Enterprise Vault™ Setting up Exchange Server Archiving
- About this guide
- Distributing Exchange Server Forms
- Setting up archiving from mailboxes
- Points to note before you set up Enterprise Vault mailbox archiving
- Defining Exchange Server mailbox archiving policies
- Mailbox policy settings when setting up Exchange Server archiving
- Mailbox policy settings when setting up Exchange Server archiving
- Defining desktop policies in Exchange Server archiving
- Desktop policy settings in Exchange Server archiving
- Options tab (Exchange Server archiving desktop policy setting)
- Advanced tab (Exchange Server archiving desktop policy setting)
- Desktop policy settings in Exchange Server archiving
- Adding Exchange Server archiving targets
- Using customized shortcuts with Exchange Server archiving
- About editing automatic messages for Exchange Server archiving
- Enabling mailboxes for Exchange Server archiving
- Setting up users' desktops
- Enterprise Vault Outlook Add-In for Exchange Server archiving
- Enterprise Vault Client for Mac OS X with Exchange Server archiving
- Getting users started with Exchange Server archiving
- Setting up Vault Cache and Virtual Vault
- Vault Cache synchronization
- Vault Cache header synchronization and content download
- Vault Cache advanced settings
- Virtual Vault advanced settings
- Setting up archiving from public folders
- About public folder policy settings
- Exchange Public Folder policy settings
- Exchange Public Folder policy settings
- Adding public folder archiving targets
- Setting up archiving of journaled messages
- Envelope Journaling
- Setting up Enterprise Vault Office Mail App for Exchange Server 2013 and later
- About the Enterprise Vault Office Mail App
- Deploying the Enterprise Vault Office Mail App
- Troubleshooting the Enterprise Vault Office Mail App
- Setting up Enterprise Vault access for OWA clients on Exchange Server 2010
- About Enterprise Vault functionality in OWA clients
- Enterprise Vault OWA Extensions in an Exchange Server 2010 environment
- Configuring access to Enterprise Vault from Outlook RPC over HTTP clients
- Using firewall software for external access to OWA and Outlook
- Configuring filtering
- About filtering
- Configuring selective journaling
- Configuring group journaling
- Configuring custom filtering
- About custom filtering ruleset files
- About controlling default custom filtering behavior
- About the general format of ruleset files for custom filtering
- About rule actions for custom filtering
- About message attribute filters for custom filtering
- About the general format of Custom Properties.xml
- About content categories
- Defining how custom properties are presented in third party applications
- Custom properties example
Configuring registry settings for Exchange Server journal custom filtering
Configuring the registry settings described in this section will enable custom filtering for all the Exchange Journaling tasks hosted on the server.
By creating a named ruleset file you can limit filtering to particular journal mailboxes.
See About custom filtering ruleset files.
Note:
If you use Compliance Accelerator to capture a required percentage of all journaled messages, do not configure a custom filter that deletes selected messages. Deleting messages compromises the accuracy of the Compliance Accelerator monitoring policy, because any deleted messages are not available for capture.
To configure the registry settings for Exchange Server journal custom filtering
- On the computer that hosts the Enterprise Vault Exchange Journaling task, log on as the Vault Service account.
- Start Regedit.
- Navigate to the following location:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \Software \Wow6432Node \KVS \Enterprise Vault \External Filtering \Journaling
If the External Filtering key does not exist, create it by performing the following steps in the order listed:
Right-click Enterprise Vault and select New > Key.
Name the key External Filtering.
Similarly, if the Journaling key does not exist, create it as follows:
Right-click External Filtering and select New > Key
Name the key Journaling.
- If the Journaling key does exist, any existing filters will be listed under it. Filter names will be an unbroken numbered sequence starting at 1.
- Create a new string value for the new custom filtering setting. The name of this setting must fit into the existing number sequence. If no other journaling filters exist, set the name to 1. Give it the value EnterpriseVault.CustomFilter.
- Optionally, you can create a DWORD entry with the name Override, if it does not exist. Set its value to 0 (zero). This entry controls whether the Exchange Journaling task reexamines any messages that are marked as MARK_DO_NOT_ARCHIVE each time it processes the journal mailbox. If the value is 0, or the Override entry does not exist, then the Exchange Journaling task does not reexamine the messages.
If you later change the rule action, you can temporarily set the value to 1. Setting this value forces the Exchange Journaling task to reprocess any messages in the journal mailbox.
- If it does not exist, create a DWORD value called MoveOnFilterFailure and set its value to 1.
This entry controls whether the Exchange Journaling task moves messages to the folder
Failed External Filter
when an unhandled error occurs in the external filter. This folder is automatically created when required in the journal mailbox.If the MoveOnFilterFailure registry entry does not exist then, when an unhandled error occurs in the external filter, the Exchange Journaling task moves the associated messages to the
Enterprise Vault Journaling Service\Invalid Journal Report
folder in the journal mailbox. - Close Regedit.
- After you have configured the required XML filter rules, restart the Exchange Journaling tasks.