The only caveat to the below is that they all say they require Win7 Ultimate or Enterprise. I did find other projects/ideas out there that may or may not work for you. I'm not sure if this is acceptable to you in your situation for manual intervention but the only way I can see to continue using the product. Turns out, I had to logon as a local admin or someone with admin rights to see the tray icon which then allowed me to right click the icon - disable the snapshot - make necessary changes - re-enabled the snapshot which created a new baseline including my changes. There was a tray icon app that showed running (shdtray.exe or something) but I couldn't see it in the systray. When I was testing this software on my virtual Win7 instance I was running as a standard user. It unfortunately doesn't run an accessible process or anything that I could even just set a policy when I wanted to update saying to turn it off on the 15 computers i need to update I apologize for not catching that earlier. This is not a true answer to your question but options do exist for the current setup.Īs a follow-up I tried to test this last night in my virtual environment and when I went to test the command line options I realized that the link I gave you was for a different product offering from the manufacturer and in fact the RRRx product does not have command line options. This will update your baseline to include the recently installed windows updates and then reboot the machine as required for the Windows Update process.Īgain, untested and never used personally but thinking out loud this SHOULD work. The task that runs is the command line of Shieldcmd.exe /updatebase and then a force reboot command. Then on the local machine (or via GPO) setup a Scheduled Task with an Event Trigger that runs when the Event of WindowsUpdateClient is logged with event ID 21 (waiting for reboot after updates). Since you're using WSUS and are likely scheduling the updates via GPO you can disable auto reboot on your update policy/deployment. I don't own the product and haven't tested it but you should be able to run something on the command line: but the tricky part would be to have Windows Update install and then somehow "trigger" the baseline update.
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