Creating an Update Process
Deploying updates involves more than just choosing a technology to install the updates. An effective update process involves planning, discussion, and testing. Although you should use your organization's existing change-management process (if one exists), this section will describe the fundamental steps of an update process. The sections that follow describe each of these steps in more detail.
In this tutorial:
- Managing Software Updates
- Methods for Deploying Updates
- Windows Update Client
- Windows Server Update Services
- System Center Configuration Manager 2007 R2
- Manually Installing, Scripting, and Removing Updates
- Overview of Windows 7 Update Files
- How to Script Update Installations
- How to Remove Updates
- Deploying Updates to New Computers
- Other Reasons to Use a Private Network for New Computers
- Managing BITS
- BITS Behavior
- BITS Group Policy Settings
- Configuring the Maximum Bandwidth Served For Peer Client Requests Policy
- Managing BITS with Windows PowerShell
- Windows Update Group Policy Settings
- Configuring Windows Update to Use a Proxy Server
- Tools for Auditing Software Updates
- The MBSA Console
- MBSACLI
- Scheduling MBSA
- Troubleshooting the Windows Update Client
- The Process of Updating Network Software
- Assembling the Update Team
- Inventorying Software
- Creating an Update Process
- Discovering Updates
- Evaluating Updates
- Speeding the Update Process
- Retrieving Updates
- Testing Updates
- Installing Updates
- Removing Updates
- Auditing Updates
- How Microsoft Distributes Updates
- Security Updates
- Update Rollups
- Service Packs
- Microsoft Product Life Cycles