<< Click to Display Table of Contents >> RayManageSoft Unified Endpoint Manager > 3.1 u8 > User Guide Appendix I: Preference Settings for Managed Devices |
This chapter describes the settings for the configuration of RayManageSoft Unified Endpoint Manager for an environment. The following points will be covered:
•The setup of the RayManageSoft Unified Endpoint Manager preference settings.
•The usage of managed device settings packages
oin the Windows registry.
oin command-line tools.
oin packages, as registry entries, or project variables.
oin configuration files.
•The identification of settings associated with particular RayManageSoft Unified Endpoint Manager behavior.
•Details of the individual settings.
RayManageSoft Unified Endpoint Manager provides a large selection of settings which can be used to control the behavior of RayManageSoft Unified Endpoint Manager. Most of these are used for the managed devices and can either be configured on the individual managed device or can be embedded in a package in order to control the behavior of the package on all managed devices using it.
There are also settings which can be configured directly in RayManageSoft Unified Endpoint Manager. This chapter describes the settings configured on the managed devices.
Be aware: Since each environment is unique, the examples in this manual may not suit your specific implementation. If in doubt, Raynet strongly recommends to speak with your Raynet Support representative before starting to change your settings. |
When RayManageSoft Unified Endpoint Manager is installed, it configures default values for many settings. This chapter includes details about the installation defaults for all settings on the managed device.
The remainder of this chapter contains:
•An overview of how settings are configured, evaluated, and locked.
•Details on how RayManageSoft Unified Endpoint Manager uses the Windows registry for configuring and reading settings.
•An explanation of using packaging project variables to configure settings.
•Details about settings with command-line tools.
•An introduction to the global configuration file.
•Lists of settings according to the behavior that they modify.
•An alphabetical list of settings which outlines:
othe purpose of the setting.
odefaults, values or ranges, and example values.
othe methods by which the setting can be configured.
odetails applicable to each definition method relevant for the setting.