The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARY
When advertising a program to a collection you may find other clients in your site executing the program even though they are not in the targeted collection. Not only will the clients execute the program but they will also create a status message stating the success or failure of the program that was executed. For example, if you advertise to a collection that contains fifty client machines and you receive over fifty status messages stating that the program was run, you can safely assume that clients that were not in the collection ran the program. MORE INFORMATION
The most plausible reason for this problem to occur is having clients that were installed under a previous site with the same site code. The Offer Data Provider (ODP) on the client looks for the existence of the following lookup files on the local machine during its polling cycle:
If the ODP finds a lookup file on the local machine it will use it instead of the lookup file on the CAP. The lookup file contains information about which instruction file the client is to use. If the client was installed under a different site it would most likely use a different instruction file than the one it should be using under the new site. To verify if you have clients using the wrong instruction complete the following steps:
A package can be created that will search for and delete all files that have an .lkp extension in the <WINDIR>\MS\SMS\CLICOMP\SWDIST32 directory on the client. Advertise this package/program to all clients in your site. The next time you advertise a program to these clients a new local lookup file will be created that will point these clients to the correct instruction file. REFERENCESPlease refer to the Systems Management Server Administrators Guide and the BackOffice Resource Kit version 4.5 for more information about the software distribution process. Additional query words: prodsms advertisements
Keywords : kbClient kbSMS200 kbSMS200bug kbAdvertisement kbAppMan kbCAP kbCollections kbPackage kbSoftwareDist |
Last Reviewed: January 10, 2000 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |