Manage Windows feature update releases
You can create custom releases for Windows feature update deployments in Windows Autopatch.
Before you begin
Before you start managing custom Windows feature update releases, consider the following:
- If you're planning on using either the Default or Custom Autopatch groups ensure:
- The Default Autopatch group has all deployment rings and deployment cadences you need.
- You have created all your Custom Autopatch groups prior to creating custom releases.
- Review Windows feature update prerequisites.
- Review the Windows feature updates policy limitations.
About the auto-populate automation for release phases
By default, the deployment rings of each Autopatch group will be sequentially assigned to a phase. For example, the first deployment ring of each Autopatch group is assigned to Phase 1, and the second deployment ring of each Autopatch group is assigned to Phase 2, etc.
The following table explains the auto-populating assignment of your deployments rights if you have two Autopatch groups. One Autopatch group is named Finance and the other is named Marketing; each Autopatch group has four (Finance) and five (Marketing) deployment rings respectively.
Phases | Finance | Marketing |
---|---|---|
Phase 1 | Test | Test |
Phase 2 | Ring1 | Ring1 |
Phase 3 | Ring2 | Ring2 |
Phase 4 | Last | Ring3 |
If the Autopatch groups are edited after a release is created (Active status), the changes to the Autopatch group won't be reflected unless you create a new custom release.
If you wish to change the auto-populating assignment of your deployment rings to release phases, you can do so by adding, removing, or editing the auto-populated phases.
More information about the completion date of a phase
The goal completion date of a phase is calculated using the following formula:
<First Deployment Date> + (<Number of gradual rollout groups> - 1) * Days in between groups (7) + Deadline for feature updates (5 days) + Grace Period (2 days).
This formula is only applicable for Deadline-driven not for Scheduled-driven deployment cadences. For more information, see Customize Windows Update settings.
Important
By default, both the Deadline for feature updates and the Grace period values are set by Windows Autopatch in every Update rings for Windows 10 and later policy created by Autopatch groups.
How to use the Windows feature update blade
Use the Windows feature update blade to check in the overall status of the default release and the custom ones you create.
To access the Windows feature update blade:
- Go to the Microsoft Intune admin center.
- Select Devices from the left navigation menu.
- Under the Windows Autopatch section, select Release management.
- In the Release management blade, under the Release schedule tab, select Windows feature updates.
- In the Windows feature updates blade, you can see all the information about the releases. The columns are described in the following table:
Status | Description |
---|---|
Release name | Name of the release |
Version to deploy | Version to deploy for the applicable release or phase |
Status | Status of the applicable release or phase:
|
First deployment |
|
Goal completion date | The date the devices within the release or phases are expected to finish updating. The completion date is calculated using the following formula:
|
About release and phase statuses
Release statuses
A release is made of one or more phases. The release status is based on the calculation and consolidation of each phase status.
The release statuses are described in the following table:
Release status | Definition | Options |
---|---|---|
Scheduled | Release is scheduled and not all phases have yet created its Windows feature update policies |
|
Active | All phases in the release are active. This means all phases have reached their first deployment date, which created the Windows feature update policies. |
|
Inactive | All the Autopatch groups within the release have been assigned to a new release. As a result, the Windows feature update policies were unassigned from all phases from within the release. |
|
Paused | All phases in the release are paused. The release will remain paused until you resume it. |
|
Canceled | All phases in the release are canceled. |
|
Phase statuses
A phase is made of one or more Autopatch group deployment rings. Each phase reports its status to its release.
Important
The determining factor that makes a phase status transition from Scheduled to Active is when the service automatically creates the Windows feature update policy for each Autopatch group deployment ring. Additionally, the phase status transition from Active to Inactive occurs when Windows feature update policies are unassigned from the Autopatch groups that belong to a phase. This can happen when an Autopatch group and its deployment rings are re-used as part of a new release.
Phase status | Definition |
---|---|
Scheduled | The phase is scheduled but hasn't reached its first deployment date yet. The Windows feature update policy hasn't been created for the respective phase yet. |
Active | The first deployment date has been reached. The Windows feature update policy has been created for the respective phase. |
Inactive | All Autopatch groups within the phase were re-assigned to a new release. All Windows feature update policies were unassigned from the Autopatch groups. |
Paused | Phase is paused. You must resume the phase. |
Canceled | Phase is canceled. All Autopatch groups within the phase can be used with a new release. A phase that's canceled can't be deleted. |
Details about Windows feature update policies
Windows Autopatch creates one Windows feature update policy per phase using the following naming convention:
Windows Autopatch - DSS policy - <Release Name> - Phase <Phase Number>
These policies can be viewed in the Microsoft Intune admin center.
The following table is an example of the Windows feature update policies that were created for phases within a release:
Policy name | Feature update version | Rollout options | First deployment date | Final deployment date availability | Day between groups | Support end date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Windows Autopatch - DSS Policy - My feature update release - Phase 1 | Windows 10 21H2 | Make update available as soon as possible | April 24, 2023 | April 24, 2023 | N/A | June 11, 2024 |
Windows Autopatch - DSS Policy - My feature update release - Phase 2 | Windows 10 21H2 | Make update available as soon as possible | June 26, 2023 | July 17, 2023 | 7 | June 11, 2024 |
Windows Autopatch - DSS Policy - My feature update release - Phase 3 | Windows 10 21H2 | Make update available as soon as possible | July 24, 2023 | August 14, 2023 | 7 | June 11, 2024 |
Windows Autopatch - DSS Policy - My feature update release - Phase 4 | Windows 10 21H2 | Make update available as soon as possible | August 28, 2023 | September 10, 2023 | 7 | June 11, 2024 |
Windows Autopatch - DSS Policy - My feature update release - Phase 5 | Windows 10 21H2 | Make update available as soon as possible | September 25, 2023 | October 16, 2023 | 7 | June 11, 2024 |
Create a custom release
To create a custom release:
- Go to the Microsoft Intune admin center.
- Select Devices from the left navigation menu.
- Under the Windows Autopatch section, select Release management.
- In the Release management blade, select Release schedule, then Windows feature updates.
- In the Windows feature updates blade, select New release.
- In the Basics page:
- Enter a Name for the custom release.
- Select the Version to deploy.
- Enter a Description for the custom release.
- Select Next.
- In the Autopatch groups page, choose one or more existing Autopatch groups you want to include in the custom release, then select Next.
- You can't choose Autopatch groups that are already part of an existing custom release. Select Autopatch groups assigned to other releases to review existing assignments.
- In the Release phases page, review the number of auto-populated phases. You can Edit, Delete and Add phase based on your needs. Once you're ready, select Next. Before you proceed to the next step, all deployment rings must be assigned to a phase, and all phases must have deployment rings assigned.
- In the Release schedule page, choose First deployment date, and the number of Gradual rollout groups, then select Next. You can only select the next day, not the current day, as the first deployment date. The service creates feature update policy for Windows 10 and later twice a day at 4:00AM and 4:00PM (UTC) and can't guarantee that the release will start at the current day given the UTC variance across the globe.
- The Goal completion date only applies to the Deadline-driven deployment cadence type. The Deadline-drive deployment cadence type can be specified when you configure the Windows Updates settings during the Autopatch group creation/editing flow.
- Additionally, the formula for the goal completion date is
<First Deployment Date> + (<Number of gradual rollout groups> - 1) * Days in between groups (7) + Deadline for feature updates (5 days) + Grace Period (2 days)
.
- In the Review + create page, review all settings. Once you're ready, select Create.
Note
Custom releases can't be deleted from the Windows feature updates release management blade. The custom release record serves as a historical record for auditing purposes when needed.
Edit a release
Note
Only custom releases that have the Scheduled status can be edited. A release phase can only be edited prior to reaching its first deployment date. Additionally, you can only edit the deployment dates when editing a release.
To edit a custom release:
- Go to the Microsoft Intune admin center.
- Select Devices from the left navigation menu.
- Under the Windows Autopatch section, select Release management.
- In the Release schedule tab, select Windows feature updates.
- In the Windows feature updates blade, select the horizontal ellipses (…) > Edit to customize your gradual rollout of your feature updates release, then select Save.
- Only the release schedule can be customized when using the edit function. You can't add or remove Autopatch groups or modify the phase order when editing a release.
- Select Review + Create.
- Select Apply to save your changes.
Pause and resume a release
Caution
You should only pause and resume Windows quality and Windows feature updates on Windows Autopatch managed devices using the Windows Autopatch Release management blade. Do not use the Microsoft Intune end-user experience flows to pause or resume Windows Autopatch managed devices.
Important
Pausing or resuming an update can take up to eight hours to be applied to devices. Windows Autopatch uses Microsoft Intune as its device management solution and that's the average frequency Windows devices take to communicate back to Microsoft Intune with new instructions to pause, resume or rollback updates. For more information, see how long does it take for devices to get a policy, profile, or app after they are assigned from Microsoft Intune.
To pause or resume a release:
Note
If you've paused an update, the specified release will have the Paused status. The Windows Autopatch service can't overwrite IT admin's pause. You must select Resume to resume the update. The Paused by Service Pause status only applies to Windows quality updates. Windows Autopatch doesn't pause Windows feature updates on your behalf.
- Go to the Microsoft Intune admin center.
- Select Devices from the left navigation menu.
- Under the Windows Autopatch section, select Release management.
- In the Release schedule tab, select Windows feature updates.
- In the Windows feature updates blade, select the horizontal ellipses (…) > Pause or Resume to pause or resume your feature updates release.
- Select a reason from the dropdown menu.
- Optional. Enter details about why you're pausing or resuming the selected update.
- If you're resuming an update, you can select one or more deployment rings.
- Select Pause deployment or Resume deployment to save your changes.
Cancel a release
Important
You can only cancel a release under the Scheduled status. You cannot cancel a release under the Active, Inactive or Paused statuses.
To cancel a release:
- Go to the Microsoft Intune admin center.
- Select Devices from the left navigation menu.
- Under the Windows Autopatch section, select Release management.
- In the Release schedule tab, select Windows feature updates.
- In the Windows feature updates blade, select the horizontal ellipses (…) > Cancel to cancel your feature updates release.
- Select a reason for cancellation from the dropdown menu.
- Optional. Enter details about why you're pausing or resuming the selected update.
- Select Cancel deployment to save your changes.
Roll back a release
Caution
Do not use Microsoft Intune's end-user flows to rollback Windows feature update deployments for Windows Autopatch managed devices. If you need assistance with rolling back deployments, submit a support request.
Windows Autopatch doesn't support the rollback of Windows feature updates through its end-user experience flows.
Contact support
If you're experiencing issues related to Windows feature update deployments, submit a support request.
الملاحظات
https://aka.ms/ContentUserFeedback.
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