8

My organization has a large deployment of Symantec Endpoint Protection (SEP) (~20k clients) with a single SEPM instance running in an ESX VM. We do have many remote clients designated as Group Update Providers (GUPs) where possible.

What our sysadmins have reported is that the SEP software does not have any native way to throttle its use of network bandwidth. It needs to send a 'full' definition update to every client, some hundreds of Mbyte in size. We found that the SEPM will practically accept 1000s of client check-in requests, and will send all clients updates at the maximum data rate possible.

We need some way of reducing the amount of bandwidth used by the SEPM to update clients natively, so that there is headroom on its network connection for management traffic (remote in, check the SEP console, etc).

So far, to mitigate flooding the entire network, we have throttled the SEPM traffic externally (at VM and switching level), which works to prevent congestion at the head-end network. However, that won't guarantee any bandwidth for management traffic.

We'd like to implement some change at the OS or application level to throttle the traffic without needing some heavyweight QoS deployment at 100s of offices. Ideally we would like to be able to throttle the amount of traffic used per client for SEP updates.

Please let me know if you have any ideas how to achieve this goal.

14
  • Found this article, will be trying some of the ideas therein: symantec.com/connect/articles/…
    – trp
    Sep 22, 2012 at 15:48
  • Hints in the article are no good with the new version of SEP, since they switch webservers to Apache.
    – trp
    Sep 26, 2012 at 21:34
  • I work with SEPM and Windows and QoS is the only way to do what you ask. However, the SEP's should not be asking for full def download each time. Unless the SEPM and its GUP's are only set to hold <5 defs. Ensure they hold at least 10, since there's default 4 def updates/day
    – Lizz
    Jan 5, 2013 at 6:13
  • 2
    symantec.com/business/support/… - Set "Maximum time that clients try to download updates from a Group Update Provider before trying the default management server" to Never. Also you can throttle the bandwidth on the GUPs if they are still demanding too much with the setting "Maximum bandwidth allowed for Group Update Provider downloads from the management server"
    – August
    Jan 10, 2013 at 12:40
  • 1
    Thanks, that helps a lot as well. It still doesn't cover the case where there is no GUP available. I want to be able to control the amount of bandwidth used by the SEPM per client regardless of its GUP status. (Could all hosts be marked as GUPs and throttled with the maximum-download option here?)
    – trp
    Jan 10, 2013 at 17:03

2 Answers 2

2
+50

I think your best solution is to configure your remote clients to either:

  1. only pull updates from the GUPs in each remote site, throttling the bandwidth on the GUP using the LiveUpdate policy settings

    or

  2. just let your remote clients go directly to Symantec for updates and not to your SEPM server

This article would help you configure it the first way- symantec.com/business/support/…:

  • Set "Maximum time that clients try to download updates from a Group Update Provider before trying the default management server" to Never.
  • Also you can throttle the bandwidth on the GUPs if they are still demanding too much with the setting "Maximum bandwidth allowed for Group Update Provider downloads from the management server"

If you have so many remote sites that managing the GUPs in each site is a headache, then I'd go for the second option.

Unfortunately, Symantec doesn't appear to have a built-in way to throttle bandwidth on the remote clients directly, only on the GUP clients.

5

You can throttle the SEP Manager process's bandwidth using policy-based QoS features that are built into Windows Server 2008 and newer.

  1. Log into the server and open gpedit.msc.

  2. Navigate to Computer Configuration\Windows Settings\Policy-based QoS.

  3. Right-click on Policy-based QoS and click Create new policy...

  4. For Policy Name, enter SEPM Throttling.

  5. Uncheck Specify DSCP Value.

  6. Check Specify Outbound Throttle Rate.

  7. Enter the desired maximum rate in megabits per second, and select Mbps (instead of Kbps) from the dropdown list.

  8. Click Next.

  9. Click Only appliations with this executable name.

  10. Enter the SEPM web server process name (probably httpd.exe).

  11. Click Next twice, then click Finish.

2
  • For whatever it's worth, SEP tends to be more problematic than certain other enterprise antivirus products. SEP is insufficiently configurable, has excessive CPU/network/disk overhead, and can cause serious problems on busy servers with high CPU utilization (especially terminal servers), even with sane exclusions configured. I prefer to recommend ESET to my clients.
    – Skyhawk
    Jan 7, 2013 at 3:36
  • thanks for the tip! This still doesn't solve the problem of throttling the bandwidth /per client/, only the total bandwidth used by the server (which we are getting through throttling at the VM). We need to avoid both choking the server's network and also choking the clients' networks.
    – trp
    Jan 7, 2013 at 21:45

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .