Start PXE over IPV4 Error on 11th gen machines

Subash Parthiban 1 Reputation point
2022-08-18T11:37:09.097+00:00

Hello,

We are unable to image a 11th Gen Intel processor machines like HP Elitebook 840 G8 and HP Zbook Studio 15 G8. They get into Network boot and hangs on "Start PXE over IPV4" screen and boots back.

Since they are 11th gen, they dont have default Legacy option in BIOS, only Secure boot and that too we have tried disabling and enabling but still the result is same. We have another location that user the same models and it works for them. Is there a network modifications that we need to do to bring this up? Because the settings wise they are all same in BIOS. But still it does not work.

Let me know if you need more details.

Thanks,

Subash P

Windows for business | Windows Server | Devices and deployment | Set up, install, or upgrade
Windows for business | Windows Client for IT Pros | User experience | Other
0 comments No comments
{count} votes

2 answers

Sort by: Most helpful
  1. Thomas Nielsen 146 Reputation points
    2022-08-21T10:31:24.377+00:00

    Hi

    What are you using to network boot on? SCCM or?

    Have you updated to newest version of the BIOS?
    Have you injected newest driver in to your winPE boot image?

    There might also be some different boot settings you might want to toggle inside the BIOS.

    Best Regards
    Thomas
    https://www.techthatworks.net


  2. Wesley Li-MSFT 4,576 Reputation points Microsoft External Staff
    2022-08-22T07:31:10.17+00:00

    Hi

    Do you want to image via PXE network boot or install the system image from disk?

    If you are installing the image via disk, in addition to disabling Secure Boot, you can also try changing the BIOS boot order under the BIOS, setting the disk as the first boot entry, and disabling the Wake on LAN feature in the BIOS.
    https://www.partitionwizard.com/partitionmagic/start-pxe-over-ipv4.html

    If you need to boot the installation image over the network, you can try updating the BIOS version to the latest, or view the boot logs from Event Viewer to assist with troubleshooting.
    https://www.auslogics.com/en/articles/see-shutdown-and-startup-log-in-windows-10/

    Best Regards,
    Wesley Li

    0 comments No comments

Your answer

Answers can be marked as Accepted Answers by the question author, which helps users to know the answer solved the author's problem.