Metering is available for Software Catalog applications only. Metering is not available for applications that appear on the Software page.
For information about enabling metering, see About metering information.
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If the Organization component is enabled on your appliance, log in to the appliance System Administration Console, https://appliance_hostname/system, or select System in the drop-down list in the top-right corner of the page next to the login information. Then click Organizations. To display the organization’s information, click the organization’s name. |
On the Organization Detail page that appears, locate the Communication and Agent Settings section.
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If the Organization component is not enabled on your appliance, log in to the appliance Administrator Console, https://appliance_hostname/admin. Then select Settings > Provisioning., and click Communication Settings on the Provisioning panel. |
The Communication Settings page appears.
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Whether the appliance stores scripting results provided by Agents installed on managed devices. Agent logs can consume as much as 1GB of disk space in the database. If disk space is not an issue, enable Agent Logging to keep all log information for Agent-managed devices. These logs can be useful during troubleshooting. To save disk space, and enable faster Agent communication, disable Agent Logging. | ||
The frequency at which Agents on managed devices report inventory. This information is displayed in the Inventory section. | ||
The frequency at which Agentless devices report inventory. This information is displayed in the Inventory section. | ||
The frequency at which managed devices report inventory to the Software Catalog page. | ||
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Metering is available for Software Catalog applications only. Metering is not available for applications that appear on the Software page.
For information about enabling metering, see About metering information.
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If the Organization component is enabled on your appliance, log in to the appliance System Administration Console, https://appliance_hostname/system, or select System in the drop-down list in the top-right corner of the page next to the login information. Then click Organizations. To display the organization’s information, click the organization’s name. |
On the Organization Detail page that appears, locate the Communication and Agent Settings section.
◦ |
If the Organization component is not enabled on your appliance, log in to the appliance Administrator Console, https://appliance_hostname/admin. Then select Settings > Provisioning., and click Communication Settings on the Provisioning panel. |
The Communication Settings page appears.
2. |
Whether the appliance stores scripting results provided by Agents installed on managed devices. Agent logs can consume as much as 1GB of disk space in the database. If disk space is not an issue, enable Agent Logging to keep all log information for Agent-managed devices. These logs can be useful during troubleshooting. To save disk space, and enable faster Agent communication, disable Agent Logging. | ||
The frequency at which Agents on managed devices report inventory. This information is displayed in the Inventory section. | ||
The frequency at which Agentless devices report inventory. This information is displayed in the Inventory section. | ||
The frequency at which managed devices report inventory to the Software Catalog page. | ||
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Application Control enables you to:
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Application Control requirements must be met for applications to be blocked.
To block applications and prevent them from being launched on managed devices, you must:
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Install the KACE Agent version 6.0 or higher on devices. Application Control is not available for Agent versions lower than 6.0, and it is not available for Linux or Agentless devices. See Updating the KACE Agent on managed devices. |
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Apply a label that has Application Control enabled, to devices. This enables the Agent to monitor application launches, including applications that are marked as Not Allowed. See Apply the Application Control label to devices. |
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Mark applications as Not Allowed. Windows and Mac applications can be marked as Not Allowed only if they are in the Software Catalog as Discovered, Not Discovered, or Locally Cataloged applications. Applications that are Uncataloged cannot be marked as Not Allowed until they are added to the Software Catalog. See Adding applications to the Software Catalog. Linux applications cannot be marked as not allowed. |
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Specify the version of the application to be blocked. For example, if you want to block all versions of Adobe Acrobat®, you must mark all versions of the application as Not Allowed. For example, Acrobat 8.x, Acrobat 9.x, and so on. However, when you mark a suite as Not Allowed, all of the applications in the suite are also marked as Not Allowed. If an application that runs on both Windows and Mac devices is marked as Not Allowed, that application is blocked on both Windows and Mac devices. |
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