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<blockquote data-quote="shmu26" data-source="post: 741585" data-attributes="member: 37647"><p>So it sounds like you are all set.</p><p>In my experience, you will know when something is being blocked. Either you will see an error message, or you will not succeed in the action you are attempting.</p><p></p><p>The big exception is certain powershell scripts that Windows runs automatically, from time to time, for maintenance purposes. Some of them are not important. </p><p>OSA has rules to allow these scripts. But it is quite possible that Microsoft will cook up new PS scripts from time to time, which OSA has not yet whitelisted. But you can check the OSA logs every once in a while, if you want to worry about this, and see what is being blocked. Usually, Windows will try again, after every reboot, to run a script that failed, so you don't have to dig back into ancient history, just look at the logs from the last day or two.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="shmu26, post: 741585, member: 37647"] So it sounds like you are all set. In my experience, you will know when something is being blocked. Either you will see an error message, or you will not succeed in the action you are attempting. The big exception is certain powershell scripts that Windows runs automatically, from time to time, for maintenance purposes. Some of them are not important. OSA has rules to allow these scripts. But it is quite possible that Microsoft will cook up new PS scripts from time to time, which OSA has not yet whitelisted. But you can check the OSA logs every once in a while, if you want to worry about this, and see what is being blocked. Usually, Windows will try again, after every reboot, to run a script that failed, so you don't have to dig back into ancient history, just look at the logs from the last day or two. [/QUOTE]
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