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Enterprise Vault™ Introduction and Planning
Last Published:
2021-12-06
Product(s):
Enterprise Vault (14.2)
- About this guide
- Introduction
- Overview of Enterprise Vault
- How Enterprise Vault works
- About Enterprise Vault indexing
- About Enterprise Vault tasks
- About Enterprise Vault services
- About the Enterprise Vault Outlook Add-In
- About Enterprise Vault Search
- Enterprise Vault administration
- About reporting and monitoring in Enterprise Vault
- Exchange Server archiving
- Exchange Public Folder archiving
- File System Archiving
- Archiving Microsoft SharePoint servers
- Domino mailbox archiving
- Domino Journal archiving
- SMTP Archiving
- Microsoft Teams Archiving
- Skype for Business Archiving
- Enterprise Vault Accelerators
- About Compliance Accelerator
- About Discovery Accelerator
- Building in resilience
- Planning component installation
- Where to set up the Enterprise Vault Services and Tasks
- Installation planning for client components
- Planning your archiving strategy
- How to define your archiving policy for user mailboxes
- How to plan the archiving strategy for Exchange public folders
- How to plan settings for retention categories
- How to plan vault stores and partitions
- About Enterprise Vault reports
Typical Enterprise Vault configuration in a VCS cluster
Figure: Active/passive failover configuration illustrates a typical configuration.
Here, the volumes for the Enterprise Vault services data are configured in a cluster disk group on shared storage. The Enterprise Vault virtual server is configured on the active node (System 1). If System 1 fails, System 2 becomes the active node, and the Enterprise Vault virtual server comes online on System 2.