![]() ![]() Mounting SERVER1 () to /Volumes/CasperShare. Verbose: Parsing Policy iTerm 2.1.1 (465). Verbose: Removing any cached policies for this trigger. Verbose: The Management Framework Settings are up to date. Verbose: No active ethernet connection found. Verbose: Checking for active ethernet connection. Verbose: Checking for an existing instance of this application.Ĭhecking for policies triggered by "iterm". Here is what I tried outside of Self Service via terminal: bash-3.2# jamf policy -event iterm -verbose I've rebooted, updated to 10.11.3, purged user cache, purged system cache, logged in as a different user, logged in as a local admin user. (The random successes I had before were in fact pkg files - not dmg) And I'm finding that it's not just random dmg files, it's ALL dmgs in Self Service. All the dmg files are created the same way. None of these failures happen with 10.9 or 10.10 Macs. Mounting SERVER2 to /Volumes/CasperShare 1. ![]() Retrying using distribution point SERVER2. Mounting SERVER1 to /Volumes/CasperShare.Ĭaching package Malwarebytes 1.1.3.72.dmg.Įrror: The package "Malwarebytes 1.1.3.72.dmg" could not be mounted (no mountable file systems). Here's the JSS log for one of the failed installs: Executing Policy Malwarebytes 1.1.3.72 (Oct 22, 2015). I have not had the dmg mount error since i removed my policy. I had to re-download it again and mount that new dmg."Īnd to add to that bit of wierdness, i bet if you duplicate that DMG, you will be able to open the duplicated one once. When I went back to my Downloads folder and tried to mount the very same DMG that worked before, I got the same "no mountable file systems" error. I mounted that DMG just fine on this same 10.11.1 Mac. I had the exact same problem you mentioned here: " - Another bit of weirdness I was just reminded of: I went to a website to download a dmg for a program I'm testing. ![]() I also created that dmg into a package and only set it to run on machines that do not have it. Since then we have removed that policy and dmg. some how mounting that dmg and having set to run every week messed up something. I "think" this may have been due to a policy we had set to run every week which was a. What OS and JSS versions are you - I am on 10.10.5 jss 9.81 - also happened on 10.11. I had to re-download it again and mount that new dmg. Another bit of weirdness I was just reminded of: I went to a website to download a dmg for a program I'm testing. I haven't tried removing the framework and re-enrolling yet (or just removing MDM) because that seems like a very drastic and very strange fix for something dealing with mounting DMGs. The only thing that is different from other computers is the OS. The ones that work are a mixture of pkg files that install and dogs created with Composer. All the ones that fail to mount via self service are created via Composer. Some policies always work, other policies never work. I tried a few other policies in Self Service and it is hit or miss. All the policies that are automatically pushed from JSS via enrollment, check-in, or events work fine. It appears that something is getting jumbled when coming down through Self Service. I then double clicked on it and it mounted just fine. Then I manually mounted the distribution point on the server and copied the dmg to the desktop. Every time I tried to install it through Self Service it failed with the same error. I rebooted several times just to make sure it wasn't something stuck in memory or kerberos or /Volumes. It gave the same error on each separate DP I have. I looked at the logs and it said "no mountable file systems" when trying to mount the. This is a package i've never had any problems with - ever - on 10.9 and 10.10. I watched as it tried and tried and tried again then failed. Then I went to Self Service and tried to install a policy that I created with Composer. The enrollment went fine and it installed all the post-enrollment policies I set for it. I'm testing my first El Capitan image (10.11.1 and JSS 9.81) and so far everything is looking good. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |