Homebrew Wimlib May 2026

wiminfo --version You should see output like wimlib v1.14.4 (or newer). Once installed, the main command-line tools become available: wimlib-imagex , mkwinpeimg , and wimapply . 1. Inspecting a WIM file wimlib-imagex info windows_10_enterprise.wim This shows all images inside, their indices, names, descriptions, and compression type. 2. Extracting a specific image # Extract image index 1 from the WIM into ./extract_folder wimlib-imagex apply windows_10_enterprise.wim 1 ./extract_folder 3. Creating a WIM from a directory wimlib-imagex capture ./source_folder my_backup.wim --compress=LZX 4. Appending another image to an existing WIM wimlib-imagex append ./second_source my_backup.wim "Second Image Name" --compress=LZX 5. Mounting a WIM (requires macFUSE) Mounting allows you to browse the WIM as a regular folder. First install macFUSE:

mkdir /tmp/wim_mount wimlib-imagex mount windows_10_enterprise.wim 1 /tmp/wim_mount When done, unmount: homebrew wimlib

brew install wimlib After installation, verify it works: wiminfo --version You should see output like wimlib v1

Enter – an open-source, cross-platform library and set of command-line tools for creating, modifying, extracting, and mounting WIM files. While tools like Microsoft’s dism are Windows-only, wimlib brings full WIM functionality to Linux, macOS, and even FreeBSD. Creating a WIM from a directory wimlib-imagex capture

brew install --cask macfuse Then mount the WIM read-only: