I am working with a Dell Latitude 3420 that seems to not be imaging properly. It is the only model I am having this issue with so it leads me to suspect a driver issue but I have uploaded all the latest drivers for the Task Sequence. I have attached the logs, any advice, or anyone run into the same issue with this model?
I've done OSD 10 years and never had this kind of problem. I very rearly had to go into dism.log. Try to install exactly the same driver from source manually, in mmc device manager window as plug and play. Will it get installed?
Try to create new driver package, maybe less drivers in it? Pay attention, what NIC driver really goes there. If not working, add latest NIC driver package directly from Intel. It would be probably newer and over-write the NIC driver offered by Dell.
Based on what @Pavel yannara Mirochnitchenko said, I checked over the DISM logs, it's clear it's failing to install the drivers during the Task Sequence. So I checked to make sure the content was actually there, that was good, checked the package content registered on the DP, that was good, so I went to check the properties of the driver package and on the Data Access tab I noticed the box marked "Copy the contents of this package to a package share on the distribution point" was not checked, so I have checked that and am testing with that. Since this package is not actually deployed but only made available in the Task Sequence it makes sense I should have had that checked. I will note I can verify it's not getting the drivers. When we press F8 after the OS install and network settings it can't ping the MP, and a nslookup just gets a loopback address, which leads me to believe it doesn't have a proper IP from not having the driver. I'll report back once I see where things go on the next test run.
Hey, holidays have taken effect and given that and it's one country working with another on a totally different time zone so things progress slow. The tech was able to manually install the drivers and join the domain. So it's really odd that it's not working in the TS. All other packages were made the same way, they work fine, this one just doesn't seem to. I will say when I am importing things I pull in the driver file from Dell, I extract the .Inf, and that is it, I upload it. I've seen in the past where it ends up looking for a .cab file so I will add that later but I don't see it looking for a cab here. My only thought now is to maybe try Dell Command for automating drivers and see if running from that will work. Problem is I haven't found a good write up on how to use that in imaging.
Running into the same issue. Updated the FDTI drivers but issue is not resolved. Xbee dev board is not recognized on any of the new laptop fleet (Windows 10 Pro on a Dell Latitude 9420). Xbee board works with older PCs. Any tips or recommendations greatly appreciated.
This driver provides support for N-Trig pen and multi-touch sensors. Singleand multi-touch events are translated to the appropriate protocols forthe hid and input systems. Pen events are sufficiently hid compliant andare left to the hid core. The driver also provides additional filteringand utility functions accessible with sysfs and module parameters.
The pcelx driver supports the 3COM EtherLink III PCMCIA PC Card as a standard Ethernet type of deviceconforming to the DLPI interface specification.The driver supports the hot-plugging of the PC Card.
If the 3Com PC Card device is recognized, the pcelx driver is automatically loaded, ports and IRQs allocated, and specialfiles created (if they don't already exist). No manual configuration of thehardware is necessary or possible.
Device naming in /dev follows standard LAN devicenaming with the exception that the PPA (physical point of attachment) unitnumber is the socket where the card resides, not the instance. For the pcelx driver, /dev/pcelx0 (or PPA 0 of /dev/pcelx) is the card in socket 0, while a card in socket 1is /dev/pcelx1 (or PPA 1 of /dev/pcelx).
1.Double-click the new icon on the desktop mark Dell Latitude E7440 Laptop Modem Communications Driver.EXE.
2.The Self-Extracting window appears and prompts you to extract or
unzip to C:DELLDRIVERS create an Modem Communications driver folder. open this path to access application setup
3.After finishing the Dell Latitude E7440 Laptop Modem Communications Driver extraction, if the self Extractor
window is still open, close it.
4.browse for C:DELLDRIVERS Modem Communications folder.
5.open the folder inside Modem Communications driver folder
6.run the setup to began the installation
7.Follow the on-screen installation instructions finish .