Module Name
Windows OS Loader
Historical Reason
Moved to historical list due to dependency on certificate #3089
Caveat
When operated in FIPS mode with module Boot Manager validated to FIPS 140-2 under Cert. #3089 operating in FIPS mode
Security Level Exceptions
- Physical Security: N/A
- Design Assurance: Level 2
Embodiment
Multi-Chip Stand Alone
Description
The BitLocker® Windows OS Loader loads the boot-critical driver and OS kernel image files.
Tested Configuration(s)
- Azure Data Box Edge (x64) running on a Microsoft Azure Data Box with an Intel Xeon Silver with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Education October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Microsoft Surface Laptop with an Intel Core i5 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Enterprise October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Microsoft Surface Book 2 with an Intel Core i7 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Enterprise October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Microsoft Surface Laptop with an Intel Core i5 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Enterprise October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Microsoft Surface Pro LTE with an Intel Core i5 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Enterprise October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Microsoft Surface Studio with an Intel Core i7 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Enterprise October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Samsung Galaxy Book 12" with an Intel Core i5 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Enterprise October 2018 Update (x64) running on an HP EliteBook x360 1030 G2 with an Intel Core i7 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Home October 2018 Update (x86) running on a Dell Inspiron 660s with an Intel Core i3 without PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Pro October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Dell Latitude 12 Rugged Tablet with an Intel Core i5 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Pro October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Dell Latitude 5290 with an Intel Core i7 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Pro October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Microsoft Surface Book 2 with an Intel Core i7 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Pro October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Microsoft Surface Go with an Intel Pentium with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Pro October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Microsoft Surface Laptop with an Intel Core i5 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Pro October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Microsoft Surface Pro LTE with an Intel Core i5 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Pro October 2018 Update (x64) running on a Samsung Galaxy Book 10.6" with an Intel Core m3 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Pro October 2018 Update (x64) running on an HP Elite x2 1013 G3 Tablet with an Intel Core i7 with PAA[1]
- Windows 10 Pro October 2018 Update (x64) running on an HP Slimline Desktop with an Intel Pentium with PAA[1]
- Windows Server 2019 Core (x64) on Hyper-V on Windows Server 2016 running on a Dell PowerEdge R740 Server with an Intel Xeon Gold with PAA[1]
- Windows Server 2019 Core (x64) on Hyper-V on Windows Server 2019 running on a Dell Precision Tower 5810MT with an Intel Xeon E5 with PAA[1]
- Windows Server 2019 Core (x64) running on a Dell PowerEdge R740 Server with an Intel Xeon Gold with PAA[1]
- Windows Server 2019 Datacenter Core (x64) on Hyper-V on Windows Server 2019 running on a Dell Precision Tower 5810MT with an Intel Xeon E5 with PAA[1]
- Windows Server 2019 Datacenter Core (x64) running on a Dell PowerEdge R740 Server with an Intel Xeon Gold with PAA[1]
- Windows Server Core Datacenter 2019 RTM (x64) running on an HPE Edgeline EL8000 / ProLiant e910 Server Blade with PAA[2] (single-user mode)
Software Versions
10.0.17763[1] and 10.0.17763.107[2]