The good news is that with CM12 you will be able to build different sets of 
client settings as appropriate so you'll be able to reduce the frequency of 
policy updates etc. which the clients on the wrong side of the WAN perform.
 

 
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [mssms] Tips to conserver bandwidth in SCCM 2012
Date: Tue, 15 Oct 2013 12:46:45 +0000









Thanks for the tips! We haven’t had a meeting on setting the frequency of these 
policy refreshes, ect. But I would say that a weekly inventory and a daily/12hr 
policy retrieval is likely to come out from them.
 Compliance rules and scans will also be on the table later on.
 
I totally agree with keeping the components to a minimum. This gives me more 
confidence moving forward, thanks again!

 

Justin White

DAK Americas LLC.- Cooper River Site

Infrastructure Technology
3350 Cypress Gardens Road
Moncks Corner SC 29461

(843)797-9190 [O]

(843)709-0152 [C]

[email protected]

www.dakamericas.com
 

 


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Trevor Sullivan

Sent: Tuesday, October 15, 2013 8:28 AM

To: [email protected]

Subject: RE: [mssms] Tips to conserver bandwidth in SCCM 2012


 
Justin,
 
How frequently do you plan to perform policy refreshes on Configuration Manager 
clients? How often are you planning on performing hardware and software 
inventories, software updates scan cycles, compliance rule
 reporting, and so on? These are all factors that will play into your decision 
to implement a Secondary Site as well.
 
If you configure the above-mentioned intervals low enough (eg. Inventory every 
5 days, policy retrieval every 4 hours), don’t have a lot of compliance rules, 
and have infrequent compliance rule scans, then you
 could probably get away with having just a Distribution Point in that site. 
Secondary Sites are generally just extra components (including its own 
database) waiting for something to go wrong.

 
Wherever possible, try to limit the number of infrastructure components, and 
your life will be made much easier. As it stands right now, with the 
information that I have been made aware of, I don’t think there’s
 a very strong justification for needing a Secondary Site.
 
Cheers,
Trevor Sullivan
 


From: 
[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Justin P. White

Sent: Tuesday, October 15, 2013 7:16 AM

To: [email protected]

Subject: RE: [mssms] Tips to conserver bandwidth in SCCM 2012


 
The remote site has about 200 clients.
 
By RDC, I mean Remote Data Center
 
Sorry I meant to say its just a Primary Site. When I mentioned ‘central’ it was 
just to say that its central geographically.
 
 
 

Justin White

DAK Americas LLC.- Cooper River Site

Infrastructure Technology
3350 Cypress Gardens Road
Moncks Corner SC 29461

(843)797-9190 [O]

(843)709-0152 [C]

[email protected]

www.dakamericas.com
 

 


From:
[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Trevor Sullivan

Sent: Monday, October 14, 2013 1:51 PM

To: [email protected]

Subject: RE: [mssms] Tips to conserver bandwidth in SCCM 2012


 
I don’t see this mentioned anywhere, but how many clients are in this remote 
site? If there’s only one client in the location, then you probably don’t need 
a Secondary Site or a Distribution Point, because content
 will only get downloaded once anyway. On the other hand, if you have 1,000 
clients behind a 1.5Mbit/sec pipe, then you’ll probably need a Secondary Site 
(and Distribution Point) in that location to proxy management traffic and 
handle content distribution.
 
FYI, there is no such thing as a “Central Primary Site Server” in ConfigMgr 
2012. There is a Central Administration Site (CAS), or Primary Site, or 
Secondary Site.
 
I’m not sure what you mean by “RDC.” That could potentially mean: Remote 
Different Compression, which is a service provided by the operating system, or 
it could mean a Read-only Domain Controller. Or does it
 maybe mean “Remote Datacenter,” since you referenced that a couple of times?
 
Cheers,

Trevor Sullivan
 


From: 
[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Justin P. White

Sent: Monday, October 14, 2013 10:26 AM

To: [email protected]

Subject: [mssms] Tips to conserver bandwidth in SCCM 2012


 

Hi, I’m on the testing phase of integrating a site with low bandwidth into our 
SCCM environment.
 
Looks like their WAN speed clocks in around 1.5mb to give you guys an idea.
 
I have installed a distribution point and a management point active on their 
local server. We have a central primary site server on our remote data center 
that talks to it.
 
Should I try to just set up a secondary site instead? Or just use the bandwidth 
throttling in BITS to contain the amount of traffic being sent to our RDC?
 
How would you guys approach integrating a low bandwidth site?

 
Does having that Management Point installed locally automatically control the 
clients to use that management point or will it try to talk over the WAN to the 
management point set up at my
 RDC?
 
Justin White

DAK Americas LLC.- Cooper River Site

Infrastructure Technology
3350 Cypress Gardens Road
Moncks Corner SC 29461

(843)797-9190 [O]

(843)709-0152 [C]

[email protected]

www.dakamericas.com
 
 

 





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