Deep Security 11.3 has reached end of support. Use the version selector (above) to see more recent versions of the Help Center.
What's new?
Deep Security 11.3
Below are major changes in the feature release Deep Security 11.3. For the support life cycle, see Feature releases. For a detailed change log, see the Deep Security release notes.
- Deep Security API updates: The Deep Security API now includes a Python SDK and the API reference includes Python examples. The API also introduces a new /roles endpoint. For more information, visit the Deep Security Automation Center.
- Upgrade on activation: Deep Security Manager 11.3 provides an option that instructs Deep Security Agents to automatically upgrade to the latest compatible version of the agent software when the agent is activated. For details, see Automatically upgrade agents on activation.
Upgrade on activation is initially supported for Linux platforms only (Windows and UNIX platforms are skipped when the feature is enabled) and is controlled through a global system setting.
- Logging improvement: To help with troubleshooting and to allow for the correlation of events between the Deep Security Manager and the Deep Security Agent, you can now choose to include the time zone in events. See Forward Deep Security events to an external syslog or SIEM server.
- New agent platform support: Deep Security Agent 11.3 adds support for:
- Windows 10 version 1809 (RS5)
- Windows Server 2019
- Windows 10 Embedded (64-bit), Windows 8.1 Embedded (32-bit), and Windows 7 Embedded (32-bit). For important details about Windows Embedded support, see Supported features by platform.
The Deep Security Agent for AIX and Solaris have not been tested for use with this feature release. The AIX and Solaris platforms continue to be fully supported using Deep Security Manager 11.0 and will continue to be supported in the next major release (Deep Security 12.0). If you have AIX and/or Solaris platforms in your deployment, please continue to use Deep Security Manager 11.0.