Enter .
Here is why this specific version still matters in a world of Windows 11 and ARM64. The single biggest reason to still have WDK 8.1 installed on a build machine is Target Platform configuration .
If you have been in the Windows driver development space for a while, you know that the evolution of the WDK (Windows Driver Kit) has been nothing short of rapid. We have moved from the classic WDK 7 to the modern WDK for Windows 11. But every so often, an engineer needs to take a step back.
But for the thousands of legacy PCIe cards, proprietary USB devices, and industrial control systems running Windows 7 Embedded?
If you are spinning up a legacy VM to patch an old driver, do not reach for the WDK 7 .iso. Reach for . It is the bridge between the past and the near-past. Do you still maintain a driver that targets Windows 7? Let me know in the comments below. Tags: WDK, Windows Driver Kit, KMDF, Windows 8.1, Legacy Drivers, Visual Studio 2013
October 15, 2023 Category: Driver Development, Legacy Systems
Rediscovering the Windows Driver Kit 8.1: A Bridge Between Windows 7 and Windows 10
It respects the classic KMDF syntax that most senior devs know by heart, but it adds just enough modern convenience (trace logging, better verifier) to make debugging bearable.