microsoft intune
20 TopicsTurn on Memory Integrity through Microsoft Intune
Hi, Question: How to turn on the following setting through Microsoft Intune? Windows Security > Device Security > Core isolation > Memory Integrity (It says: Memory integrity is off. Your device may be vulnerable.) Applied licenses: Microsoft Intune Suite + Microsoft Defender for Endpoint P2 Client OS: Windows 11 It has been weeks since I already applied the following through the Security Baseline Policy for Windows 10 and Later but still the Memory Integrity has not got enabled on any client: Device Guard Credential Guard: (Enabled with UEFI lock): Turns on Credential Guard with UEFI lock. Enable Virtualization Based Security: enable virtualization based security. Require Platform Security Features: Turns on VBS with Secure Boot and direct memory access (DMA). ------ Virtualization Based Technology Hypervisor Enforced Code Integrity: (Enabled with UEFI lock) Turns on Hypervisor-Protected Code Integrity with UEFI lock. The Windows Baseline Security has got applied successfully on all endpoints without any errors or conflicts. Intune Sync and device restart have been performed 100s of times but in vain. Any suggestions would be highly appreciated.433Views0likes0CommentsRBAC Access and scope tags not showing the correct amount of devices within the device list?
Hi, Is anyone else experiencing issues with the RBAC/Scope Tags within Intune? For example, A Department manager has access to HR devices within Intune and should see 60 Windows devices within the devices section, but can only see 25 devices declining slowly over time randomly until it plateaus to having only a few devices left. However global administrators can see all 60 devices when filtering the device category to HR. No configuration changes were made and this is happening across all departments.579Views0likes1CommentUpgrading Windows 11 on Co-Managed Entra Joined Devices with Intune
Dear Support, All of our Windows 10 devices are managed through SCCM and Microsoft Intune, with shared workloads piloted through Intune. Below are the details from one of our testing devices, Here is the testing device details, Co-management configuration settings: As per the instructions provided , I have created a profile under "Update rings for Windows 10 and later" and manually synced it from the company portal, Intune device console, and Account or Work School > Info > Sync. However, I do not see any prompts or progress regarding the Windows 10 upgrade. I verified in event viewer, Application and Services Logs > Microsoft > Windows > DeviceManagement-Enterprise-Diagnostics-Provider -> admin, I see there was an error “MDM Session : OMA-DM message failed to be sent. Result: (Unknown Win32 Error code: 0x801901ad)” I checked in google the error message indicates that, the device was unable to sync because of network connection issues so restarted the device to see if this error get rid from the event viewer but I got another issue in event viewer , “MDM ConfigurationManager: Command failure status. Configuration Source ID: (E97E6844-D6DA-4626-8E08-2981CAC4E66F), Enrollment Name: (MDMDeviceWithAAD), Provider Name: (Policy), Command Type: (Add: from Replace or Add), CSP URI: (./Device/Vendor/MSFT/Policy/ConfigOperations/ADMXInstall/Receiver/Properties/Policy/FakePolicy/Version), Result: (The system cannot find the file specified Not sure whether because of this error windows 11 upgrade is failed? Dsregcmd /status , WUfB Policy registry entries and values: Could you please assist in providing guidance on how to upgrade Windows 10 for hybrid devices?Solved3.6KViews0likes10CommentsRe-Enabling Lost Devices
When I attempt to disable lost mode, the status is stuck on pending, and the device itself is still in lost mode. In order to troubleshoot this, I've connected the device to LTE via an activated SIM, which did not resolve the issue. I'm able to restore the devices, but I'd like to back up the data before I wipe them. I have a number of devices, iPhones and iPads, that I'm working on. Any ideas as to next steps?14KViews0likes5CommentsIntune auto pilot international settings
Hi everyone, I'm trying to achieve the following for new computers in autopilot: Set time zone to my time zone Set system locale, culture and windows home location to my country Set a language list to use en-US and my country's language Make sure that my country language is installed on the compute In MECM this is the Apply windows settings which looks like this: The end result I'm looking for is this: I searched the web and also found the Copy-UserInternationalSettingsToSystem, but this is for windows 11... We are still deploying windows 10. I found and tested multiple options such as deploying the LXP and using several powershell commands to apply what I need but it doesn't exactly work. This is my autopilot profile: Is there a way to use some unattended file or any other way to configure the operating system to our international settings? Rahamim.Solved12KViews0likes9CommentsSchedule restart for user's laptop which are enrolled to organizational domain.
Hi All, Will it be possible to give the users an option to schedule the automated restart on intuned laptops? As if now it is only giving two option one is to restart now and the other one is to restart after five minutes and the user are having trouble with their working.434Views0likes0CommentsEvent Grid for Intune?
Hi! I have an app (TOPdesk) where I am currently trying to integrate with Intune. I have learned that Azure has Event Grids and I can use this to fire off PowerShell Runbooks to execute a PS script which will then send off an HTTP request to connect to my app. The question that came to mind is whether it's possible for Event Grids to listen in to activities from Intune? Basically, I was thinking that whenever a new device is created, the Event Grid can help trigger a runbook to send off a HTTP request to connect to the app. Unfortunately, I have no access to Intune and Event Grid so I cannot confirm this myself. Any insight or alternatives will be appreciated! Thanks!1.2KViews0likes0CommentsHow to Setup Endpoint Manager RBAC
:pushpin:My new blog post on setting up Endpoint Manager RBAC permissions. In this article I explain how to assign the admins with correct and enough access without assigning them the powerful Intune Admin role. Hope this helps to anyone who is planning on introducing and setting up RBAC in their Endpoint Manager environment. How to Setup Endpoint Manager RBAC – Shehan Perera:[techBlog]875Views0likes0CommentsPros and Cons of Using Microsoft Endpoint Manager Policy Sets Feature
What else can be a great feature in Microsoft Endpoint Manager other than bundling up all the policies and create that “Golden Image” type policy and assign it to the Device or User groups so from an Administrators perspective, you don’t need to individually assign groups in to policies and apps and managing this will be super easy. A great MEM function which is still in Preview though, but I already see great benefits as well as some caveats using it. Benefits of Using Policy Sets Most of the organizations when they move from SCCM or from their current management solution to MEM/ Intune, they look for similarities so things can be managed without an additional hassle. In a world where you don’t have MEM Policy Sets feature, you would have apps – each app assigned to a group, device profiles – each one assigned to group/s, Compliance policies – each one assigned to group/s etc. It is an overwhelming task to make sure every policy that’s created, every app that has been added has been assigned to the group/s etc. The main usage of Policy Sets is very simple to understand. It’s basically bundling up the policies, apps, configuration profiles etc. in one place and from that point onwards, if you have your set of users/ devices that needs to be assigned to those, rather than going to each policy and assigning them, you can go other way round. Assigning the Policy Set to the group/s. Also this is a great feature to set up that SOE level and maintain it as one single entity. You always have the ability to do modifications as you go. As an example, you can maintain 3 policies for Windows, iOS and Android devices which are manages by MEM. At this stage, below are available to configure in Policy Sets Apps App configuration policies App protection policies Device configuration profiles Device compliance policies Windows autopilot deployment profiles Enrollment status page Caveats of Using Policy Sets Microsoft have already identified some known issues with Policy Sets which is basically stopping the administrators to think twice before using it. In high level, Some policies can’t be applied to User groups Some apps which will be required by special devices/ users must be added separate to the policy sets Even in this form, the goal of creating that Super Policy and add all the policies and Apps that needs to go in and then assigning groups (Device or User) is bit dicey as if you assign a device group to the Policy Set object, the underlying policies that needs to be assigned to a user policy will not work. So to overcome this you would introduce chaos by direct assigned policies which are not a part of the policy set. According to Microsoft documentation, below are the Policy sets issues new to version1910 The following app types are currently supported by policy sets: iOS/iPadOS store app iOS/iPadOS line-of-business app Managed iOS/iPadOS line-of-business app Android store app Android line-of-business app Managed Android line-of-business app Microsoft 365 Apps (Windows 10) Web link Built-in iOS/iPadOS app Built-in Android app Setting a policy set assignment of All Users to Autopilot Profile is unsupported. Policy sets have the following enrollment restrictions and Enrollment Status Page (ESP) issues: Restrictions and ESP do not support virtual group assignments. Restrictions and ESP do not strictly support exclusion group assignments. Restrictions and ESP use priority-based conflict resolution. Restrictions and ESP might not be applied to the same users as the rest of a policy set’s payloads if the restrictions and ESP are also targeted by a higher priority restriction and ESP. The default restrictions and ESP cannot be added to a policy set. MAM policy types that support policy sets include the following: MAM WIP (Windows) MDM targeted managed app protection MAM iOS/iPadOS targeted managed app protection MAM Android targeted managed app protection MAM iOS/iPadOS targeted managed app configuration MAM Android targeted managed app configuration MAM policy types that do not support policy sets include the following: MAM WIP (Windows) targeted managed app protection MAM processes policy set assignments as direct assignments for the following policy types: MAM iOS/iPadOS targeted managed app protection MAM Android targeted managed app protection MAM iOS/iPadOS targeted managed app configuration MAM Android targeted managed app configurationIf a policy is added to a policy set that is deployed to a group, the group would show as directly assigned in the workload, not “assigned via the policy set”. As a result of this, MAM does not process group assignment deletions coming from policy sets. MAM does not support deployment to All Users and All Devices virtual groups for any policy types. The Device Configuration Profile of type “Administrative Templates” cannot be selected as part of a policy set. The Verdict I believe Policy Sets are still in Preview because of this situation as they have these known issues than the usages. Everyone’s requirement is not he same and If you can tackle the caveats, you can still use the Policy Sets, but since this is out there for a while now and because Microsoft has identified the issues, they may working on a better version of this that we call can use without any hesitation. Pros and Cons of Using Microsoft Endpoint Manager Policy Sets Feature – Shehan Perera:[techBlog]4.8KViews1like0CommentsHow to Migrate Group Policies to Microsoft Endpoint Manager using Group Policy Analytics
An exciting feature was recently available in MEM and I wrote a step by step guide on how to analyse and migrate your GPOs to MEM. Hope you'll find this informative. How to Migrate Group Policies to Microsoft Endpoint Manager using Group Policy Analytics974Views1like0Comments