Phil the systems guy
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We have a lot of VPN users that are suddenly offsite using corporate devices, and we want to revise our SCCM boundaries.
I would like to do a giant IP range, rather than individual subnet IP ranges.
A colleague of mine is concerned that these ranges include servers.
My understanding is that boundaries and boundary groups don't automatically push or install anything, and can only help SCCM clients (which servers are not) find a site system or which distribution point to use.
We want to simplify our boundaries and boundary ranges.
Servers are in OUs that are not part of SCCM discovery.
We are not trying to manage servers with SCCM, and are not trying to create boundaries for servers.
Am I missing something? Should servers always exist outside of IP ranges defined in SCCM, when SCCM is not managing them?
Thanks, phil
I would like to do a giant IP range, rather than individual subnet IP ranges.
A colleague of mine is concerned that these ranges include servers.
My understanding is that boundaries and boundary groups don't automatically push or install anything, and can only help SCCM clients (which servers are not) find a site system or which distribution point to use.
We want to simplify our boundaries and boundary ranges.
Servers are in OUs that are not part of SCCM discovery.
We are not trying to manage servers with SCCM, and are not trying to create boundaries for servers.
Am I missing something? Should servers always exist outside of IP ranges defined in SCCM, when SCCM is not managing them?
Thanks, phil
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