Ccboot Image May 2026
🖥️ CCBoot Image Feature – "Smart Image Manager"
Core Capabilities:
1. Image Versioning & Rollback
- Auto-save snapshots before updates
- One-click rollback to previous working image
- Keep last 5 versions by default (configurable)
- Use CHAP for iSCSI sessions if supported, and secure management access with strong credentials and TLS where available.
. Since one image might need to boot on machines with different motherboards or GPUs, the image must be "generalized." CCBoot utilizes multi-hardware profile management, allowing a single VHD to contain multiple sets of drivers, detecting the specific hardware IDs during the boot sequence to load the correct environment. Efficiency and the Bottom Line
Every client boots into an identical environment. This eliminates the "it works on my machine" syndrome in labs and cafes. The Super Client Mode: ccboot image
- Use Sysprep to generalize base images; manage licensing (KMS, MAK) per Microsoft guidance.
The Ultimate Guide to Creating a CCBoot Image
An "Image" in CCBoot is essentially a virtual hard drive file (VHD or VMDK) that contains the Operating System, Drivers, and Software. Client PCs boot directly from this image over the network. 🖥️ CCBoot Image Feature – "Smart Image Manager"
Phase 1: Prerequisites
Before you begin, ensure you have:
A "Super Image" allows one file to boot different PC builds (e.g., different GPUs or motherboards). Use CHAP for iSCSI sessions if supported, and
4. Defragment the VHD (Offline)
Over time, your CCBoot image becomes fragmented inside the VHD file.