System Center Configuration Manager for WS2K8 Released

By Scott M. Fulton, III | Published August 27, 2007, 5:41 PM

What may eventually be considered one of the most useful and welcome new features for admins has finally been officially released by Microsoft. Today, the company announced that System Center Configuration Manager has officially "released to manufacturing." A 120-day trial evaluation version appeared on Microsoft TechNet this morning.

SCCM is the replacement for Systems Management Server 2003 R2, and its purpose is to enable an administrator from a central location to manage and configure operating systems remotely. This new version makes feasible an innovative method of deployment, which is actually already under way for Windows Vista: You can build your own "distribution image" of an operating system, complete with the applications and settings specific to your organization, and distribute it through your network for remote installation.

Another critical new feature is network access protection (NAP), which lets you set up a scheme whereby systems (including notebooks) cannot gain full access to your network until they meet certain "health" criteria that you specify. SCCM then sets up a process whereby those systems can "get healthy" before logging in.

Typically at this point, I'd provide a link to my description of this new Windows Server feature on InformIT's Windows Server Reference Guide, but that page was offline due to technical difficulties today. At any rate, UPDATE: The InformIT server's back up, so my full article on SCCM appears here. Here's how I described NAP last April:

Here's how NAP works: The management server contacts Windows Update and other online distribution points for updated software. In learning about these updates, the SCCM software on the management server activates a wizard, which will of course require your intervention. Using this wizard, SCCM builds a series of policies whose rules govern whether non-updated systems have full or restricted network access. Those policies are distributed to the remediation server.

When a client seeks a DHCP server, under Longhorn, it provides that server with a kind of signature that represents its "health." Under Microsoft parlance, a non-updated client is relatively unhealthy (although in practice, the update can sometimes cause the problem, which is why it's necessary that you know your updates thoroughly as you're using the SCCM wizard).

The DHCP server runs the health certificate by the SCCM policy manager to see whether the client is healthy enough to be granted access. If the certificate fails this test, the DHCP server places the client on a kind of quarantine. It can access the remediation server, but not much else. The remediation server "heals" the client with the updates, then the client requests access again. If the health certificate passes the test the second time around, all is forgiven.

UPDATE - Microsoft Senior Technical Product Manager for SCCM 2007 Jeff Wettlaufer wrote BetaNews on Wednesday to remind us that the new edition is not just for Windows Server 2008. Our headline for this story may have given that implication, so we stand corrected. The new edition also works with Windows Server 2003 R2.

Comments

It was announced on Friday in the lead PM's blog:

http://myitforum.com/cs2...-left-the-building.aspx

Score: 0

|

Don't wait for Microsoft's patch: Secure Windows now from today's 0-day

Microsoft is recommending users simply get rid of a vulnerable ActiveX control that no one even uses any more. We'll show you how to do that right now.

Nokia: Android? Are you crazy?

Rumors about new Android devices abound, but Nokia squashes this one.

Symantec goes live with Norton 2010 betas

Norton Internet Security and Norton Antivirus 2010 are now available for testing.

What's Now: Drenched with 'Purple Ra1n,' iPhone users caught eating 'redsn0w'

Plus: Symantec and McAfee go to war, and what's LucasArts building in its top-secret, moon-shaped orbital facility?

In New York, online booze loses a Circuit Court decision

Court worried about gangster influence if liquor purchased directly.

British Telecom sacks bitterly unpopular Phorm ad platform

Phorm under BT is no more, but the targeted ad service could still go on under Virgin or TalkTalk.

CBS is the last man standing against Hulu

Popular streaming syndication site Hulu now has all the major networks in its camp except CBS.

Not just Vista: The operating system is dying, too

Carmi Levy: Wide Angle Zoom Vista's troubles point to a bigger shift that will affect more than just Microsoft.

Bolt: the dark horse mobile browser

Bitstream's small-footprint mobile browser is available in Beta 3

IE8 WSUS update push to begin August 25

After months of availability to users willing to seek it out, Internet Explorer 8 will be rolled into Windows Server...

Geeks vs. journalists: A tale of two worldviews

Recovery with Angela Gunn Why geeks think most mainstream journalism is flaky, and why the mainstream thinks geeks are trying to kill them. (They're both right.)

Can Linux do BitLocker better than Windows 7?

Betanews kicks off a new series with a look at how the Linux operating system's FDE stacks up against BitLocker, the Windows feature that today commands a $120 premium.

Windows 7 ISO Verifier 1.0

July 6 - 5:40 PM ET

ProgDVB 6.10.2

July 6 - 5:19 PM ET

FreeBSD 8.0 Beta 1

July 6 - 4:58 PM ET

K-Lite Codec Pack 64-bit 2.5.0

July 6 - 3:55 PM ET

SysCheckUp 1.4.0

July 6 - 3:34 PM ET