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Dell Command | Deploy FAQ

Summary: Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) that Dell has received about the Dell Command Deploy Driver packs.

This article applies to This article does not apply to This article is not tied to any specific product. Not all product versions are identified in this article.

Symptoms

The following article provides information based on Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) that Dell has received about the Dell Command Deploy Driver packs.


Bluetooth radio support comes with various devices and you would primarily see it with the WIFI cards. The Bluetooth driver isn’t included because they aren’t compatible with the INF-centric installation that is used by SCCM/MDT etc. Our driver cabs are primarily provided for automated deployment through software packages like SCCM/MDT …

Bluetooth drivers aren’t included in the driver cab for reasons said above. It is expected as of this writing that, with the currently available Operating Systems provided by Microsoft, an inbox driver (Generic Bluetooth Radio) will be installed for Bluetooth. There are inbox drivers for various Bluetooth profiles. However since you are seeing a yellow bang, you can look up for a Bluetooth driver package from  Dell Support. This package (DUP package) has to be installed manually. It shouldn’t be used by extracting the contents and then using the extracted contents (perhaps as part of a compressed file) for remote deployment.

Thunderbolt drivers have similar issues as seen in Bluetooth drivers. They can’t be used in the SCCM environment or installed correctly using just the device manager. We are working with the IHV to fix this issue.

Example error in setuperr.log (from %windir%\Panther) shows the following failure information:

2013-08-29 13:09:40, Error CBS Startup: Failed to process advanced operation queue, startupPhase:
0. Primitives are still pending. [HRESULT = 0x80004005 - E_FAIL]
2013-08-29 13:09:40, Error CBS Startup: POQ has not been processed yet, aborting startup processing. Startup processing will be attempted again. [HRESULT = 0x80004004 - E_ABORT]
2013-08-29 13:09:40, Error [0x030149] CMI Callback_CBS_Do_OnlineInstall:Calling startup processing failed 0x80004004
2013-08-29 13:09:40, Error [0x030153] CMI Callback_CMI_ConfigInstall: CBS startup processing re-run failed.

You need the updated Kernel Mode Driver Framework (KMDF) 1.11 SLN312106_en_US__1iC_External_Link_BD_v1 included in your base image.

Reasons for failure:

  • Windows 7 Operating system comes with KMDF 1.9 (Kernel Mode driver framework) as part of the image. Any driver release which is built with a newer version of KMDF requires a reboot of the system during the installation, this reboot is unexpected during OS Setup.
  • If the Win7 image used contains any security update or patch affecting the KMDF components is used along with driver (which is built on a newer version of KMDF) then deployment would fail. Example: KB2808735

Resolution:

Download and inject package (2685811 SLN312106_en_US__1iC_External_Link_BD_v1) as part of the image preemptively. So that same image can be used for OSD. This will avoid the unexpected reboot during OSD.

Scope/Affected Drivers:

This issue applies to Window 7 OS:

1.1. If the Win7 cab includes any driver consisting of wdfcoinstaller01011.dll (initiates KMDF upgrade to 1.11).

2.2. If the image does not include any security updates or patches affecting KMDF components (example KB2808735) then OS deployment might not fail, but it will prompt for a reboot when User logins for the first time.

List of devices Affected:

  • ST Microelectronics Free Fall Data Protection
  • Intel Smart Connect Technology
  • Intel Management Engine Interface
  • Dell Touchpad
  • Intel Dual Band Wireless AC7260 Bluetooth

msvcr100.dll is a run-time library version. This popup would appear if the OS being deployed doesn't have this runtime library. One of the drivers being deployed may rely on this DLL file. You can refer below links to understand the issue and get the fixes.

At the time of this writing, the library can be downloaded using the following links...

After installing the above, the missing driver can be installed by extracting it from the .CAB file and pointing to the .INF file. (with device manager)

With the introduction of TPM 2.0 Microsoft has released a hotfix, to support the new TPM modules for, Microsoft Windows 7 OS variants. The ACPI recognizes this device as ACPI\MSFT0101. The KB article and hotfix is available as of this writing at the following link:

If your platform supports NVMe for PCIe and the operating system is Microsoft Windows 7, it will need a hotfix to provide native support for NVMe for PCIe.

The following link provides the advisory...

However, installing this KB can also present a BSOD. Microsoft has provided a fix for this issue. Please refer to the following link for the hotfix, for the STOP error (if you might see one) after installing KB2990941.

There is known issue for Windows 10 Driver Import in SCCM 2012 SP2\R2SP1.

To resolve this, you must apply the following KB:

Yes, to properly prepare your systems for Windows 10, update the platform BIOS with the latest update. The system components below are not supported with Windows 10, updating to latest BIOS will not show these devices in device manager

  • Intel(R) Rapid Start Technology Application

  • Intel(R) Smart Connect Technology Application

For Windows 10 deployment using SCCM, follow the blog: System Center Configuration Manager Team Blog SLN312106_en_US__1iC_External_Link_BD_v1.

Some drivers are only available through Windows Update and some are yet to be released and will be included in a future CAB.

Drivers are tested for being digitally signed well before they are made available to dell.com/support. They again go under rigorous testing before they are included in the driver cab. There are so many reasons why the system would complain that drivers are not signed. Ensure that the operating system’s certificate enrollment policy is not switched off. If you are connected to a domain then the enrollment pulls certificate information from the domain controller if configured so. There are this and many other settings to ensure the system understands the digital signature.

There is a new scenario that is being seen recently as Microsoft has released a security update for windows 7 x64 systems around March. Windows 7 systems use SHA-1 as a hash algorithm for digital signatures. This hashing algorithm is now considered less secure and hence they have provided a security update for allowing Windows 7 x64 systems to use SHA-2 that is available by default in later systems (Windows 8 and above). Some Hardware Vendors have considered changing the digital signature algorithm used for their drivers, where for Windows 7 drivers they are using SHA-2 as the default hashing algorithm. Hence if you try to install these drivers in a Windows 7 x64 system they will fail.

Please check the problem system to see if KB3033929 has been pushed. If not, this might fix the issue. The relevant links are below...

SLN312106_en_US__13i_aspx_sk_v1

(Figure.1 ASPX Logo)

The latest versions of Bluetooth drivers provided for Intel 8260 Bluetooth modules may present an exclamation mark on device manager after install. This is because the driver tries to update the firmware and while doing so it looks for some related files in C:\ drive specifically. We are working with Intel on the bug-fix and we expect to bundle the fix in our upcoming driver cabs. Meanwhile, the workaround is to force deployment of the Operating system to C:\ drive.

SCCM users can refer the below link to force the installation of the Operating System to the C:\ drive.

For others who already have an OS deployed to a drive other than C:\ the following command could help:

subst c:

e.g.) subst c: d:\

The above command would make all references made to c:\program files\Intel, in an application, get redirected to d:\program files\Intel

Advanced workstations - T7610/R7610/T7910/R7910 provide support for Intel Phi co-processor card. However, we do not provide factory Install or driver cab support for these drivers. Drivers won't be included in driver cabs for Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1 and Windows 10 operating systems. Inclusion of the drivers has presented BSODs in the past. Also to put this device to use one will have to install the entire MPSS software stack provided by Intel. MPSS should also install the necessary drivers required for this device to function.

This driver is also available from dell.com/support for the respective products.

There are two cases of timeout one that is due to the delayed activation of the co-installer supplied with the driver and second due to driver signature checking related activity. For the former, we would usually provide you with a better solution in the subsequent release of our cab. For the latter, Microsoft has already documented this fact. Please refer to below KB article.

SLN312106_en_US__16i_file_sk001_v1(1)

(Figure.2 File Logo)

Windows 7 USB driver stack is built to support USB 2.0 only. However, the USB 3.0 option was provided to vendors. Hence the entire USB 3.0 stack including support for innate USB 2.0 stack is provided by the vendor of the device through the driver they provide. Therefore for Windows 7, it was required that a switch be made from USB 2.0 to USB 3.0 as there was no direct support for USB 3.0. This is achieved by the iusbhcs.sys component provided in the Intel driver package. However, it is also a requirement that this driver is installed only via setup.exe application or a similar driver installation program. This is against the INF-installation method that is supported by SCCM/MDT or even DPInst and such utilities. We have observed BSODs in case the HCS was included and installed via the INF file. Hence we do not pack this component. To achieve full USB 3.0 functionality one would still want to run the setup.exe application that DELL provides via the drivers available in  Dell Support  (of the format Self-extractable installer executable – DUP).

Unable to import Broadcom Control vault driver to MDT. While importing – user gets a Length cannot be less than zero; Parameter name: length error

The latest Control Vault drivers are packaged with both driver and firmware together. And there is a file named current_version in the firmware folder without a file extension. MDT does not recognize files without extensions hence this driver import fails.

Broadcom is planning a driver update for addressing this issue. Meanwhile, Control Vault applications can be installed as part of the task sequence.

It is a known issue with Dell Command Integration Suite which will be fixed in the next release. As a workaround, import the failed drivers manually to the Configuration Manager Console and add to the Driver Packages.

Kindly refer to the following link to import Drivers manually:

The issue is currently under investigation by Microsoft. The problem seems to be caused by DISM trying to load the registry of the offline OS when it has not finished unloading the registry from a previous driver install registry load. This issue primarily happens on faster PCs with SSD drives, mainly SSD NVME drives, but can occur on any PC.

Article Properties
Article Number: 000177999
Article Type: Solution
Last Modified: 21 Feb 2021
Version:  4
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