User's Manual

Understanding Kaspersky Administration Kit 15
parameters specific for each type of tasks form the task settings. The application
settings and task settings do not overlap.
For more information about task types, refer to the documentation for
Kaspersky Lab applications.
To have an application to perform an action, you should configure application
settings, create and configure a corresponding task and run it.
Application settings defined for each individual client computer via a local
interface or remotely via an Administration console will be called the local
application settings.
Centralized configuration of the application operation settings installed on the
client computers in the logical network is performed by defining policies.
A Policy – is a set of parameters of an application in a group. A policy includes
settings for complete configuration of all functions of the application excluding
settings specific for individual tasks. An example of such settings are schedule
settings.
Therefore a policy includes the following settings:
common settings for all types of tasks - application settings;
common settings for all individual tasks of each type – most task settings.
This means that the policy for the anti-virus application (see Figure 1) that
includes the real-time protection and on-demand scan tasks, contains all
required settings of the application's configuration for execution of both types of
tasks, but does not contain, for example, the schedule for execution of these
tasks or settings that define the scan scope.
Figure 1. Policy
Each setting in a policy has an attribute, a "lock" that indicates whether changing
this setting is allowed in the nested policies in the hierarchal level (for nested
groups and slave Administration servers), in the task settings and local
application settings. If there is a "lock" attached to this setting, you will not be
able to redefine its value (see section 2.1.6 on page 14).