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What is patch management? Lifecycle, benefits and best practices

Patch management is the subset of systems management that involves identifying, acquiring, testing and installing patches, or code changes, that are intended to fix bugs, close security holes or add features.

Patch management requires staying current on available patches, deciding which patches are needed for specific software and devices, testing them, making sure they have been properly installed and documenting the process.

This comprehensive guide explains the entire patch management process and its role in IT administration and security. The hyperlinks direct you to detailed articles on patch management best practices, tools and services.

Why is patch management important?

Patch management helps keep computers and networks secure, reliable and up to date with features and functionality that the organization considers important. It is also an essential tool for ensuring and documenting compliance with security and privacy regulations. Patching can improve performance and is sometimes used to bring software up to date, so it will work with the latest hardware.

How does patch management work?

Patch management works differently depending on whether a patch is being applied to a standalone system or systems on a corporate network. On a standalone system, the operating system and applications will periodically perform automatic checks to see if patches are available. New patches will typically be downloaded and installed automatically.

In networked environments, organizations generally try to maintain software version consistency across computers and usually perform centralized patch management rather than allowing each computer to download its own patches. Centralized patch management uses a central server that checks network hardware for missing patches, downloads the missing patches and distributes them to the computers and other devices on the network in accordance with the organization's patch management policy.

A centralized patch management server does more than just automate patch management; it also gives the organization a degree of control over the patch management process. For example, if a particular patch is determined to be problematic, the organization can configure its patch management software to prevent the patch from being deployed.

Another advantage of centralized patch management is that it helps conserve internet bandwidth. It makes little sense from a bandwidth perspective to allow every computer in an organization to download the exact same patch. Instead, the patch management server can download the patch once and distribute it to all the computers designated to receive it.

Although many organizations handle patch management on their own, some managed service providers perform patch management in conjunction with the other network management services they provide to clients. MSP patch management can minimize the significant administrative hassles of doing the work in-house.

10 steps of the patch management process
Patch management has discovery and documentation requirements at nearly every stage of the process.

What are the benefits of patch management?

Most major software companies periodically release patches, which can serve any of three primary purposes:

  1. Patches are often used to address security vulnerabilities. If a software vendor discovers a security risk associated with one of its products, it will typically issue a patch intended to address that risk. It is important for organizations to apply security patches as soon as possible because hackers and malware authors know about the security vulnerabilities a patch is designed to correct and will actively look for unpatched systems.
  2. Patches can fix bugs, improving the software's stability and eliminating annoying problems.
  3. Vendors occasionally release patches to introduce new features. Feature updates are becoming more common because of the growth of subscription-based cloud software.

What are the challenges of patch management?

Buggy patches are the most common problem in patch management. Sometimes a patch will introduce problems that did not exist before. They may show up in the product that is being patched or in other software that has a dependency relationship with the patched software. A patch might also have to be removed if the vendor releases a patch that can't be put in place while the previous patch remains on the system. Because patches can sometimes introduce problems into a system that was previously working correctly, it is important for administrators to test patches before deploying them.

Another common problem is that disconnected systems might not receive patches in a timely manner. For example, if a mobile user rarely connects to the corporate network, their device may go for long periods without being patched. In such cases, it may be better to configure the device for standalone patch management rather than relying on centralized patch management.

The sharp increase in remote work since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic has added a new problem: managing patches on a wider range of endpoints that connect to the network through various security mechanisms. While some users might connect to applications on a highly secure VPN, others might use single sign-on from the public internet, log into some applications individually or use unsecure Wi-Fi networks. There are more places for hackers to enter the corporate network, which can mean more patches to deploy.

Patch management lifecycle

The main stages of the patch management process -- identifying, acquiring, testing, deploying and documenting them -- are supported by the following important steps:

  • inventorying devices, operating systems and applications;
  • deciding which software versions to standardize on;
  • categorizing IT assets and patches by risk and priority;
  • testing patches in a representative lab or sandbox environment;
  • running a pilot on a sample of devices (an optional step);
  • validating patches to confirm that they have been installed and to detect systems that are missing patches;
  • planning the rollout, including identifying who is responsible for it and which patches should be installed on which devices; and
  • documenting patches, vulnerabilities, test results and deployments, which helps in analyzing and improving the process.
Patch management KPIs
Compiling a list of key performance indicators can help improve the patch management process.

Patch management best practices

System management software vendors, MSPs and consultants have expertise in making patch deployment smooth and effective. Among the oft-mentioned patch management best practices are the following 10 recommendations:

  1. Know what you're responsible for patching. This entails clearly identifying targets and their locations.
  2. Create standard and emergency patching procedures. Emergency patches have to be installed outside the windows established for regularly scheduled patching. There should be clear procedures for both.
  3. Understand vendor patch-release schedules. The number and types of operating systems, applications and endpoint firmware vary significantly, as does the timing of the patches available for them.
  4. Design and maintain a realistic test environment. It should closely match the production environment, including workload fluctuations, and will need to be updated when the production environment is changed. This can be expensive and hard to scale, so a representative sample of assets is often used instead. Another option is a virtual test environment designed to replicate the production environment on a single computer or cloud service such as AWS or Microsoft Azure. There are also online services that handle the replication process.
  5. Review the patch process and results. Your review of patch management KPIs can also help identify potential improvements.
  6. Prioritize patches by risk level. Assign assets a criticality level according to their importance to business processes, optimal downtime and vulnerability risk. Test, schedule and deploy patches for the most critical assets before less essential ones.
  7. Stay abreast of security vulnerabilities. For commercial software, subscribe to reputable sources, such as the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency or Common Vulnerability Scoring System of the U.S. government. For internally developed applications, use a software composition analysis tool to track their open source and third-party components.
  8. Deploy patches as quickly as possible. Users may complain about downtime, but the longer the wait, the greater the chance that hackers will find a way in.
  9. Execute production rollouts in stages. Dedicate the initial rollout to less critical systems. If the patches perform as expected, continue the rollout until every system is updated.
  10. Create a contingency and rollback plan. In the event something goes wrong, have a backup or image snapshot of systems before starting patch deployment so they can be restored to their previous state.

Examples of patch management

Microsoft often provides patches to its Windows operating systems and other products such as Office. The patches are normally released on a scheduled monthly basis, often on a day that has come to be known as Patch Tuesday.

Standalone systems rely on Windows Update to automatically download and deploy any available patches. In business environments, however, it is much more common to use Windows Server Update Services (WSUS), which are included with Windows Server and specifically designed to centralize patch management. There are also numerous third-party WSUS alternatives for managing, downloading and deploying Microsoft patches.

Many IT departments also maintain systems that run the open source Linux operating system. Linux patch management is similar to Windows patching, but there are more Linux distributions, which means becoming familiar with the different patching procedures of several vendors instead of just one.

MacOS also has built-in software update tools, but an organization can have multiple versions of the operating system, which makes it challenging to keep every system up to date without using centralized patch management. Many third-party patch management tools support macOS, along with Windows and Linux. 

differences between vulnerability management and patch management

Patch management in cybersecurity and vulnerability management

The increase in cyber attacks in recent years makes cybersecurity probably the most common reason for deploying patches. Patch management is an important part of vulnerability management, a much broader strategy for discovering, prioritizing and remediating the security vulnerabilities of network assets. Patch management remediates the identified risks by upgrading software to the most recent version or by temporarily patching it to remove a vulnerability until the software vendor releases an upgrade that contains the fix.

In this context, software patch testing also involves documenting the test process for security compliance purposes, as well as coming up with alternative vulnerability management plans in case security patches can't be installed on the required devices.

Vulnerability management includes the following steps:

  • network scanning to identify users and devices on the network (the same technique hackers use to search for vulnerable targets);
  • penetration testing, which mimics the tactics of hackers to identify vulnerable parts of the network;
  • verification to confirm that a vulnerability identified during scanning and testing can, in fact, be exploited;
  • mitigation steps, such as taking a vulnerable system offline, to prevent vulnerabilities from being exploited before a patch is available; and
  • reporting that uses data management, analytics and visualization tools for evaluating the organization's vulnerability management process and complying with regulations.

A distinct category of tools known as vulnerability management software is used for scheduling and documenting these processes and partly automating them. Some vulnerability management tools have patch management as a component.

How to choose the right patch management software

Patch management tools are available on premises or in the cloud, and many vendors offer both deployment options. While some vendors specialize in patch management, most include it in a broader collection of IT systems management, endpoint management or security and compliance tools. Prominent players include Atera, Automox, GFI LanGuard, Kaseya VSA, ManageEngine Patch Manager Plus and SolarWinds Patch Manager.

cost-benefit analysis of patch management software
Patch management tools should be subject to a cost-benefit analysis that considers the cost of the software, underlying infrastructure and required personnel, along with their impact on company regulations.

Before investigating products, it's important to create a complete patch management policy. By ranking their reasons for deploying patches and specifying who needs to be involved, how patches will be tested, implemented and monitored, and what kind of reporting is required, organizations will be more successful at finding the software that meets their exact needs.

Buying teams should look for dashboards that are easy to set up, understand and use, and that can display the information they need. Reporting and documentation features should also be user-friendly and able to handle the required information on vulnerabilities, test results and patching history. The software should support patching for every operating system and major application used in the organization. Most vendors name the OSes and commercial applications their products can patch.

Other important patch management features include the following:

  • real-time visibility into network devices and software;
  • the ability to prioritize patches by criticality;
  • administrative controls for approving patches;
  • patch automation -- sometimes through the use of software agents -- with fine tuning that makes it easy to exclude certain patches and endpoints;
  • timely receipt of software updates and patches from vendors;
  • the ability to program patch management policies into the system; and
  • patch validation and verification to confirm that patches have taken effect.

Organizations that take the time to develop a patch management policy, establish a comprehensive patch management process and use the software tools that best support those efforts will likely be successful at making their IT systems reliable, secure and current with the latest technology.

Latest patch management news and trends

Patch management not enough to secure SAP systems
Security is critical to SAP customers, and third-party tools can help seek out and monitor vulnerabilities in areas that SAP patches miss, such as custom code and access control.

Apple patches zero days used in spyware attacks on Kaspersky
Apple released patches for three zero-day vulnerabilities, two of which were used in a spyware campaign against Kaspersky Lab employees.

Vulnerability exploitation volumes up over 50% in 2022
Data from Palo Alto Networks' Unit 42 threat intel specialists reveals insight into the scale of vulnerability exploitation in the wild.

Improving cyber resilience with continuous threat exposure management
CISOs can rely on internal penetration testing and vulnerability management teams to help them validate the discovered vulnerabilities.

Remote work and the cloud create new endpoint security challenges
Cybersecurity has always been challenging, but with the cloud becoming more complex, the Internet of Things more advanced and remote work more embraced, security and endpoint management face a host of new challenges. Experts weighed in on the subject at the recent Syxsense Synergy event.

This was last updated in June 2023

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