Well even with GPO preferences, you would need a way to differentiate the
computers.  So either deploying the GPO to two different OUs, or if one OU,
have the machines in groups and apply GPO Security filtering to the GPO so
that different computers get the different settings.

On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 1:21 PM, Robert Spinelli <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Could be really anything, this machine is part of LOB1 and this machine is
> part of LOB2 for example and they want this setting over this setting but
> they are both in the same OU.
>
>
>
> GPO Preferences is a thought.
>
>
>
> *From:* [email protected] [mailto:
> [email protected]] *On Behalf Of *ccollins9
> *Sent:* Thursday, April 2, 2015 10:22 AM
> *To:* mssms
> *Subject:* Re: [mssms] Applications - Requirements
>
>
>
> Just curious, what makes the different enough to run different commands on
> different machines?  Of the top of my head, you could put a registry
> setting on them via GPO Preferences, then have the DT requirements check
> for the different registry settings.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 10:01 AM, Robert Spinelli <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> So trying to figure out how others do this:
>
>
>
> Application called App1
>
>
>
> The App can be installed using 2 command lines:
>
>
>
> Command line1: install.exe /test1
>
> Command line2: install.exe /test2
>
>
>
> You want to use App1 and target it to a collection based of a user group
> called: Contoso\App1 with 100 machines in it.
>
>
>
> 50 of the machines need command line: install.exe /test1
>
> 50 of the machines need command line: install.exe /test2
>
>
>
> I can create 2 DT':
>
>
>
> DT1: install.exe /test1
>
> DT2: install.exe /test2
>
>
>
> In order to do requirements for both DT's its best to bounce of something
> local on the machine (ex: OS), but what if there really isn't anything
> different about the 100 machines 50 of them need to do a specific thing
> (ex: /test1) and the other 50 need to do some other specific thing (ex:
> /test2).  I was thinking of doing a requirement based off of AD group, but
> from everything I read requirements shouldn't use AD groups since that
> could cause high load at evaluation time.
>
>
>
> Do others just create 2 apps even though it's the same app just with a
> different command line and then create 2 collections and target those 2
> collections?
>
>
>
> Rob
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


Reply via email to