![]() This is done when registering the image by: Unique to Windows 11 imports, VM Import/Export automatically enables UEFI Secure Boot using Microsoft keys and NitroTPM. Customers with Virtual Desktop Access (VDA) E3 or E5 licenses may bring those licenses to Amazon EC2 Dedicated Hosts and Dedicated Instances. The LicenseType set to BYOL – Microsoft requires customers to Bring Your Own License (BYOL) for Windows 11 and to run it on hardware dedicated to a single customer.For previous versions of Windows, VM Import/Export defaults to the Legacy BIOS boot mode. The BootMode set to uefi by default – This behavior is a change to the import process for Windows images as Windows 11 supports only UEFI. ![]() When VM Import/Export detects a Windows 11 image, it configures the import task with: Differences in importing Windows 11 images Using this AMI, I will then launch a new instance and demonstrate how to confirm the operation of the TPM, the UEFI boot mode, and Secure Boot state. I will then start an import of a Windows 11 image, resulting in an AMI that can be used to launch Secure Boot-enabled instances. In this blog post, I will discuss new functionality in the VM Import/Export import process used with Windows 11 images. You can reduce your time spent preparing an Amazon Machine Image (AMI) for Windows 11 by using VM Import/Export to convert your existing VM image to an AMI ready for use with the Secure Boot feature. Using the UEFI boot mode and NitroTPM, launching Windows 11 is now supported on Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2). Do you maintain a Windows 11 VM image on-premises? Windows 11 sets new hardware requirements for Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI), Trusted Platform Module (TPM) 2.0, and Secure Boot support.
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