The service instantly disables if its manually changed back to Automatic (delayed).Remote Control settings are set at both the default policy level and in a policy applied to a device collection this thing is in, both set to allow.RequestedMachineSettings only had five things in there, and none of them are CCMRemoteToolsConfig.I used sendschedule to tell it to do a machine policy cycle, which claimed to have succeeded.
After that, either RequestedMachineSettings actually looked normal, or I was looking at the wrong PolicySpy window. RequestedMachineSettings only has five things still, and while ActualMachineSettings has a ton of stuff, the RemoteToolsConfig branch is missing. Sending any of them returns a success, but nothing ever changes. LocationServices.log looks good. Last Activity in the console updates periodically (right now showing the timestamp of when I sent the Evaluate Machine Policies schedule). Microsoft Configuration Manager Remote Control How To Run ItI wrote a blog post about how to run it standalone a couple of years ago. In that blog post a comment on how to add a registry key normally added by the Admin console setup will make the audit logging to Configuration Manager work. ![]() They are located here on a computer with the Admin Console installed C:Program Files (x86)Microsoft Configuration ManagerAdminConsolebini386 the files are: CmRcViewer.exe RdpCoreSccm.dll 00000409CmRcViewerRes.dll. I use the English version you can of course modify the script and add the language folders you want to use. I recommend using file version as the detection method as we need to create a new application for every Configuration Manager release where the Remote Tools are updated. This is my blog where I will share tips and stuff for my own and everyone elses use on Enterprise Mobility and Windows related topics. Well assume youre ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.
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