


The following Ethernet devices are supported for network boot with Surface devices: Microsoft Ethernet adapters, such as the Surface Ethernet Adapter and the Surface Dock, use a chipset compatible with the Surface firmware. The chipset in the Ethernet adapter or dock must be detected and configured as a boot device in the firmware of the Surface device. For more information on potential conflicts with shared adapters, see Manage MAC addresses with removable Ethernet adapters later in this article.īooting from the network (PXE boot) is only supported when using an Ethernet adapter or docking station from Microsoft. In that case, you may also want to consider whether the removable Ethernet adapters will be dedicated to a specific Surface device or shared among multiple devices. Suppose you're prestaging clients with Windows Deployment Services (WDS) or using Microsoft Endpoint Configuration Manager. When selecting Ethernet adapters, the primary concern is how adapters will boot your Surface devices from the network. Select an Ethernet adapter for Surface devicesīefore you can address how devices will be recognized by your deployment solution, you have to use a wired network adapter. Due to the lack of a native wired Ethernet adapter, administrators must provide connectivity through a removable Ethernet adapter. Network deployment to Surface devices can pose some unique challenges for system administrators. This article describes how to perform a network deployment of the latest Surface devices including Surface Pro 3 and later.
