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From: Tengu on 11 Apr 2010 20:00 Is there a way to get all of the Critical/Important Updates since the release of XP-SP-3 for slipstreaming? Updateing after installation is very time consuming and, it seems, dangerous accessing the internet without those updates. -- Thanks!
From: Shenan Stanley on 11 Apr 2010 20:49 Tengu wrote: > Is there a way to get all of the Critical/Important Updates since > the release of XP-SP-3 for slipstreaming? > Updateing after installation is very time consuming and, it seems, > dangerous accessing the internet without those updates. All? Not really. Most? Yes. Just like you slipstream/integrate the service packs, really. Many people utilize tools like AutoStreamer or nLite to intgrate/slipstream updates into the installation media. nLite (I believe) has a way/hack that 'integrates' Internet Explorer 7 - but to be honest, _I_ would not do that. Getting the updates - that is fairly simple. One way... You can see the critical (security and other) patches released for a given month using the following: http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms##-***.mspx At the end of this line you see "ms##-***.mspx" .. If you simply replace ## with the two-digit year and the *** with the three character month abbreviation, you will see the list of "critical" and "important" patches for that month (since it only happens once a month usually, if you check by the second Tuesday (wait until afternoon) of each month - you should be fine) - note that future months will not work - although they may have an "Advance Notification for" in place when the actual time approaches. Example: November 2009 http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms09-nov.mspx Another way... Windows Updates Downloader http://www.windowsupdatesdownloader.com/ Another way... Security updates are available on ISO-9660 DVD5 image files from the Microsoft Download Center http://support.microsoft.com/kb/913086 The second is truly the easiest for most people. Most of the updates you can get have an /integrate switch. Pretty much the same way you do the service packs. Although many people use the nlite/autostreamer and other similar tools - I stick with the original. Copy the installation CD files to a directory on a Windows XP system (I prefer doing the integration on a working system of the same version, although it is not usually necessary...) - preferably a short path like "C:\WinXP". Downloading the full latest service pack and the patches I want to integrate using one of the methods above and putting them all into a different (but short as well) path like "C:\XPPatch" - no sub-directories. Integrating the service pack first - in this case, given what I have, the command would be: "C:\XPPatch\WindowsXP-KB936929-SP3-x86-ENU.exe" /integrate:C:\WinXP and after some time, it would be done. Then I would integrate the other patches that I could. There would be *quite a few* updates, so I could either do them one-by-one using this command with the appropriate substitutions... "C:\XPPatch\WindowsXP-KB??????-x86-enu.exe" /integrate:C:\WinXP Or I could create a batch script to run through and do them for me: <start batch script here - copy below this line> set sourcedir=C:\WinXP set patchdir=C:\XPPatch for %%U in (%patchdir%\WindowsXP-KB??????-x86-enu.exe) DO ( if not exist %svcpackdir%\%%U ( @ECHO Now integrating %%U . . . @ECHO. start /wait %%U /integrate:%sourcedir% ) ) @ECHO Windows XP Updates Integrated into your Installation Media. @ECHO Burn your new media. <end batch script here - copy above this line> And running that would integrate the majority of the available patches and automatically integrate them - only pausing for me to click OK on each of the patches "Success" or "Failure" messages. You could make it silent with a little modification. The reason it cannot get them all is that some patches do not integrate and some do not use the same naming scheme (although you could rename them so they do...) I then use BBIE (Bart's Boot Image Extractor) to take the 'boot image' off the original Windows XP CD and save it to a file so I can burn a bootable Windows XP CD with the integrations I have made. Depending on what CD burning software or ISO creation software you use - the instructions can differ a bit here... This part is important when burning to CD: Set Load segment of sectors (hex) to 0000 and set Number of loaded sectors to 4. Or at least that is something I always remember. That's just the way I have done it - even though I have used the other methods, I find that one the most reliable. -- Shenan Stanley MS-MVP -- How To Ask Questions The Smart Way http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
From: Ǝиçεl on 11 Apr 2010 21:11 Security updates are available on ISO-9660 DVD5 image files from the Microsoft Download Center http://support.microsoft.com/kb/913086 -=- Ǝиçεl ©¿©¬ -=- "Tengu" wrote: > Is there a way to get all of the Critical/Important Updates since the release > of XP-SP-3 for slipstreaming? > Updateing after installation is very time consuming and, it seems, dangerous > accessing the internet without those updates. > -- > Thanks!
From: Jerry on 12 Apr 2010 16:40 Also, The RyanVM Integrator will help; look here: http://siginetsoftware.com/forum/ and here: http://www.ryanvm.net/forum/ "Tengu" <Tengu(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:5A61EC8C-14F6-46F3-88C3-8049F896FA25(a)microsoft.com... > Is there a way to get all of the Critical/Important Updates since the > release > of XP-SP-3 for slipstreaming? > Updateing after installation is very time consuming and, it seems, > dangerous > accessing the internet without those updates. > -- > Thanks!
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