. This directory is created beneath the directory specified in the Steps
above. The directory name should reflect its contents--for example,
Win2000.pro. Click Next to accept the default name of win2000.pro.
- You are prompted for a friendly description and help text
that describes this OS image. The friendly description and help text is
displayed to users or IT staff during the client installation wizard
(OSChooser) at initial startup on a remote client. For example, if this
workstation OS will be tailored to sales staff, then a friendly description
might be 'Windows 2000 Professional for Sales Staff.' The help text is
displayed when the user selects the description within the Client Installation
wizard. Make sure you provide clear help text to your users, to ensure that
they choose the correct OS option at installation time. For this exercise,
click Next to accept the default name of Microsoft Windows 2000
Professional.
- At this point, you are presented with a summary screen
indicating the choices you have made. Click Finish to confirm your choices. Once the installation wizard completes,
you are ready to either service client computers, or additionally configure the
RIS settings.
- Click Done. Now that RIS is successfully installed, you must authorize the
RIS server within Active Directory. If you do not authorize the RIS server, it
will fail to service client computers requesting a network service boot. The
next section outlines these steps.
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Authorizing RIS in Active Directory
RIS allows you to control which RIS servers can service client
computers on the network. For a RIS server to operate, it must first be
authorized within Active Directory. If the RIS server is not authorized within
Active Directory, client computers requesting service will not be able to
contact the RIS server and will not be answered. To authorize a RIS server
within Active Directory, you must be logged on as an enterprise administrator
or a domain administrator of the root domain.
- Click Start, point to Programs, point to Administrative Tools and click DHCP.
- Right-click DHCP in the upper-left corner of the DHCP screen, and select Manage Authorized Servers. If your server is not already listed, click Authorize, and enter the IP address of the RIS server.
- Click Yes when prompted to verify that the address is correct. At this
point, your RIS server is authorized within Active Directory and is now able to
respond to client computers requesting service.
Note: If you authorize the RIS server on a non-domain controller
computer, follow these steps to install the Administrator Tools Package: Click
Start, click Run, and type adminpak.msi on a Server system. From a Professional
based system, execute adminpak.msi from the Windows 2000 Server CD.
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Setting required user permissions
If users are allowed to use RIS to install their own client
computers, the administrator must ensure that those users have been granted the
correct permissions for creating machine accounts within the domain. The
permissions granted using the steps below will allow users to create computer
accounts anywhere in the domain.
- Click Start, point to Programs, point to Administrative Tools, and click Active Directory Users and Computers.
- Right-click the Domain Name (for this example, Reskit.com) at the top of the snap-in, and
click the Delegate Control option.
- A wizard starts. Click Next.
- Click Add to add users who are allowed to install their own computers using
Remote OS Installation.
- For the purpose of this guide, highlight Everyone and click
Add. Click OK.
- Click Next to continue.
- Check the Join a Computer to the Domain option, and click Next.
- Click Finish.
You can now either use the default RIS settings and immediately
begin servicing client computers, or you can make changes to the RIS settings
first.
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Installing client computers using remote installation
This section describes the steps required to successfully install
Windows 2000 Professional on a Net PC, a Managed PC (PC 98 compliant system),
or a PC that contains a network card supported by the remote installation boot
floppy. To ensure a successful client installation, complete all prerequisites
listed at the beginning of this document.
- Reboot your client machine from either the remote floppy or
the PXE boot ROM. When prompted, press the F12 key to start the download of the client installation wizard.
- Press Enter at the welcome screen.
- For the user name, type Jon Grande (this user is created
using the Common Infrastructure step-by-step guide discussed in the
Prerequisites Section above.) Press the Tab key twice. For this instruction set, the password is left blank
and the domain name should be entered as reskit.com. Press Enter to continue.
- You will get a warning message that all data on the client
machine hard drive will be deleted. To continue, press Enter.
- A computer account and a global unique ID for this
workstation are displayed. Press Enter to begin Setup. The Windows 2000 Setup program begins.
- If prompted, go through the Windows 2000 Professional Setup
Wizard.For additional information, click the article number
below to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
304868 How to Install Windows 2000 Professional
After the installation is complete, the user is prompted to log
on to the network with an existing user account, password, and logon domain. At
this point, you have successfully configured and installed a remote operating
system using RIS.
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Remote Installation Boot Disk Option
The remote installation boot disk can be used with computers that
do not contain a remote boot-enabled ROM on the network card. The boot disk is
designed to simulate the PXE boot process for computers that lack a supported
DHCP PXE-based remote boot ROM. The boot disk generator utility is called
RBFG.EXE and is located within the \RemoteInstall\admin directory on every
Remote Installation Server.
The RBFG.exe utility is also contained
within the Administrator Tools package that ships with Windows 2000 Server. The
Administrator Tools package can be deployed across your organization using
either Systems Management Server 2.0 or using the new Software Management
feature, which is part of the Group Policy infrastructure.
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Creating a Remote Installation Boot Floppy
To create a Remote Installation Boot Floppy, run the RBFG.exe
utility from the RIS server or a computer with the administrator tools package
installed.
- Browse to the E:\RemoteInstall\Admin\i386 folder and double
click RBFG.exe, which will bring up the "Windows 2000 Remote Boot Disk
Generator" dialog box.
NOTE: E:\ drive should be the drive letter where you setup the REMOTE
INSTALLATION SERVICES in Step 2
To see a list of network adapters supported, click Adapter
List. (Note: the RBFG.exe utility does not allow you to add network adapters).
To create a remote installation boot disk, insert a disk into the appropriate
drive and then select Create Disk.
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