Enterprise Vault™ Classification using the Microsoft File Classification Infrastructure
- About this guide
- Getting started
- Setting up the classification properties
- About the Enterprise Vault classification properties
- Setting up the Enterprise Vault classification properties manually
- Checking the Folder Usage classification property
- How classification property values and retention categories interact
- Setting up new values for the Enterprise Vault classification properties
- Points to note on setting retention categories
- Configuring your classification rules
- Defining and applying classification policies
- About classification policies
- Defining classification policies
- About the PowerShell cmdlets for working with classification policies
- Associating classification policies with retention plans
- About the PowerShell cmdlets for working with retention plans
- Applying retention plans to your Enterprise Vault archives
- Running classification in test mode
- Publishing classification properties and rules across your site
- Using classification with smart partitions
- Appendix A. Enterprise Vault properties for use in classification rules
- About the Enterprise Vault properties
- System properties
- Attachment properties
- Custom Enterprise Vault properties
- Custom Enterprise Vault properties for File System Archiving items
- Custom Enterprise Vault properties for SharePoint items
- Custom Enterprise Vault properties for Compliance Accelerator-processed items
- Custom properties for use by policy management software
- Custom properties for Enterprise Vault SMTP Archiving
- Appendix B. PowerShell cmdlets for use with classification
- About the classification cmdlets
- Disable-EVClassification
- Get-EVClassificationFCITags
- Get-EVClassificationPolicy
- Get-EVClassificationStatus
- Get-EVClassificationTestMode
- Import-EVClassificationFCIRules
- New-EVClassificationPolicy
- Publish-EVClassificationFCIRules
- Remove-EVClassificationPolicy
- Set-EVClassificationPolicy
- Set-EVClassificationTestMode
- Appendix C. Monitoring and troubleshooting
Attachment properties
When an item that Enterprise Vault has passed for classification has one or more attachments, multiple properties of those attachments are also available for classification. You can distinguish these attachment properties by their a_ prefixes: a_cont, a_subj, and so on. Table: Enterprise Vault attachment properties lists a typical set of attachment properties that Enterprise Vault passes for classification.
Table: Enterprise Vault attachment properties
Property | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
a_comr | String | The reason for missing content (encrypted content, converter error, and so on). See the description of the comr property for more details. See System properties. |
a_cont | String | The content of the attachment, up to the limit that the Windows File Classification Infrastructure imposes. |
a_date | Date | The created, sent, received, or archived date of the attachment. |
a_dtyp | String | The data type of the attachment. For example, DOCX, XLSX, or MSG. |
a_mdat | Date | The last-modified date of the attachment. |
a_size | Number | The size of the attachment in KB. |
a_subj | String | The file name of the attachment or, if it is a message, the subject. |
The classification feature always treats attachments as files. So, even if an attachment is an email message, its sender information and recipient information are not available for classification.