Chat now with support
Chat with Support

KACE Systems Deployment Appliance 9.2 Common Documents - Administrator Guide

About the KACE Systems Deployment Appliance Getting started Using the Dashboard Configuring the appliance Setting up user accounts and user authentication Configuring security settings Preparing for deployment Managing device inventory Using labels Creating a Windows or Linux Boot Environment Managing drivers Capturing images Capturing user states Creating scripted installations Creating a task sequence Automating deployments Performing manual deployments Managing custom deployments Managing offline deployments About the Remote Site Appliance Importing and exporting appliance components Managing disk space Troubleshooting appliance issues Updating appliance software Glossary About us Legal notices

Remove components from a label

Remove components from a label

You can remove users, devices, scripted installations, system images, user states, and USMT scan templates from a label.

a.
On the left navigation pane, click Devices , then click Device Inventory, to display the Device Inventory page, and to view the devices to which a label is applied.
2.
Select Choose Action > Remove Labels to display the Remove Labels window, then select the labels, and click Remove Labels.

Delete a label from the appliance

Delete a label from the appliance

When you delete a label from the appliance, any components that were assigned to the label are automatically removed.

1.
On the left navigation pane, click Settings > Control Panel to display the Control Panel, then click Labels to display the Labels page.
3.
Select Choose Action > Delete, then click Yes to confirm.

View the components assigned to a label

View the components assigned to a label

You can view the components assigned to a label.

2.
Select View by > Label, and click the label name under that group.

The components assigned to that label display in the list.

Creating a Windows or Linux Boot Environment

You can create a KACE Boot Environment (KBE) for Windows systems using the KACE Media Manager. For Linux systems, when you upload a Linux source media, the appliance automatically creates a Linux boot environment.

For Windows boot environments, install the Windows ADK and the KACE Media Manager on the Administrator device where you installed the appliance. The Windows ADK provides network card drivers that the KBE requires to boot target devices. Target devices must be on the same network as the appliance.

You can import a KBE from a different location, by exporting the KBE from a different appliance, and saving the exported .pkg file to the appliance restore directory. See Import appliance components.

Related Documents

The document was helpful.

Select Rating

I easily found the information I needed.

Select Rating