intune ios

Keep Me Upadted!

With iOS/iPadOS 16 scheduled to be released in the next few days, many organizations will put restrictions on deferring software updates to buy in time to get ready with the new OS. At the same, there will be many zero-day vulnerabilities for which you might want to keep your

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Keep Me Upadted!

With iOS/iPadOS 16 scheduled to be released in the next few days, many organizations will put restrictions on deferring software updates to buy in time to get ready with the new OS. At the same, there will be many zero-day vulnerabilities for which you might want to keep your devices updated to a specific version. 

Hope this will help you to configure the software update policies and keep your iOS devices updated. The software update policies can only be applied to devices enrolled as supervised. This seems straightforward, but practically speaking, it’s NOT that simple! 

Continue reading the post to configure the policy for your tenant.

The software update policies can only be applied to supervised devices with iOS/iPadOS 13 minimum required version. 


Concept:

With these software update policies, you can:

  1. Either choose to deploy the latest available update or choose to deploy an older update.
  2.  Configure the update to install at a specific time. 

If you are configuring software update policies for Shared iPads, then the update will only install when no user is signed in to a Shared iPad and the device is charging. Else the update will fail.


Configure The Policy

These options look interesting. But before we apply the policy, let us understand them in detail.


End User Experience

When you assign these policies, you might notice discrepancies between expected and experienced behavior.

  1. Expected behavior when OS update is released to iPad:

  2. Experienced behavior when new OS is released to iPad:


Bonus Content: Reasons for Discrepancies

(Reasons are in chronological order)

  1. When the user checks for the update in Settings Apps, the update can be deleted if it falls within the delay period set on the device. This behavior ties in with most of the other scenarios.
  2. When the Passcode is stashed, and the MDM uses the ‘Download’ and ‘InstallASAP” options in the ScheduleOSUpdate command – the device will update.
  3. Update Cadence. This was introduced in iOS 14.6 and can be configured with the Settings command. 

This value defines how the system presents software updates to the user. When there’s more than one available update for the user, the system behaves as follows:

0: Presents both options to the user.
1: Presents the lower numbered (oldest) software update version.
2: Presents only the highest numbered (most recent) release available for the device.

Hope this will help you to configure the software update policies and keep your iOS devices updated.


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