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Enterprise Vault™ Setting up File System Archiving (FSA)
Last Published:
2019-10-21
Product(s):
Enterprise Vault (12.5)
- About this guide
- About File System Archiving
- About FSA shortcut files
- Steps to configure File System Archiving
- Adding a Windows file server to File System Archiving
- About archiving from Windows Server 2012 or later file servers
- Permissions and privileges required by the Vault Service account on Windows file servers
- Adding a NetApp filer to File System Archiving
- Adding a NetApp C-Mode Vserver to File System Archiving
- Adding a Celerra/VNX device to File System Archiving
- Adding a Dell EMC Unity 4.3 device to File System Archiving
- Configuring FSA with clustered file servers
- Troubleshooting the configuration of FSA with clustered file servers
- Installing the FSA Agent
- Defining volume and folder policies
- About selecting the shortcut type for an FSA policy
- About FSA policy archiving rules
- Configuring the deletion of archived files on placeholder deletion
- Configuring target volumes, target folders, and archive points
- About adding target volumes, target folders, and archive points for FSA
- About managing archive points
- Archive point properties
- Effects of modifying, moving, or deleting folders
- About deleting target folders, volumes, and file servers
- Configuring pass-through recall for placeholder shortcuts
- Configuring and managing retention folders
- Configuring and running FSA tasks
- Using Run Now to process FSA targets manually
- Configuring file system filtering
- Managing the file servers
- PowerShell cmdlets for File System Archiving
- Appendix A. Permissions and privileges required for the Vault Service account on Windows file servers
- Permissions required by the Vault Service account for the FSA Agent
About using FSA with clustered file servers
If your Windows file servers are grouped in a cluster, you can make the FSA services that run on them highly available. You must add an FSA resource to the cluster resource group or service group, and configure the FSA resource for high availability. The FSA resource monitors the state of the FSA services on the online node. If a problem occurs with the FSA services on the online node, then the cluster resource group or service group that contains the FSA resource fails over to the next available node.
Figure: Example FSA cluster configuration shows an example environment in which three file servers are clustered.
Note that you can make the FSA services highly available only when there is a shared disk resource.
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