The Summary page of a policy displays the following panels:
The General panel provides a summary of the policy’s general settings. Click the headings below for descriptions of the settings.
Displays the type of policy.
Click Compute to display the size of the content associated with the policy.
Displays the policy’s version number.
Displays whether or not the policy can be deployed to managed devices .If a policy is enabled, it can be deployed to managed .
If you disable a policy that has already been deployed to some managed devices , the policy is removed from those devices . Also, it cannot be deployed to new devices .
An error is anything that causes the deployment or installation of the policy to fail. The number displayed indicates the number of unacknowledged errors, which are any errors that you have not specifically marked as acknowledged. Unacknowledged errors are displayed in the Message Log section.
A warning is anything that does not cause the deployment or installation of the policy to fail, but indicates minor problems with the policy. The number displayed indicates the number of unacknowledged warnings, which are any warnings that you have not specifically marked as acknowledged. Unacknowledged warnings are displayed in the Message Log section.
Lists the policy’s GUID (global unique identifier), a randomly generated string that provides a unique identifier for the policy. You cannot edit the GUID.
Displays the timestamp (Month, date, year and time) when the policy was created and saved for the first time. The author of the policy will also be displayed in this field.
Displays the timestamp (Month, date, year and time) when the current version of the policy was created. The version created date will be updated only when the policy version is changed.
Displays the timestamp (Month, date, year and time) when the policy was modified. The modifier name is also displayed in this field.
Displays the policy’s description, if one was provided when the policy was created. The description appears in Endpoint Management Console and the Endpoint Agent (on managed devices). Click Edit to change the description.
The Content Status field displays the current status of the content on a bundle or policy. The following are statuses:
Available: The content is physically present on a bundle or policy and available for distribution.
Not Applicable: The content is not uploaded to a bundle or policy.
Not Applicable: The content is not uploaded to a bundle or policy.
In-progress: The content is not yet physically present on a bundle or policy but is currently being uploaded.
Failed: The content set to be hosted on a bundle or policy has failed.
The Policy Status panel displays a summary of the policy’s assignment and enforcement status. The Device row displays the status of the policy through assignment to devices. A policy can be directly assigned or assigned through membership in a folder or group. You can click an underlined link in any column to view the status of the individual devices to which the policy is assigned, retry a failed policy, or export the data to a CSV file.
A policy’s status is calculated using the status of many events. The numbers in the various columns represent an overall view of the policy’s status.
NOTE:The Policy Status panel on the policy’s sandbox or the older versions page does not display the status. However, the Policy Status panel on the policy’s published version page displays the status of the policy’s published version, sandbox, and the older versions.
The policy status information is separated into the following groups, which are independent of each other. For example, it is possible for an installation to be successful, but the launch to be unsuccessful.
The following status information is available:
Targeted: Displays the number of devices on which the policy is enforced.
Devices Effective: Displays the number of devices on which the policy is effective through a device assignment. A policy is effective for a device if the device meets the system requirements of the policy. The number of devices in the Devices Effective column might be less than the number in the Targeted column because the policy might be enforced on a device that does not meet the policy’s system requirements. For example, you might have a Windows policy enforced on a Linux device, but the policy is not effective for that device.
Devices Not Effective: Displays the number of devices on which the policy is not effective through a device assignment. If a policy is not effective for the device, it means that the device does not meet the policy’s system requirements.
Pending: The pending status for the device displays the number of devices on which the policy is not yet enforced, such as devices that are switched off. Click the underlined link to display the list of such devices.
The following status information is available:
Devices Pending: Displays the number of devices on which the policy is pending. A policy’s status is pending if the policy has met the device’s system requirements, but the policy has not been enforced on the device.
Devices Succeeded: Displays the number of devices on which the policy was successfully enforced.
Devices Failed: Displays the number of devices on which the policy’s enforcement failed.
The Message Log panel displays all unacknowledged messages generated for the object. An unacknowledged message is one that you have not yet reviewed and marked as acknowledged.
Status:
Displays an icon indicating the type of message: critical,
warning, and
normal.
Message: Displays a brief description of the event that occurred.
Date: Displays the date and time the event occurred.
NOTE:The Message Log panel on the policy’s sandbox or the older versions page does not display any messages. However, the Message Log panel on the policy’s published version page displays the messages of the policy’s published version, sandbox, and the older versions.
A message remains in the Message Log list until you acknowledge it. You can acknowledge individual messages, acknowledge all messages at one time, or view more information about both acknowledged and unacknowledged messages. The following table explains how to do these tasks:
Task |
Steps |
Additional Details |
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Acknowledge a message |
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If you decide that you do not want to acknowledge the message, click Finished to dismiss the dialog box. This causes the message to remain in the Message Log list. |
Acknowledge all messages |
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View all acknowledged or unacknowledged messages |
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In addition to viewing all acknowledged and unacknowledged messages, you can also view only those messages with a specific status or date, view more details about messages, and acknowledge messages. Click the Help button on the Edit Message Log page for specific information about performing tasks on that page. |
Delete a message |
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Deleting a message completely removes the message from your Endpoint Management system. |