Windows Server Update Services 2.0 and above operate on a
repository of update packages from Microsoft. It allows administrators to approve or decline updates before release, to force updates to install by a given date, and to produce extensive reports on which updates each machine requires. System administrators can also configure WSUS to approve certain classes of updates automatically (critical updates, security updates, service packs, drivers, etc.). One can also approve updates for
detection only, allowing an administrator to see which machines will require a given update without also installing that update. WSUS may be used to update computers on a
disconnected network. This requires exporting patch data from a WSUS server connected to the internet and, using removable media, importing to a WSUS server set up on the disconnected network. Administrators can use WSUS with
Group Policy for client-side configuration of the
Automatic Updates client, ensuring that end-users can't disable or circumvent corporate update policies. WSUS does not require the use of
Active Directory; client configuration can also be applied by
Local Group Policy or by modifying the
Windows registry. WSUS uses
.NET Framework,
Microsoft Management Console and
Internet Information Services. WSUS 3.0 uses either
SQL Server Express or
Windows Internal Database as its database engine, whereas WSUS 2.0 uses WMSDE.
System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM) interoperates with WSUS and can import third-party security updates into the product. ==Licensing==