Veritas Enterprise Vault™ Administrator's Guide
- About this guide
- Managing administrator security
- Roles-based administration
- Working with predefined RBA roles
- Customizing RBA roles
- Day-to-day administration
- About Exchange mailbox archiving reports
- About starting or stopping tasks or services
- Monitoring journal mailboxes
- About monitoring disks
- About maintaining the SQL databases
- Using SQL AlwaysOn availability groups
- About managing vault store groups and sharing
- About managing safety copies
- About managing partition rollover
- About expiry and deletion
- Working with retention categories and retention plans
- Enabling archiving for new mailboxes
- About applying or removing legal holds on selected archives
- About moving archives
- How Move Archive works
- About moving mailbox archives within a site
- About moving mailbox archives between sites
- About configuring Move Archive
- Running Move Archive
- Monitoring Move Archive
- Using Enterprise Vault for records management
- Setting the default record type for users
- Common configuration scenarios
- Searching archives for items marked as records
- Automatically filtering events
- Managing indexes
- About the indexing wizards
- Managing indexing exclusions
- About the indexing PowerShell cmdlets
- Advanced Domino mailbox and desktop policy settings
- Editing the advanced settings for Domino mailbox and desktop policy
- Domino mailbox policy advanced settings
- Archiving General: Domino mailbox policy
- Archiving General: Domino mailbox policy
- Domino desktop policy advanced settings
- Advanced Exchange mailbox and desktop policy settings
- Editing the advanced Exchange mailbox and desktop settings
- Exchange mailbox policy advanced settings
- Archiving General (Exchange mailbox policy advanced settings)
- Archiving General (Exchange mailbox policy advanced settings)
- Exchange desktop policy advanced settings
- Office Mail App (Exchange desktop policy advanced settings)
- Outlook (Exchange desktop policy advanced settings)
- OWA versions before 2013 (Exchange desktop policy advanced settings)
- Vault Cache (Exchange desktop policy advanced settings)
- Virtual Vault (Exchange desktop policy advanced settings)
- Advanced Exchange journal policy settings
- Archiving General (Exchange journal policy advanced settings)
- Advanced Exchange public folder policy settings
- Archiving General (Exchange public folder policy advanced settings)
- Advanced SMTP policy settings
- Site properties advanced settings
- Editing site properties advanced settings
- Site properties advanced settings
- Content Conversion (site properties advanced settings)
- File System Archiving (site properties advanced settings)
- IMAP (site properties advanced settings)
- Indexing (site properties advanced settings)
- SQL Server (site properties advanced settings)
- SMTP (site properties advanced settings)
- Storage (site properties advanced settings)
- Content Conversion (site properties advanced settings)
- Computer properties advanced settings
- Editing computer properties advanced settings
- Computer properties advanced settings
- Agents (computer properties advanced settings)
- IMAP (computer properties advanced settings)
- Indexing (computer properties advanced settings)
- Storage (computer properties advanced settings)
- Task properties advanced settings
- Advanced Personal Store Management properties
- Classification policy advanced settings
- Managing the Storage queue
- Automatic monitoring
- About monitoring using Enterprise Vault Operations Manager
- About monitoring using MOM
- About monitoring using SCOM
- Managing extension content providers
- Exporting archives
- Enterprise Vault message queues
- Customizations and best practice
- Mailbox archiving strategies
- Notes on archiving based on quota or age and quota
- Notes on archiving items from Exchange managed folders
- About performance tuning
- Mailbox archiving strategies
- Auditing
- Failover in a building blocks configuration
- Appendix A. Ports used by Enterprise Vault
- Appendix B. Useful SQL queries
- Appendix C. Troubleshooting
- Installation problems
- Microsoft SQL Server problems
- Server problems
- Client problems
- Problems enabling or processing mailboxes
- Problems with Vault Cache synchronization
- Identifying and resolving Vault Cache issues on the Enterprise Vault server
- Identifying and resolving Vault Cache issues on an end-user computer
- Problems with Enterprise Vault components
- Troubleshooting: All tasks and services
- Troubleshooting: Directory service
- Troubleshooting: Exchange archiving or Journaling tasks
- Troubleshooting: Storage service
- Troubleshooting: Shopping service
- Troubleshooting: Web Access application
- Troubleshooting: All tasks and services
- Techniques to aid troubleshooting
- How to modify registry settings
- About moving an Indexing service
- Appendix D. Enterprise Vault accounts and permissions
About retention plans
With a retention plan, you can associate a retention category with a number of other settings, such as a classification policy and the criteria for discarding expired items, and apply them all to one or more archives. If you choose to set a classification policy with a retention plan then, for the archives to which you assign the retention plan, the classification policy determines the following:
Whether to classify items at the same time that Enterprise Vault indexes and archives them. After Enterprise Vault has applied the classification tags, users of applications like Compliance Accelerator and Discovery Accelerator can use them to filter items when they conduct searches and reviews.
Whether to classify items when users manually delete them or Enterprise Vault automatically expires them.
For more information on the classification feature, see the Classification guide.
Applying a retention plan to an archive gives you greater control over the retention periods of the items in the archive. In particular, a retention plan lets you dispose of already-archived items by giving them a different retention period than the one that Enterprise Vault first gave them when it archived the items. For example, you can configure a retention plan so Enterprise Vault expires the affected items according to the retention category that you have associated with the retention plan, and not the retention categories with which Enterprise Vault originally stamped them.