Posted on 08-28-2012 07:43 PM
Hi all,
I am looking to set up an Inventory Search to identify system running our Windows Image for I can set up a smart group of those particular systems, I am thinking I will need an Extension Attribute - has anyone done something similar to this before?
Thanks
Matt
Solved! Go to Solution.
Posted on 08-28-2012 07:52 PM
I believe I have found my own solution.
I have just altered the Extension Attribute script that looks for the Recovery Partition, to search for our Windows drive name instead.
Posted on 08-30-2012 09:23 AM
Hey Matt,
Chiming in a bit late here, but back in like 2008 or 2009 I deployed Windows to a ton of Macs. They were a dual boot configuration. We had to have Windows and a dual boot config to run a specific application, so I used a dummy receipt system (this was pre Extension Attributes) to track if they had an NTFS partition or not. Then I could scope saved searches by if they had the dummy receipt or not.
I just used the `df` command. You could do something similar, here is my example (note I don't have a NTFS system available):
df -T hfs
Filesystem 512-blocks Used Available Capacity Mounted on
/dev/disk0s2 975093952 232630808 741951144 24% /
/dev/disk1s1 204720 147456 57264 73% /Volumes/Casper Suite SDK - November 2011
/dev/disk2s1 204720 95288 109432 47% /Volumes/Resource Kit - November 2011
So, if you did a df -T ntfs it should list any ntfs partitions present. From there you can grep, awk, or check exit status to see if one is present.
If you don't have a working solution, hopefully this may help.
Thanks,
Tom
Posted on 08-28-2012 07:52 PM
I believe I have found my own solution.
I have just altered the Extension Attribute script that looks for the Recovery Partition, to search for our Windows drive name instead.
Posted on 08-29-2012 05:23 AM
I believe you could also simply specify search criteria as:
OS Configuration Information -> Operating System -> not like OS X
Posted on 08-30-2012 09:23 AM
Hey Matt,
Chiming in a bit late here, but back in like 2008 or 2009 I deployed Windows to a ton of Macs. They were a dual boot configuration. We had to have Windows and a dual boot config to run a specific application, so I used a dummy receipt system (this was pre Extension Attributes) to track if they had an NTFS partition or not. Then I could scope saved searches by if they had the dummy receipt or not.
I just used the `df` command. You could do something similar, here is my example (note I don't have a NTFS system available):
df -T hfs
Filesystem 512-blocks Used Available Capacity Mounted on
/dev/disk0s2 975093952 232630808 741951144 24% /
/dev/disk1s1 204720 147456 57264 73% /Volumes/Casper Suite SDK - November 2011
/dev/disk2s1 204720 95288 109432 47% /Volumes/Resource Kit - November 2011
So, if you did a df -T ntfs it should list any ntfs partitions present. From there you can grep, awk, or check exit status to see if one is present.
If you don't have a working solution, hopefully this may help.
Thanks,
Tom