- Managing device features and behavior
- Managing devices with IT policies
- Importing IT policy and device metadata updates
- Creating device support messages
- Enforcing compliance rules for devices
- Sending commands to users and devices
- Deactivating devices
- Controlling the software updates that are installed on devices
- Create a device SR requirements profile for Android Enterprise devices
- Create a device SR requirements profile for Samsung Knox devices
- View users who are running a revoked software release
- Managing OS updates on devices with MDM controls activations
- View available updates for iOS devices
- Update the OS on supervised iOS devices
- Configuring communication between devices and BlackBerry UEM
- Displaying organization information on devices
- Using location services on devices
- Using Activation Lock on iOS devices
- Managing iOS features using custom payload profiles
- Managing factory reset protection for Android Enterprise devices
- Create a Factory reset protection profile
- Manually obtain a user ID for a Google account
- How factory reset protection responds to device resets
- Considerations for using a specific Managed Google Play account when setting up a factory reset protection profile
- Clear factory reset protection from a device
- Setting up Windows Information Protection for Windows 10 devices
- Allowing BitLocker encryption on Windows 10 devices
- Managing attestation for devices
- Migrate iOS devices to use a hardened channel
- BlackBerry Docs
- BlackBerry UEM 12.17
- Administration
- Managing device features
- Managing iOS features using custom payload profiles
Managing iOS features using custom payload profiles
iOS
features using custom payload profilesYou can use custom payload profiles to control features on
iOS
devices that aren’t controlled by existing BlackBerry UEM
policies or profiles.If a feature is controlled by an existing
BlackBerry UEM
policy or profile, a custom payload profile may not work as expected. You should use existing policies or profiles whenever possible.You can create
Apple
configuration profiles using the Apple Configurator
and add them to BlackBerry UEM
custom payload profiles. You can assign custom payload profiles to users, user groups, and device groups.- Control an existingiOSfeature that isn’t included in theBlackBerry UEMpolicies and profiles. For example, withBES10, your CEO’s assistant was able to access both her own email account and the CEO’s on aniPhone. InBlackBerry UEM, you can assign only one email profile to a device, so the assistant can only access his own email account. To solve this, you can assign an email profile to let the assistant’siPhoneaccess the assistant’s email account and a custom payload profile that lets the assistant’siPhoneaccess your CEO’s email account.
- Control a newiOSfeature that was released after the latestBlackBerry UEMsoftware release. For example, you want to control a new feature that will be available to devices when they upgrade to a recentiOSupdate, butBlackBerry UEMwon’t have an IT policy rule for the new feature until the nextBlackBerry UEMsoftware release. To solve this, you can create a custom payload profile that controls that feature until the nextBlackBerry UEMsoftware release.