I can think of two ways to do this during imaging using a script. Using either the bless command from the OS, or the bless verb from the jamf binary:
Usage: jamf bless -target <path to target> [-setOF]
jamf bless -bootargs <boot-args> -bootfile <boot-file> -bootdevice <bootdevice>
You would of course need to know the disk that you want to boot to. I just cobbled this together quickly, so you'll want to test this, and I'm sure someone else on list will let you know if there is an easier way:
#!/bin/sh
# get the volume path
bootVolume=`diskutil list | grep -i "macintosh hd" | awk '{ print $7 }'`
# bless the boot volume
jamf bless -target /dev/$bootVolume
Of course, if your internal drive is not named Macintosh HD, you'll want to change the grep in that script. Also, you'll want to make sure there are no other drives named "Macintosh HD", so re-naming the drive you are booting from to do the imaging is important.
Like I said, I'm sure there's another way I'm not thinking of, and I'm sure someone on list will respond with it. Right @mm2270? :-)
I will give it a test run and let you know. Looks pretty straight forward. Thanks!
Heh :) Sorry, but I've got bupkis more or less here. Since the drive you're booting TO won't actually be the drive you're booted FROM during imaging, the way @stevewood][/url wrote it would be the best way I can think of. Getting the boot volumes disk identifier is easy even if you don't know the name of the drive, but that's not what we're actually talking about. While its being imaged or after its imaged, it looks more or less like any other internal HD would, so no tricks up my sleeve for this.
If your drives are not named "Macintosh HD" as Steve mentioned, then you;d have to adjust your script accordingly.
Edit: Also, meant to say this, but Casper Imaging should be setting the drive as the boot volume I believe. So if that's not happening, you might want to look into why further, Maybe contact your Account Manager on that to see if they have any thoughts.
If you add a script to your imaging workflow that looks for the .jamfTarget file created by Casper Imaging (https://jamfnation.jamfsoftware.com/discussion.html?id=10545), you could then adapt the script that @stevewood posted to get that volumes name.
Although, I though Casper Imaging did the bless anyways.
I see that it blesses it during the image process. But it does not seem to work. I am about to try his scripto here is a sec...
This is the error I am getting.
There is a problem with your syntax.
Error: A valid system was not found on the specified drive. (/Volumes/dev/disk0s2/System/Library/CoreServices/ does not exist)
I pretty much copy and pasted @stevewood script. Not sure what I am missing.
Is jamf bless adding /Volumes?
You either need to refer to /Volumes/[name of volume]
or
/dev/disk[identifier]
/Volumes/dev/...... wont exist