Running ScanState on Offline Windows Images: You can run the ScanState command in Microsoft Windows PE. In addition, USMT now supports migration from previous installations of Windows contained in Windows.old directories. The offline directory can be a Windows directory when you run the ScanState command in Windows PE or Windows.old when you run the ScanState command in Windows .
Volume Shadow Copy Support: With the /vsc command line option, the ScanState command can now use the volume shadow copy service to capture files that are locked for editing by other applications.
New AES Encryption Options: USMT now provides support for stronger encryption algorithms in several key size options, based on support in the source computer’s operating system.
Configurable File Errors: You can use the new
New Helper Functions: The ScanState command has two new helper functions that enable new migration scenarios:
-MigXmlHelper.FileProperties can be used to control which files are migrated, based on properties that you specify. For example, date created, date modified, date accessed, and file size.
-MigXmlHelper.GenerateDocPatterns can be used to find user documents on a computer automatically without your having to author extensive custom migration .xml files.
Improved Space Estimation: The ScanState command now more accurately estimates the size of the migration store as well as the additional temporary disk space required to create the migration store. This results in a reduction of migration failures due to low disk space. The ScanState command now also estimates the size of the compressed migration store.
List of Files Being Migrated: You can use the /listfiles command-line option for the ScanState command to generate a text file list of all files included in the migration.
Usmtutils.exe: This is a new tool that supplements the functionality provided by Scanstate.exe and Loadstate.exe.
Local Group Migration: You can use the new