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A few days ago I asked if anyone would be interested in an article/tip about setting up WSUS. The response was somewhat underwhelming (and focus quickly turned to the fact that I use a 10-year old version of OneNote) so I decided not to bother.
Anyway. I've been struggling with getting clients to connect to it ever since. Until this morning, when I changed the policy that names the WSUS server to include the port at the end of the string (:8530). After making that change, and then refreshing the policy on client endpoints, they started trickling in almost immediately.
This wasn't necessary before. The port hasn't changed. Why it's suddenly needed in this version, I don't know. Or when it became a requirement, I don't know (it could've been introduced in 2012, 2012 R2, 2016 or 2019...and I'm not about to review the documentation for each to try to find out).
The lesson, I guess, is don't take anything for granted...like assuming newer versions work the same as old versions (even though, based purely on the UI, you'd think MS hasn't done any change to WSUS).
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dandy72 wrote: Until this morning, when I changed the policy that names the WSUS server to include the port at the end of the string (:8530). It's a URL[^] not a 'name'. The port is always at the end of the string[^].
dandy72 wrote: This wasn't necessary before. The port hasn't changed. The change was made in version 6.2 from the default of 443 to 8530. The reason the URL did not need the :8530 before is because HTTPS defaults to 443.
Best Wishes,
-David Delaune
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Of course I know the difference between a URL and a name. I simply wrote that the server was "named" in that string because the URL happens to identify the server...by its name...
Randor wrote: The change was made in version 6.2 from the default of 443 to 8530. The reason the URL did not need the :8530 before is because HTTPS defaults to 443.
I'm not following. The default (non-https) port was always 8530, and that's how I've always had it configured (by omission).
Are you claiming my older server, by not having any port specified, was therefore defaulting to an https connection, and not using port 8530, and now the newer version is enforcing https over port 8530 and effectively no longer using https over 443...? I'd love to see the page documenting that. Even that doesn't make sense, since the policy for my previous server had always been set to:
http://vwsus
...and now I have to use:
http://vwsus2019:8530
Note that in both cases, I'm specifying http, not https.
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Well,
Just RTFM[^]
Best Wishes,
-David Delaune
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Thanks for that.
From the article:
Quote: •On WSUS 3.2 and earlier, port 80 for HTTP and 443 for HTTPS
•On WSUS 6.2 and later (at least Windows Server 2012 ), port 8530 for HTTP and 8531 for HTTPS are used
So...even though WSUS has been widely known to be using port 8530 since day one, if you don't specify the port, it'll default to 80...
I've always made the assumption that if it "uses port 8530 by default", then if not specified, then that's the port it'll use. Meaning, even though I didn't specify one, the initial handshake might be done over port 80, but then switch over to port 8530. What the docs infer is that even though 8530 is the default, if not specified, then it'll implicitly use 80 and stick with that. That's a confusing definition of "default" if that's the case. And if it is, then I'm not sure how it would be technically wrong to instead say it's using port 80 by default. To me, "by default" has always meant "this is what will be used if omitted".
Anyway...again, the bottom line remains, don't take anything for granted.
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When I win the new year lottery, I promise to treat myself on a trip with the Rocky Mountaineer[^]
Otherwise I will have to settle for a week in the Belgian Ardennes, which is the closest to mountainous terrain we have nearby.
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The smoked ham in the Ardennes was the best I've ever had.
I've only taken the train from eastern Canada to Banff. There's great hiking around there and Lake Louise.
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The french fries in Stavelot in the Ardennes were the best I ever had, not in a fancy restaurant but just a chip shop in the city centre !
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Yes, Belgian french fries are great!
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We did the train ride between Vancouver and Whistler a few years ago. Great fun and lots to see on the route. Flew back to Vancouver in a seaplane which was even more fun.
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We did it in the summer of 2014, but I have to say there was no shortage of space on the train. I guess it was no longer economical to run that short journey.
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Especially when having Dutch tourists
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We had the Turkey Enchiladas last night (and pretty good they were too - you could hardly tell it was turkey) and Dij the Cat finished off the last of the meat with his lunch1
So a question: in the UK, pretty much the only time you see turkey on the menu is Christmas. Why? If it's that good - and it isn't, it's a fairly dull meat IMO - why don't we eat it every month?
And more importantly, why do people buy a bird so large they need a also buy a new cooker to fit it into, and end up seemingly eating the damn thing until Easter?2
1) With gusto, and every sign of real enjoyment. Mind you, this is a cat that eats mice, rats, dragonflies, and spiders ...
2) I buy a single smallish turkey breast and cook that in the sous vide - more than enough for two people.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Turkey is without merit. On holidays where it's traditional, we usually have prime rib or a roast, or duck if it's a smaller group.
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Turkey white meat is unappealing; I eat (devour) the back half -- this goes for chickens as well.
White meat is good only for sandwiches.
When I were a lad my mother cooked a turkey once a month. (No, not the same turkey.)
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Turkey was great for us; after my dad and I came back from our annual hunting trip(s) we would have moose (or caribou) in all the variations possible: steak, roast, sausage, ground, pot roast - my dad actually made corned moose a couple of years - even he couldn't stand it (800 lbs of moose takes a while to process and eat - we did our own butchering). Caribou was closer to elk, but still generally the same. One year I got a largish black bear on bow and arrow, that was pretty good.
A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, navigate a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects! - Lazarus Long
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I think the tradition goes back a few hundred years (see A Christmas Carol), when most people were poor and meat was a treat. That was much the case in my family in the 1950s and early 60s. Most days our meals could not exactly be termed 'hearty', but we generally had a cheap roast on Sundays. At Easter we had chicken, which was a treat in those days, and at Christmas we had turkey, two occasions for feasting. The traditional part has now been so devalued, by multiple Christmas meals in December, that there seems little point in choosing what is essentially a very average meat. However when catering for 12-14 adults it is a good choice.
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It's all a big conspiracy from Big Turkey.
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We had a largish duck which was fine for the four of us. Leftovers went into a soup that was finished today.
In Hungariaorszag, turkey is eaten year round and is the turn to cheap meat; more so than chicken.
veni bibi saltavi
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We had our staple christmas lunch/dinner and the next few days as well- prawns wrapped in prosciutto and BBQ'd, kilos of cooked prawns, bugs and ham.
I do feels sorry for you poor sods where it is so cold a roast dinner is a must.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity -
RAH
I'm old. I know stuff - JSOP
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Yeah - but at least our country isn't currently on fire.
Hope you get torrential rain soon - if I could ship you some of ours, I would!
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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In the US, Thanksgiving is the traditional day to eat turkey and feast. We now use thanksgiving to give thanks for lots of food and lots of football.
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So the office cleaning lady asked me if I wanted to smoke a joint with her! I had to decline.
I try to stay away from high maintenance women!
I, for one, like Roman Numerals.
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