Provided by: wimtools_1.14.4-1.1build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       wimlib-imagex - Extract, create, modify, or mount a WIM archive

SYNOPSIS

       wimlib-imagex append arguments... (or wimappend arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex apply arguments... (or wimapply arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex capture arguments... (or wimcapture arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex delete arguments... (or wimdelete arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex dir arguments... (or wimdir arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex export arguments... (or wimexport arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex extract arguments... (or wimextract arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex info arguments... (or wiminfo arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex join arguments... (or wimjoin arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex mount arguments... (or wimmount arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex mountrw arguments... (or wimmountrw arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex optimize arguments... (or wimoptimize arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex split arguments... (or wimsplit arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex unmount arguments... (or wimunmount arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex update arguments... (or wimupdate arguments...)
       wimlib-imagex verify arguments... (or wimverify arguments...)

DESCRIPTION

       wimlib-imagex  deals with archive files in the Windows Imaging (WIM) format.  Its interface is similar to
       Microsoft's ImageX, but wimlib-imagex is cross-platform and has useful improvements and extensions.

       To do its work, wimlib-imagex uses wimlib,  an  open  source  C  library  that  provides  interfaces  for
       manipulating WIM archives.  wimlib is completely independent from the equivalent Microsoft implementation
       (WIMGAPI,  or  wimgapi.dll).   You  can  use  wimlib  in your own programs, although for command-line use
       wimlib-imagex already provides access to most of wimlib's functionality.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

       The Windows Imaging (WIM) format was designed by Microsoft primarily for archiving  Windows  filesystems,
       such  as NTFS.  However, it can be used on other platforms as well, with some limitations.  A WIM archive
       contains one or more images, each of which is a logically independent directory tree.  Images are indexed
       starting from 1, and each may also have a name.  File data is stored as content-addressable "blobs"  that
       are  deduplicated  across  the  entire  archive.  Data may be compressed using one of several compression
       algorithms.

       An update of the WIM format which Microsoft released with Windows 8 uses solid-mode LZMS  compression  to
       achieve  a  better  compression  ratio.   Such  files  are  also called "ESD files" and may have the .esd
       extension instead of .wim.  wimlib fully supports these files except when they are encrypted.

COMMANDS

       wimlib-imagex accepts one of a number of commands (listed above in SYNOPSYS),  and  additional  arguments
       depending on the specific command.  Although wimlib-imagex will print usage information with --help or if
       you  invoke  it  incorrectly,  the  full documentation for each wimlib-imagex command can be found in the
       appropriate manual page.

       Note: if appropriate hard links or batch files have been installed, a command wimlib-imagex  COMMAND  can
       also  be  accessed  as simply wimCOMMAND; for example, wimapply for wimlib-imagex apply.  For brevity the
       documentation uses the shorter names.

GENERAL FEATURES

       The following are some of the general features, or use cases, currently supported by  wimlib-imagex,  and
       pointers to the relevant commands:

       •   Display information about a WIM file (wiminfo)

       •   List the files in a WIM image (wimdir)

       •   Extract, or "apply", a full WIM image (wimapply)

       •   Extract files or directories from a WIM image (wimextract)

       •   Capture a WIM image and save it to a new WIM file (wimcapture)

       •   Capture a WIM image and append it to an existing WIM file (wimappend)

       •   Modify a WIM image by adding, deleting, or renaming files (wimupdate)

       •   (Linux only) Mount a WIM image read-only (wimmount)

       •   (Linux only) Mount a WIM image read-write (wimmountrw)

       •   Delete an image from a WIM file (wimdelete)

       •   Export image(s) from a WIM file (wimexport)

       •   Change the name or description of a WIM image (wiminfo)

       •   Change the bootable image index of a WIM file (wiminfo)

       •   Rebuild, and optionally recompress, a WIM file (wimoptimize)

       •   Split a WIM file into multiple parts (wimsplit)

       •   Join a split WIM (wimjoin)

       •   Verify the validity and integrity of a WIM file (wimverify)

DETAILED FEATURES

       This section presents some of the interesting features of wimlib-imagex in more detail.

       •   Multi-platform support.  wimlib-imagex is supported on both UNIX-like systems (mainly Linux, but also
           FreeBSD, Mac OS X, etc.) and Windows.  Most code is shared among all platforms, but platform-specific
           features are still supported when possible.

       •   XPRESS, LZX, and LZMS compression and decompression.  wimlib contains advanced implementations of all
           these  compression  algorithms.   These  have  been improved over time and now usually outperform and
           outcompress their Microsoft equivalents, while remaining fully compatible.

       •   Solid-mode compression, or "ESD file", support. "ESD files" are an updated WIM format that uses solid
           LZMS compression to achieve a better compression ratio.

       •   Multithreaded compression.  By default, wimlib's data compression is multithreaded and will  use  all
           available processors.

       •   On  UNIX-like systems, integration with libntfs-3g allows capturing a WIM image directly from an NTFS
           volume, or applying a WIM image directly to an NTFS volume.  This allows saving and  restoring  NTFS-
           specific  data  and  metadata,  such  as  security  descriptors  and  named data streams, which would
           otherwise only be supported on Windows.

       •   On UNIX-like systems, optional support for  saving  and  restoring  standard  UNIX  file  permissions
           (owner/group/mode),  UNIX  special  files,  and  extended  attributes.   (This is a wimlib extension;
           Microsoft's WIM software ignores this extra information.)

       •   On Linux, support for mounting WIM images with FUSE (Filesystem  in  UserSpacE),  both  readonly  and
           read-write.

       •   Split WIMs.  A split WIM is a WIM archive split into multiple parts.  wimsplit can create a split WIM
           from a standalone WIM, and wimjoin can create a standalone WIM from a split WIM.

       •   Delta  WIMs.   A  delta WIM contains image metadata but excludes file data already present in another
           WIM file.  A delta WIM can be created using wimcapture with the --delta-from option.

       •   "Pipable" WIMs.  As a wimlib extension (not compatible with the Microsoft implementation), wimcapture
           supports capturing a WIM file to standard output in a special "pipable" format  which  can  later  be
           applied  by  sending  it to wimapply on standard input.  Among other things, this can be used to pipe
           images to or from a server over the network to implement fast filesystem imaging and restore.

       •   Support for WIM integrity tables.  Although file data in WIM archives is  always  checksummed,  there
           can  also  be an extra set of checksums (an "integrity table") associated with the WIM file itself to
           provide extra integrity assurance.  The --check option to several wimlib-imagex commands can be  used
           to verify or add these extra checksums.

       •   Fast  incremental  backups.   Because WIM archives use content-addressible file data, the contents of
           files are automatically deduplicated.  In addition, using the --update-of  option  of  wimcapture  or
           wimappend,  you  can  optimize an image capture so that files that are unmodified based on timestamps
           are not even read from disk.

       •   Windows-specific image metadata support.  When capturing an image  of  a  Windows  operating  system,
           wimlib  will  automatically  populate  XML  metadata fields such as the Windows OS version details by
           scanning well-known system files.

       •   WIMBoot support.  On Windows 8.1 and later, files can be "externally backed" by a  WIM  archive  with
           the  help  of Microsoft's Windows Overlay Filesystem (WOF) filter driver.  With the --wimboot option,
           wimapply will extract "pointer files" to the WIM archive rather than the files themselves.

       •   VSS snapshot  support.   On  Windows,  wimcapture  or  wimappend  with  the  --snapshot  option  will
           automatically  create  a  temporary  VSS snapshot and capture the image from it.  This can be used to
           image a "live" Windows system.

       •   Long path support on Windows.  wimlib-imagex can capture and apply files  with  paths  exceeding  the
           MAX_PATH (260 character) limitation of the Win32 subsystem.

       •   Non-Administrator  support  on  Windows.   You  can  run  wimlib-imagex without Administrator rights,
           subject to some limitations.

COMMON OPTIONS

       The following options work for all wimlib-imagex commands:

       --help
             Display the help, then exit.

       --version
             Display the version and legal information, then exit.

       --quiet
             Suppress informational and progress messages.

CASE SENSITIVITY

       By default, the case sensitivity of wimlib-imagex differs somewhat between UNIX-like systems and Windows.
       WIM images may (but usually do not) have multiple files with the same case-insensitive name.  Internally,
       wimlib stores filenames as case-sensitive, but on Windows paths actually provided by the user for use  in
       a  WIM  image  (e.g.  for  extracting, adding, renaming, or deleting files) will by default be treated as
       case-insensitive in order to get the "expected" behavior. This differs from the default behavior on UNIX-
       like systems, where such paths will be treated as case-sensitive.

       Note that with case insensitivity, a path component may in general be ambiguous due to multiple files  or
       directories  having  the same case-insensitive name.  In such cases, if there is a file or directory with
       an exactly matching name, it is chosen;  otherwise,  one  of  the  case-insensitively  matching  file  or
       directories is chosen arbitrarily.

       The  default  case sensitivity of wimlib-imagex can be overridden by explicitly setting the environmental
       variable WIMLIB_IMAGEX_IGNORE_CASE to 1, in which case such paths will be treated case insensitively,  or
       0, in which such paths will be treated case sensitively.

       Regardless of these settings, options and non-path arguments must be specified in lower case.

LICENSE

       wimlib-imagex  may  be  redistributed  and/or modified under the terms of the GNU General Public License;
       either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.  There is  NO  WARRANTY,  to  the
       extent permitted by law.

REPORTING BUGS

       Report bugs to https://wimlib.net/forums/.  Feedback and suggestions are also welcome.

SEE ALSO

       wimappend(1),   wimapply(1),   wimcapture(1),   wimdelete(1),   wimdir(1),  wimexport(1),  wimextract(1),
       wiminfo(1),  wimjoin(1),  wimmount(1),   wimmountrw(1),   wimoptimize(1),   wimsplit(1),   wimunmount(1),
       wimupdate(1), wimverify(1),

wimlib 1.14.4                                     February 2024                                 WIMLIB-IMAGEX(1)