Ulaiphur Posted November 12, 2015 Share Posted November 12, 2015 I was wondering if the compression setting inside imagex (/compress none|fast|maximum) have anything to do with the speed of applying a wim file. Will setting compression to none make the apply operation faster or just the same? Thank you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tripredacus Posted November 12, 2015 Share Posted November 12, 2015 I have never tried max compress, but I cannot tell the difference between none vs fast. From the Win7 WAIK: While the compression type that you choose affects the capture time, it only slightly affects the apply time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vinifera Posted November 12, 2015 Share Posted November 12, 2015 by logic it shouldbut if you have multicore cpu with ssd then i guess it don't matter Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JFX Posted November 12, 2015 Share Posted November 12, 2015 XPRESS (fast) decompression is measurable faster than LZX (max) compression LZMS (recovery) decompression is much slower than all others. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ulaiphur Posted November 13, 2015 Author Share Posted November 13, 2015 LZMS (recovery) decompression is much slower than all others. What is this recovery? Is it the none parameter? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JFX Posted November 13, 2015 Share Posted November 13, 2015 No, none really means no compression. But you can use DISM and export a wim file to an esd file, than compression is called recovery. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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