Starting in SCCM 1610, you can use the new Software Updates Dashboard to view the compliance status of devices in your organization and analyze devices that are at risk. This is the third dashboard since the Current Branch release which is a great effort from the product group to give better visibility on the data gathered by your Configuration Manager clients. We already made an overview of the Windows 10 Servicing dashboard and the Office 365 Management dashboard will also be a topic in a future post.
SCCM Software Updates Dashboard Overview
To open the dashboard :
- Open the SCCM console
- Go to Monitoring / Security / Software Updates Dashboard
The dashboard is divided in 5 sections :
- Devices Compliance Status
- Missing Updates by Category
- Critical Alerts
- Last Successful Synchronization Time
- Devices Missing Updates
Devices Compliance Status
Gives a number of devices the are compliant and non-compliant based on the Compliance Status Filters options using the 3 dots in the upper right corner. In our example 17 devices are compliant and 37 are not.
In the Compliance Status Filter section, you can decide which Updates Category and the update time frame that you want included in the calculation.
Missing Updates by Category
This section is self-explanatory. By clicking on a section of the pie chart, the selected updates are displayed in the Devices Missing Updates section. In our example, we clicked on the 7 Update Rollups
Critical Alerts
The Critical Alerts section show any alerts related to Software Updates like Automatic Deployment Rules that has failed.
When clicking on the 1, we get redirected to Monitoring \ Alerts \ Critical – Updates which gives more details about the error.
Last Successful Synchronization Time
This section is self-explanatory, the Last Successful Synchronization Time on your Software Update Point
Devices Missing Updates
This section is interesting but incomplete. In our example, we clicked on the 7 Update Rollups in the Missing Updates by Category section. The pane show those 7 Updates and the number of devices which requires the update. When clicking on a column, it would have been nice to have a list of those 30 devices for Article 890830 but you get redirected to the Microsoft Support page instead. This is logic since there’s nothing that group those devices (ie : in a collection).
Where it gets incomplete is that if we select 25 Security Updates, only 10 updates are displayed. There’s a maximum of 10 updates to be shown in the chart which is… odd. Impossible to see the 15 other updates out of the 25.
Conclusion
The new Software Updates dashboard is a really nice addition but as the other dashboards, it still lacks major features to rely on for your overall compliance. We still suggest to use built-in reports or our Software Updates reports to monitor your compliance. How do you monitor your software update compliance ?
https://systemcenterdudes.com/sccm-2012-software-updates-deployment-report/
https://systemcenterdudes.com/sccm-2012-software-update-reports/
fady
05.26.2019 AT 02:12 PMfady
05.26.2019 AT 02:11 PMjose manuel
06.06.2018 AT 05:54 AMPaulo Santana
12.29.2016 AT 08:06 AM