

Testing new products in a pilot group is always a good idea


If FLE is installed you can use the “Change application components” task to uninstall this feature (reboot required)ģ.) BTW if there is a need to upgrade let’s say to 11.4 as you suggested, can we make the upgrade on a pilot group of client devices or do we need to upgrade it on all devices as I guess some server component also needs to be updated that talks to KES 11.4, right? Is there any option to stay on KES 11.1.1.126 and disable some of it’s components and make the upgrade (just for a test)? Upgrade Kaspersky Endpoint Security to version 11.4.0.”Ģ.). “If KES 11.2.0 or 11.2.0 Critical Fix 1 with the FLE encryption component is installed on your computer, the operating system update is not supported. With KES11.3 or 11.4 operating system update is supported - even with FLE: Please check your installation package - FLE is disabled by default. I think that till now people have made a lot of In-place upgrades and have faced the same issue, so please share the approach you took to make a successful upgrade of Windows 10 while using KES.ġ.) … if we have the “ File Encryption component (FLE)” and it even wouldn’t need to be used for the In-place upgrade to fail, is this correct? We are discussing with our internal security department the way to upgrade the OS and there is an idea to disable Kaspersky just for the upgrade and I’m wondering if this is the best practice/recommended way by Kaspersky?

Just to test I installed an identical client (same applications, also a VM on the same hypervisor) without KES and tried to upgrade it - totally no issues, the upgrade went smooth and fast. I need to upgrade Windto 1909 with KES 11.1.1.126 already installed on the clients, when I’m doing the validation suggested by MS I get a success code of 0xC1900210 (no issues found) and later on when I run the upgrade (from ISO) the upgrade fails and the device (VM) tries to revert with a poor effect as most applications don’t work including MS Office. I’m curious of what are the best practices for Windows 10 In-place upgrades from Kaspersky’s perspective?
