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Intel® vPro™ and Intel® Centrino® Pro Processor Technology Quick Start Guide 
18 
 
Step 1:  Configure Existing IT Infrastructure 
In order for an Intel vPro machine to be manageable, it must become known to the management 
console. The process by which this occurs is called “provisioning”.  Enterprise setup (pre-provisioning) 
requires a series of steps that are performed on both the Intel vPro clients and the LANDesk core server 
in order to prepare the client for provisioning over the network by the LANDesk core server (which acts 
as the provisioning server for the Intel vPro clients). 
 
Intel vPro Integration Points with IT Infrastructure Components 
The following diagram shows the interaction with the different network elements.  Each will be 
discussed briefly in order to understand the integration requirement. 
 
Management 
Console
Intel
®
vPro™
Clients
DHCP
Core Server
Configuration Server
CA Server
SQL DB
DNS
Reg
is
ter
s
Updates
Req
u
es
ts
Manages
Manages
 
 
DHCP Server:  When an Intel vPro machine enters setup state, the default IP addressing scheme is 
DHCP (that is, use DHCP to obtain an IP address).  The Intel® Management Engine (Intel® ME) also 
uses the DHCP server to help dynamically update the DNS server with its network address information.  
The DHCP server must support Option 81 to register network address information into the DNS server 
on behalf of the Intel ME.  Option 15 should also be enabled in the DHCP Scope Options to allow the 
DNS to resolve host queries after IP address changes. 
DNS Server:  The DNS Server is used by network devices such as Management Consoles to locate 
address information for Intel vPro clients in order to contact them and manage them.  The Intel vPro 
clients may also use the DNS server during the provisioning configuration phase to locate the provision 
server and request their configuration information, as explained below. 
Once configured to the setup state, Intel AMT makes a DNS request for the name "ProvisionServer" 
(unless you choose to configure the client’s BIOS manually).  If the requested name cannot be resolved 
by the DNS server, then a second request is made for "ProvisionServer.DomainName." Intel AMT 
expects to either find the IP address of the provision server in this way, or by having it set explicitly in 
the Intel MEBx configuration process (Step 4:  Configure Intel vPro Client Authentication Settings, page 
21).  The Intel Management Engine BIOS Extension (Intel MEBx) is an option ROM module extension to