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Planning for Boundaries and Boundary Groups in Configuration Manager

 

Updated: November 3, 2016

Applies To: System Center 2012 Configuration Manager, System Center 2012 Configuration Manager SP1, System Center 2012 Configuration Manager SP2, System Center 2012 R2 Configuration Manager, System Center 2012 R2 Configuration Manager SP1

In System Center 2012 Configuration Manager, a boundary is a network location on the intranet that can contain one or more devices that you want to manage. Boundaries can be an IP subnet, Active Directory site name, IPv6 Prefix, or an IP address range, and the hierarchy can include any combination of these boundary types. To use a boundary, you must add the boundary to one or more boundary groups. Boundary groups are collections of boundaries. By using boundary groups, clients on the intranet can find an assigned site and locate content when they have to install software, such as applications, software updates, and operating system images.

When clients are on the Internet, or they are configured as Internet-only clients, they do not use boundary information. These clients cannot use automatic site assignment and always download content from any distribution point in their assigned site when the distribution point is configured to allow client connections from the Internet.

Use the following sections in this topic to help you plan how to manage boundaries in your Configuration Manager hierarchy:

  • Boundaries

  • Boundary Groups

    • Site Assignment

    • Content Location

    • Preferred Management points

    • Overlapping Boundaries

    • Network Connection Speed

  • Best Practices for Boundaries

What’s New in Configuration Manager

Note

The information in this section also appears in the Getting Started with System Center 2012 Configuration Manager guide.

The following items are new or have changed for boundaries since Configuration Manager 2007:

  • Boundaries are no longer site specific, but defined once for the hierarchy, and they are available at all sites in the hierarchy.

  • Each boundary must be a member of a boundary group before a device on that boundary can identify an assigned site, or a content server such as a distribution point.

  • You no longer configure the network connection speed of each boundary. Instead, in a boundary group you specify the network connection speed for each site system server associated to the boundary group as an assigned site system server.

What’s New in System Center 2012 Configuration Manager SP2

Beginning with System Center 2012 Configuration Manager SP2, the following items are new or have changed for boundaries groups:

  • Boundary groups support associating one or more management points. These are called preferred management points. Clients will try to use a preferred management point before using management points that are not associated with the clients boundary.

Boundaries

Each boundary represents a network location in System Center 2012 Configuration Manager, and it is available from every site in your hierarchy. A boundary does not enable you to manage clients at the network location. To manage a client, the boundary must be a member of a boundary group.

Configuration Manager does not support the direct entry of a supernet as a boundary. Instead, use the IP address range boundary type. When Active Directory Forest Discovery identifies a supernet that is assigned to an Active Directory site, Configuration Manager converts the supernet into an IP address range boundary. For more information about Active Directory Forest Discovery, see the About Active Directory Forest Discovery section in the Planning for Discovery in Configuration Manager topic.

Boundary Groups

Use boundary groups to manage your network locations. You must assign boundaries to boundary groups before you can use the boundary group. Boundary groups have the following functions:

  • They enable clients to find a primary site for client assignment (automatic site assignment).

  • They can provide clients with a list of available site systems that have content after you associate the distribution point and state migration point site system servers with the boundary group.

  • Beginning with System Center 2012 Configuration Manager SP2, they support management points and can provide clients with a list of preferred management points.

To support site assignment, you must configure the boundary group to specify an assigned site for clients to use during automatic site assignment. To support site system servers, you must specify one or more site systems. Prior to System Center 2012 Configuration Manager SP2, you can only specify site systems with the distribution point or state migration point site system role. With System Center 2012 Configuration Manager SP2 or later, you can also specify management points. Both the site assignment and site system server configurations are optional for boundary groups.

When you plan for boundary groups, consider creating one set of boundary groups to associate site system servers and a second set of boundary groups for automatic site assignment. This separation can help you avoid overlapping boundaries for site assignment. When you have overlapping boundaries and use automatic site assignment, the site to which a client is assigned might be unpredictable.

The following sections contain information to consider when you configure boundary groups.

Site Assignment

You can configure each boundary group with an assigned site for clients. Clients join the assigned site of a boundary group that contains the client’s current network location. When a boundary is added to multiple boundary groups that have different assigned sites, clients will nondeterministically select one of the sites. System Center 2012 Configuration Manager does not support this overlapping boundary configuration for site assignment.

If you make a change to the site assignment configuration of a boundary group, only new site assignment actions are affected. Clients that have previously been assigned to a site, do not re-evaluate their site assignment based on changes to the configuration of a boundary group.

For more information about client site assignment, see How to Assign Clients to a Site in Configuration Manager.

Content Location

You can associate one or more distribution points and one or more state migration points with each boundary group. You can also associate a distribution point or state migration point with multiple boundary groups.

During software distribution, clients request a location for deployment content. Configuration Manager sends the client a list of distribution points that are associated with each boundary group that includes the current network location of the client.

During operating system deployment, clients request a location to send or receive their state migration information. Configuration Manager sends the client a list of state migration points that are associated with each boundary group that includes the current network location of the client.

This behavior enables the client to select the nearest server from which to transfer the content or state migration information.

Preferred Management points

Beginning with System Center 2012 Configuration Manager SP2, you can configure preferred management points. Preferred management points enable a client to identify and prefer to communicate with a management point that is associated with its current network location (or boundary). When configured, a client attempts to use a preferred management point from its assigned site before using a management point from its assigned site that is not configured as preferred.

To use this option you must enable it for the hierarchy, and configure boundary groups at individual primary sites to include the management points that should be associated with that boundary group’s associated boundaries. This is done the same way you would assign distribution points and state migration points to a boundary group.

When preferred management points are configured and a client organizes its list of management points, the client places the preferred management points at the top of its list of Assigned management points (which includes all management points from the client’s assigned site). This enables the client to try to use a preferred management point before using management points from its assigned site that are not configured as preferred.

For clients at a secondary site, the assigned site remains the parent primary site. To prevent clients at the secondary site from using the assigned management point from the primary site, add the secondary sites management point to the boundary groups that include the secondary sites network locations.

Note

When a client roams it might use a management point from the local site or a proxy management point before attempting to use one from its assigned site, which includes the preferred management points. See Service Location and how clients determine their assigned management point for more information about how clients identify and select a management point to communicate with.

Tip

Do not position management points across a slow link from their primary site server or from the site database server.

To configure preferred management points, see the procedure To associate a content deployment server or management point with a boundary group in the Create and Configure Boundary Groups for Configuration Manager section of the Configuring Boundaries and Boundary Groups in Configuration Manager topic.

Overlapping Boundaries

System Center 2012 Configuration Manager supports overlapping boundary configurations for content location.

When a client requests content, and the client network location belongs to multiple boundary groups, Configuration Manager sends the client a list of all distribution points that have the content.

When a client requests a server to send or receive its state migration information, and the client network location belongs to multiple boundary groups, Configuration Manager sends the client a list of all state migration points that are associated with a boundary group that includes the current network location of the client.

This behavior enables the client to select the nearest server from which to transfer the content or state migration information.

Network Connection Speed

You can configure the network connection speed of each distribution point in a boundary group. Clients use this value when they connect to the distribution point. By default, the network connection speed is configured as Fast, but it can also be configured as Slow. The network connection speed and the deployment configuration determine whether a client can download content from a distribution point when the client is in an associated boundary group.

Best Practices for Boundaries

Use the following best practices information to help you use boundaries in System Center 2012 Configuration Manager.

Consider using the IP address range boundary type only when other boundary types cannot be used

When designing your boundary strategy, we recommend you use boundaries that are based on Active Directory sites before using other boundary types. Where boundaries based on Active Directory sites are not an option, then use IP subnet or IPv6 boundaries. If none of these options are available to you, then leverage IP address range boundaries. This is because the site evaluates boundary members periodically, and the query required to assess members of an IP address range requires a substantially larger use of SQL Server resources than queries that assess members of other boundary types.