Jan 30, 2012 Beyond package (.pkg) files, Pacifist will also read and extract from.dmg.pkg.zip.tar.tar.gz.tar.bz2.xar, and even Mac OS X Installer apps. There are plenty of troubleshooting and trick situations where this would be valuable. For example, if you have a installer file of OS X or a dmg you want to explore and extract files. I try to keep the page at bootcamp-driver-download up to date with all the pkg download URLs. Be patient as it's probably 600MB. Once your pkg is downloaded, double click it and install to a folder on your hard drive so you know where to find it. The folder contains a nest of folders, the last of which contains a dmg disk image file. Lexmark C748de color laser printer offers midsize workgroups high-quality color printing and easy-to-use features. Eco-friendly features, like automatic two-sided printing, make responsible printing easy. . Filetypes are OS Specific: Windows may install.exe or.msi files, macOS may install.pkg or.app encapsulated inside a.dmg image. Checking Enrollment Status on Dashboard For Windows desktop and macOS devices, there are a few ways to check whether a device has the management profile installed, agent installed, or both.

Because Systems Manager supports so many different operating systems, there are a few primary enrollment methods to add management capability to your devices. This guide will cover the two primary aspects of management, agent installs and enrollment profiles, and the features associated with each of them.

For detailed instructions on how to enroll a particular device type, see this article.

What are the Meraki Agent and MDM Profiles?

The MDM enrollment profile provides most of the management functionality on devices, such as restrictions or live tools like sending notifications and remote reboot commands. These profiles exist as configurations on the device's operating system, using the vendor's native APIs, and are provisioned during the enrollment process. You can see examples of where the profile can be found on each device type in this article.

Although MDM profiles are used for most platforms, desktop versions of Windows and macOS support installing an agent as well. The Meraki agent installs like an application and runs as a service in the background of your enrolled Windows/Mac machine. The agent provides additional functionality, such as custom software deployment and remote desktop. The agent and profile are not mutually exclusive, you can enroll a device using either method or with both.

We typically recommend enrolling with both methods for full Systems Manager functionality.

Operating System Compatibility

Agent

MDM Profile

macOS

iOS/iPadOS

Android

Windows 10

Windows 8*

Windows 7*

Windows Phone 10

Chrome OS**

* Windows 7 and 8 natively do not support MDM enrollment profiles, and can only be managed via the SM agent. Microsoft began implementing MDM support with Windows 10.

** Chrome OS technically does not run an agent or install a profile, and connects via Google's APIs for management. See here.

How to Enroll

Enrollment instructions can be found in the Meraki Dashboard under Systems Manager > Manage > Add Devices. You can also find guides on how to enroll every operating system for a detailed breakdown.

Dmg Vs Pkg

Agent Version Control

Systems Manager admins have the ability to manage the preferred version of the agent used for all devices in their networks, or upgrade or downgrade the agent on specific devices.

To manage the preferred version in a network, navigate to Systems Manager > Configure > General and select the preferred agent version under Agent Version. The Agent version can be set to a specific version number or 'Latest' which will automatically update the agent on currently managed and newly enrolled devices with each new Agent release.

To manage the preferred version for a specific device, navigate to the 'Device Details' page for a target device and select the expected version under Agent Version. Click on 'Set' to automatically upgrade or downgrade the agent on the next device check-in.

For a list of feature updates and bug fixes across all agent versions, see the Systems Manager Agent Release Notes.

Auto-installing the macOS Agent

The macOS agent can be pushed down as an application to Mac devices that have gone through profile enrollment. This can help streamline the enrollment process of macOS devices, ensuring that both profile and agent are installed without needing to manually run the .pkg on devices. The agent can be added Systems Manager > Manage > Apps > + Add new and scoped to all devices, or via tags. Once configured, devices enrolling through DEP can automatically install the agent if within the specified scope.

Agent vs Profile Features

The agent and profile each enable different sets of features on your devices. For full functionality on Windows 10 desktops and macOS devices, we recommend enrolling through both methods whenever possible. Most notably, Microsoft did NOT build MDM profile support for Windows 7 and 8, which means it is not possible to distribute settings like wireless configs to those devices.

The key differences: software installer (macOS/Windows Custom Apps) and remote desktop require the agent to be installed, and installing MDM profiles (wireless, VPN settings, etc.) or Store Apps (macOS) require the management profile. See a full comparison of features, including various MDM commands below.

Windows ProfileWindows Agent

Apple

Unsupervised Profile

Apple

Supervised Profile

macOS Agent

Push MDM profiles

Lock Device

Selective Wipe

Erase Device

Fetch process list

Command line

Network stats

Screenshot

Remote Desktop

Power Control

Install Software Binaries****

Send Notification

Install OS updates

*

Activation Lock/Bypass

* Installing OS updates on iOS requires DEP supervision specifically, and will not work with Apple Configurator supervision.

** Filetypes are OS Specific: Windows may install .exe or .msi files, macOS may install .pkg or .app encapsulated inside a .dmg image.

Checking Enrollment Status on Dashboard

For Windows desktop and macOS devices, there are a few ways to check whether a device has the management profile installed, agent installed, or both.

Client Details

After selecting a client, scroll down to the 'Online status' section. A device with the agent installed with show 'Last online' here. A device with the management profile installed will show 'Last check-in'. Devices enrolled through both methods will show both lines, as in the below image.

You can also tell how a device was enrolled based on the MDM commands available. With just the management profile installed, you'll see:

Dmg Vs Pkg Mac

With both the profile and agent installed, you'll see:

Clients List

On the Systems manager > Clients page, click the '+' sign at the top right, and add the 'Managed?' column to the table. Devices that are enrolled with 'Managed? No' are enrolled through the agent, and do not have a management profile installed.

Checking for Management Profile on Devices

iOS/iPadOS

For iOS/iPadOS, the enrollment profile is stored in Settings > General > Profiles & Device Management > Meraki Management/Meraki Systems Manager.

In addition to the Meraki Management enrollment profile, you can also add the Meraki Systems Manager app to iOS, which allows some additional features to be enabled, including Backpack, GPS tracking, Push Notifications, and much more.

macOS

For macOS, the enrollment profile is stored in System Preferences > Profiles > Meraki Management/Meraki Systems Manager.

Android

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For Android, the enrollment profile can be viewed in the Meraki Systems Manager app on the Configuration page.

Windows 10

For Windows 10, the enrollment profile is stored in Settings > Accounts > Work Access.

Windows Phone 10

For Windows Phone 10, the enrollment profile is stored in Settings > Accounts > Work Access.


Checking for the Agent on Devices

The agent is a process that will be running in the background on macOS and Windows 7, Windows 8, and Windows 10.

To confirm that the agent is running on macOS and view the Meraki agent's log file, run the following command in Terminal:

Dmg Vs Pkg Vs App

If you see logging information being generated for today's date, your Meraki agent is currently running!

To confirm that the agent is running on Windows 10, Windows 8, or Windows 7, view the Meraki agent's log file by opening m_agent_service in this directory:

If you see logging information generated for today's date, your Meraki agent is currently running!

For extra Windows agent running confirmation you can also find the m_agent_service running with the Task Manager:

What about Chrome OS?

Chromebooks are enrolled through the Google Admin Console with API access enabled. If you are interested in managing your Chrome OS devices, please view our documentation on enrolling Chrome OS into Meraki Systems Manager.

HI Pat,
From Wikipedia: A file with the extension .dmg (an abbreviation for disk image) uses a disk image format commonly found on Mac OS X. The format allows secure password protection as well as file compression and hence serves both security and file distribution functions. Its most common function is the distribution of software over the Internet. When opened, DMG files are 'mounted' as a drive within the Finder.
From: Wikipedia .cdr and ISO
ISO image
Filename extension .iso
Uniform Type Identifier public.iso-image
Type of format Disk image
Standard(s) ISO 9660
An ISO image is an archive file (a.k.a. disk image) of an optical disc using a conventional ISO (International Organization for Standardization) format that is supported by many software vendors. ISO image files typically have a file extension of .ISO but Mac OS X ISO images often have the extension .CDR. The name 'ISO' is taken from the ISO 9660 file system used with CD-ROM media, but an ISO image can also contain UDF file system because UDF is backward-compatible to ISO 9660.
Carolyn 🙂
Message was edited by: Carolyn Samit

Dmg Vs Pkg Mac

Dec 3, 2008 1:30 PM