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title | description | ms.prod | author | ms.author | ms.topic | ms.localizationpriority | ms.reviewer | manager |
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Windows Configuration Designer command-line interface (Windows 10/11) | Learn more about the ICD syntax, switches, and arguments that you can use in the Windows Configuration Designer command-line interface for Windows10/11 client devices. | w10 | aczechowski | lizlong | article | medium | gkomatsu | aaroncz |
Windows Configuration Designer command-line interface (reference)
Applies to
- Windows 10
- Windows 11
You can use the Windows Configuration Designer command-line interface (CLI) to automate the building of provisioning packages.
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IT pros can use the Windows Configuration Designer CLI to require less retooling of existing processes. You must run the Windows Configuration Designer CLI from a command window with administrator privileges.
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You must use the Windows Configuration Designer CLI and edit the customizations.xml sources to create a provisioning package with multivariant support. You need the customizations.xml file as one of the inputs to the Windows Configuration Designer CLI to build a provisioning package. For more information, see Create a provisioning package with multivariant settings.
Syntax
icd.exe /Build-ProvisioningPackage /CustomizationXML:<path_to_xml> /PackagePath:<path_to_ppkg>
[/StoreFile:<path_to_storefile>] [/MSPackageRoot:<path_to_mspackage_directory>] [/OEMInputXML:<path_to_xml>]
[/ProductName:<product_name>] [/Variables:<name>:<value>] [[+|-]Encrypted] [[+|-]Overwrite] [/?]
Switches and arguments
Switch | Required? | Arguments |
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/CustomizationXML | No | Specifies the path to a Windows provisioning XML file that contains the customization assets and settings. For more information, see Windows provisioning answer file. |
/PackagePath | Yes | Specifies the path and the package name where the built provisioning package will be saved. |
/StoreFile | No See Important note. |
For partners using a settings store other than the default store(s) used by Windows Configuration Designer, use this parameter to specify the path to one or more comma-separated Windows settings store file. By default, if you don't specify a settings store file, the settings store that's common to all Windows editions will be loaded by Windows Configuration Designer. Important If you use this parameter, you must not use /MSPackageRoot or /OEMInputXML. |
/Variables | No | Specifies a semicolon separated <name> and <value> macro pair. The format for the argument must be <name>=<value> . |
Encrypted | No | Denotes whether the provisioning package should be built with encryption. Windows Configuration Designer autogenerates the decryption password and includes this information in the output. Precede with + for encryption, or - for no encryption. The default is no encryption. |
Overwrite | No | Denotes whether to overwrite an existing provisioning package. Precede with + to overwrite an existing package or - if you don't want to overwrite an existing package. The default is false (don't overwrite). |
/? | No | Lists the switches and their descriptions for the command-line tool or for certain commands. |
Related articles
- Provisioning packages for Windows client
- How provisioning works in Windows client
- Install Windows Configuration Designer
- Create a provisioning package
- Apply a provisioning package
- Settings changed when you uninstall a provisioning package
- Provision PCs with common settings for initial deployment (simple provisioning)
- Use a script to install a desktop app in provisioning packages
- PowerShell cmdlets for provisioning Windows client (reference)
- Create a provisioning package with multivariant settings