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Installing the KACE Agent on devices. The KACE Agent can be installed on Windows, Mac®, Red Hat®, SUSE®, and Ubuntu® devices. See Provisioning the KACE Agent. |
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Enabling Agentless management for devices. Agentless management is especially useful for devices that cannot have the KACE Agent installed, such as devices with unsupported operating systems. See Managing Agentless devices. |
This information includes the date the change was made and the user who made the change, which can be useful during troubleshooting. See About history settings.
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Thorough Discovery: You can use this type of discovery to get more device information than what is available from the "what and where" type. See Add a Discovery Schedule for a thorough scan of managed Windows, Mac, Linux, and UNIX computers. |
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External Integration Discovery: A different type of thorough discovery that is aimed at certain computer devices that are not Windows-, Mac Os X-, or Linux-based. For more information, see: |
If you want to add an Nmap Discovery Schedule, there are several issues to consider. See Things to take into consideration with Nmap discovery.
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Log in to the appliance Administrator Console, https://appliance_hostname/admin. Or, if the Show organization menu in admin header option is enabled in the appliance General Settings, select an organization in the drop-down list in the top-right corner of the page next to the login information. |
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External Integration [KACE Cloud Mobile Device Manager, G Suite, Workspace ONE]. KACE Cloud Mobile Device Manager, G Suite, and Workspace ONE discovery options appear. |
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Authenticated [WinRM, SNMP, SSH, VMware, Hyper-V]. DNS Lookup, Relay, WinRM, Hyper-V, VMM, SNMP, SSH, and VMware discovery options appear. |
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In the IP Address Range field, enter an IP address range to scan. Use hyphens to specify individual IP address class ranges. For example, type 192.168.2-5.1-200 to scan for all IP addresses between 192.168.2-5.1 and 192.168.2-5.200, inclusive. |
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Optional: Enter an email address for being notified of when the discovery scan completes. The email includes the name of the discovery schedule. |
Run in combination with an event rather than on a specific date or at a specific time. | |||||||||||
Every n hours |
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Run daily at a specified time, or run on a designated day of the week at a specified time. | |||||||||||
Run on the nth of every month/specific month at HH:MM |
Run on the same day every month, or a specific month, at the specified time. | ||||||||||
Run on the nth weekday of every month/specific month at HH:MM |
Run on the specific weekday of every month, or a specific month, at the specified time. | ||||||||||
Run according to a custom schedule. Use standard 5-field cron format (extended cron format is not supported): Use the following when specifying values:
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Click to view the task schedule. The Task Schedule dialog box displays a list of scheduled tasks. Click a task to review the task details. For more information, see View task schedules. |
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To improve the speed and accuracy of Nmap discovery:
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Avoid using DNS Lookup. DNS Lookup can slow down scan times by up to 500 percent if you specify an invalid or unreachable IP address for the DNS. |
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Run one discovery type at a time. Although it is possible to run multiple discovery types simultaneously, doing so can extend the length of a run and can cause erratic OS detection results. |
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Select Nmap Operating System Detection (Best Guess) if you are unsure what to run. This selection can give you a reasonable view into your subnet or subnets. At a minimum, using Best Guess can identify what OSs are on what devices. If you do not get the expected results, for example if some devices appear with unknown as the Operating System, try increasing the timeout value and rerunning the discovery. |
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Discovery does not work correctly through a VPN. Use another source for access to the devices. |
If you know that there are devices that should be reported, but are not, they are either:
If the Operating System appears as unknown in the Discovery Results list page:
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Check to see if the Nmap checkmark is present in the Nmap column. If not, the device was offline during the scan, and the operating system could not be determined. |
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If the Nmap checkmark is present, but the Operating System is unknown, the most likely cause is a firewall that is blocking the ports that Nmap is using to determine what OS is running on the device. |
For example, if you scan using only UDP ports 7 and 161, the device appears online with the Nmap checkmark displayed. However, the Operating System appears unknown, because UDP ports alone are not sufficient to determine what OS is running on the device.
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