Event banner
Windows Office Hours: September 19, 2024
Event Ended
Thursday, Sep 19, 2024, 08:00 AM PDTEvent details
Get answers to your questions about adopting Windows 11 and managing the Windows devices used by remote, onsite, and hybrid workers across your organization. Get tips on keeping devices up to date ef...
Heather_Poulsen
Updated Nov 19, 2024
Jason_Sandys
Microsoft
Sep 19, 2024Hi Michelle,
Yes, there is throttling on manually initiated policy refreshes from the console or locally on devices to prevent adding pressure on the service and the device itself. The throttling details are undocumented and subject to change. Is there a specific requirement or expectation on your part? What challenge are you facing where this is significant, and you need or want to attempt to manually initiate policy refreshes rapidly?
HeyHey16K
Sep 20, 2024Iron Contributor
Hi Jason, thank you for your response. As Hans says, when you're testing policy changes etc. it gets frustrating to not be able to instantly sync. Could Microsoft consider allowing us to add test devices to a group that would allow more frequent syncs? Or can we force them using "restart-service IntunemanagementExtenstion" perhaps? Thank you
- Jason_SandysSep 20, 2024
Microsoft
So, to be clear here, you can absolutely manually sync the policy and have it update in real-time. What you can't do is initiate a sync over and over again in a very short period of time. This throttle is in place because the end effect of doing this would be to actually slow the process down as it queues up more and more requests. Also, keep in mind that for one-off testing and troubleshooting purposes, policy changes targeted to a small number of devices will automatically be pushed to the devices at the time you make the changes. This is also subject to throttling though for similar reasons.- HeyHey16KSep 20, 2024Iron ContributorThank you Jason 🙂