Anonymous (Last update 7/12/2005):
Here is something useful that I found out the hard way. If you have a server running WSUS on port 8530 and you have more than 1 website running on port 80, as I did, you have to make sure that the SelfUpdate tree virtual site exists on all of your port 80 sites (I use host headers to point the users to the correct site on the server). When I ran the script to install SelfUpdate tree, it only installed it on 1 of my sites running on port 80, not all of them. To fix this, save the SelfUpdate tree virtual file configuration. Then import it on each of your sites running on port 80. Reset IIS, reset the Update Services service and you should be good to go.
Anonymous (Last update 6/21/2005):
From a newsgroup post: "If you are not using the default website for anything, I would stop the default website, change the port number for the WSUS to port 80, and restart IIS. If you still have some web applications that need port 80 or you prefer to keep WSUS on port 8530, you will need to run installselfupdateonport80.vbs in the \Program Files\Update Services\Setup directory. The will restore the selfupdate virtual folder that SUS removed during it’s uninstall".
See the link to "Automatic Updates must be updated" for additional information on this issue.
Denis Scherbakov (Last update 6/20/2005):
I got this error logged into my event Log after I ran WSUS for the first time. Although it was logged, my SelfUpdate Tree was ok. To test this I restarted Update Services (WSUS) service and the error disappeared. So be aware, that WSUS might sometimes log it by mistake. See the link to “SelfUpdate Tree is not working” for information on this event.
Philipp (Last update 6/16/2005):
See the link to "WSUS Wiki" for information on Windows Server Update Services.