twyg
Back to Mac Baby!
Hello all,
I was just wondering if anyone has experience creating a package file (installer) that will then be usable via our Software Update server.
I've found the location of where all the repositories are, the .dist files, as well as the index.sucatalog, but would like someone to help bounce some questions off of.
My goal here is to use Software Update as a mechanism to "ride" installs into the computer vs. ARD. Apple has done a lot of the heavy lifting that used to be manually scripted in an installer, and their Software Update tool has a lot of features I'd like to use as a foundation.
For example, when a software update is tagged as requiring a restart the client downloads the update in the background, and when the user is ready to update they are prompted to restart the computer. When they click restart the computer is dropped into a UI that shows only a progress bar, and the computer can "focus" with out the user needing to help the machine along. This is the type of install I'm looking for, and it's something that Apple's got finely tuned.
Anyone out there able to help?
Thanks,
John "twyg"
I was just wondering if anyone has experience creating a package file (installer) that will then be usable via our Software Update server.
I've found the location of where all the repositories are, the .dist files, as well as the index.sucatalog, but would like someone to help bounce some questions off of.
My goal here is to use Software Update as a mechanism to "ride" installs into the computer vs. ARD. Apple has done a lot of the heavy lifting that used to be manually scripted in an installer, and their Software Update tool has a lot of features I'd like to use as a foundation.
For example, when a software update is tagged as requiring a restart the client downloads the update in the background, and when the user is ready to update they are prompted to restart the computer. When they click restart the computer is dropped into a UI that shows only a progress bar, and the computer can "focus" with out the user needing to help the machine along. This is the type of install I'm looking for, and it's something that Apple's got finely tuned.
Anyone out there able to help?
Thanks,
John "twyg"