Enterprise Vault™ Setting up File System Archiving (FSA)

Last Published:
Product(s): Enterprise Vault (12.3)
  1. About this guide
    1.  
      Introducing this guide
    2. Where to get more information about Enterprise Vault
      1.  
        Enterprise Vault training modules
  2. About File System Archiving
    1.  
      About File System Archiving
    2.  
      About using FSA with clustered file servers
    3.  
      About setting up File System Archiving
    4.  
      About FSA policies
    5.  
      About target volumes, folders, and archive points
    6.  
      About client access to FSA-archived items
    7.  
      About archived file permissions
    8. About FSA shortcut files
      1.  
        About internet shortcuts
      2.  
        About placeholder shortcuts
      3.  
        About folder shortcuts
      4.  
        About pass-through recall for placeholder shortcuts
    9.  
      About the FSA Agent
    10.  
      About retention folders
    11.  
      About FSA Reporting
    12.  
      About FSAUtility
  3. Steps to configure File System Archiving
    1.  
      Steps to configure File System Archiving
  4. Adding a Windows file server to File System Archiving
    1.  
      Adding a Windows file server to File System Archiving
    2.  
      Using FSA with the Windows Encrypting File System (EFS)
    3. About archiving from Windows Server 2012 or later file servers
      1.  
        About the ReFS and CSVFS file systems and FSA
      2.  
        About Dynamic Access Control and FSA
      3.  
        About archiving Windows Server 2012 and later deduplicated files with FSA
    4.  
      Account requirements for managing FSA with Windows file servers
    5. Permissions and privileges required by the Vault Service account on Windows file servers
      1.  
        Granting permissions to the Vault Service account if you do not install the FSA Agent
    6.  
      Configuring a file server's firewall for FSA
    7.  
      Adding a Windows file server as an archiving target
  5. Adding a NetApp filer to File System Archiving
    1.  
      Adding a NetApp filer to File System Archiving
    2.  
      Setting the permissions for FSA on a NetApp filer
    3.  
      Adding a NetApp filer as an archiving target
  6. Adding a NetApp C-Mode Vserver to File System Archiving
    1.  
      Adding a NetApp C-Mode Vserver to File System Archiving
    2.  
      Permissions and privileges required by the Vault Service account on NetApp C-mode Vservers
    3.  
      Granting the required permission on each Vserver
    4.  
      Configuring the FPolicy server details
    5.  
      Adding a NetApp C-Mode Vserver as an archiving target
    6.  
      Points to note about File System Archiving on NetApp C-Mode file servers
  7. Adding a Celerra/VNX device to File System Archiving
    1.  
      Adding a Celerra/VNX device to File System Archiving
    2. Preparing a Celerra/VNX device for FSA
      1.  
        Configuring Celerra/VNX pass-through behavior for placeholder shortcuts
      2.  
        The format of the Web Access application URL in the Celerra/VNX fs_dhsm command
      3.  
        Configuring the Data Mover HTTP server to use SSL
      4.  
        Example commands to prepare a Celerra/VNX device for FSA
    3.  
      Adding a Celerra/VNX device as an archiving target
    4.  
      Specifying a cache location for retrieved Celerra/VNX files
  8. Configuring FSA with clustered file servers
    1.  
      About configuring FSA with clustered file servers
    2.  
      Steps to configure FSA with clustered file servers
    3.  
      Preparing to set up FSA services in a cluster
    4.  
      Adding the Vault Service account to the non-secure VCS cluster for FSA high availability
    5.  
      Adding the virtual file server as an FSA target
    6.  
      Configuring or reconfiguring the FSA resource
    7.  
      Removing the FSA resource from all cluster groups
    8. Troubleshooting the configuration of FSA with clustered file servers
      1.  
        'Failed to collect clustering data' error on starting FSA Cluster Configuration wizard
  9. Installing the FSA Agent
    1. About installing the FSA Agent on a Windows file server
      1.  
        Installing the FSA Agent using the Install FSA Agent wizard
      2.  
        Installing the FSA Agent manually
    2.  
      About FSA Agent uninstallation
    3.  
      Updating the logon credentials of the FSA Agent services
  10. Defining volume and folder policies
    1.  
      About defining FSA volume and folder policies
    2.  
      Creating FSA volume policies and folder policies
    3.  
      About FSA volume policy and folder policy properties
    4. About selecting the shortcut type for an FSA policy
      1.  
        About choosing not to display the file size in NetApp placeholder shortcuts
    5. About FSA policy archiving rules
      1.  
        Tips for creating FSA policy archiving rules
      2.  
        About excluding specific Mac and Windows file types from archiving
      3.  
        FSA shortcut creation options
      4.  
        Notes on FSA shortcut creation
    6.  
      About options for archiving files that have explicit permissions, and files under DAC
  11. Configuring the deletion of archived files on placeholder deletion
    1.  
      About configuring the deletion of archived files on placeholder deletion
    2.  
      Configuring the deletion of archived files on placeholder deletion for Windows file servers and NetApp filers
    3. Configuring the deletion of files on placeholder deletion for Dell EMC Celerra/VNX devices
      1.  
        Troubleshooting the deletion of files on placeholder deletion for Dell EMC Celerra/VNX devices
  12. Configuring target volumes, target folders, and archive points
    1. About adding target volumes, target folders, and archive points for FSA
      1.  
        About the checks for existing archives for an FSA folder path
    2.  
      Adding a target volume for FSA
    3.  
      Adding a target folder and archive points for FSA
    4. About managing archive points
      1.  
        Viewing, editing, or deleting archive points in the Administration Console
    5. Archive point properties
      1.  
        Archive point properties: General tab
      2.  
        Archive point properties: Indexing tab
    6. Effects of modifying, moving, or deleting folders
      1.  
        Effects of modifying folders with folder policies
      2.  
        Effects of modifying folders with archive points
    7. About deleting target folders, volumes, and file servers
      1.  
        Deleting a target folder from FSA
      2.  
        Deleting a target volume from FSA
      3.  
        Deleting a target file server from FSA
  13. Configuring pass-through recall for placeholder shortcuts
    1.  
      About configuring pass-through recall for placeholder shortcuts
    2. Configuring pass-through recall for a Windows file server
      1.  
        About configuring pass-through recall for a file server cluster
      2.  
        Registry values for pass-through recall on Windows file servers
    3.  
      Configuring pass-through recall for a NetApp filer
  14. Configuring and managing retention folders
    1. Configuring retention folders
      1.  
        Creating a retention folder policy
      2.  
        Adding a target folder with a retention folder policy from the Administration Console
      3.  
        About controlling whether FSA recreates deleted or moved retention folders
      4.  
        About testing the effects of a retention folder configuration
    2. About assigning a retention folder policy using the Command Line Interface (CLI)
      1.  
        The format of the RtnFolder.exe settings file
      2.  
        Example RtnFolder.exe commands
    3. Managing retention folders
      1.  
        Disabling the archiving of retention folders for an FSA target
      2.  
        Assigning a different retention folder policy to a target folder
  15. Configuring and running FSA tasks
    1.  
      About configuring and running FSA tasks
    2.  
      Adding a File System Archiving task
    3.  
      Scheduling a File System Archiving task
    4.  
      Setting the FSA folder permissions synchronization schedule
    5.  
      Scheduling the deletion of archived files on placeholder deletion for Dell EMC Celerra/VNX
    6.  
      Configuring FSA version pruning
    7. Using Run Now to process FSA targets manually
      1.  
        Processing an FSA target volume manually
      2.  
        Running a File System Archiving task manually
    8.  
      About File System Archiving task reports
    9.  
      About scheduling storage expiry for FSA
  16. Configuring file system filtering
    1.  
      About custom filters for File System Archiving
    2.  
      Configuring file system filters
    3.  
      About file system filter reports
  17. Managing the file servers
    1.  
      About managing the target file servers
    2.  
      About backing up the target file servers
    3.  
      About virus-checking the target file servers
    4. About changing the placeholder recall rate settings
      1.  
        Changing the placeholder recall rate settings for a Windows file server
      2.  
        Changing the placeholder recall rate settings for a NetApp file server
    5. About preventing unwanted file recalls from placeholder shortcuts
      1.  
        Using FSA backup mode to prevent file recalls
      2.  
        Prohibiting a program from recalling files that FSA has archived
      3.  
        Preventing file recalls on Celerra/VNX
  18. PowerShell cmdlets for File System Archiving
    1.  
      About the PowerShell cmdlets for File System Archiving
    2.  
      Running the File System Archiving cmdlets
    3.  
      Creating PowerShell scripts using File System Archiving cmdlets
    4.  
      File System Archiving cmdlets error handling
  19. Appendix A. Permissions and privileges required for the Vault Service account on Windows file servers
    1.  
      About the permissions and privileges required for the Vault Service account on Windows file servers
    2.  
      Group membership requirements for the Vault Service account
    3.  
      DCOM permissions required by the Vault Service account
    4.  
      WMI control permissions required by the Vault Service account
    5.  
      Local security user rights required by the Vault Service account
    6. Permissions required by the Vault Service account for the FSA Agent
      1.  
        FSA Agent service permissions required by the Vault Service account
      2.  
        Enterprise Vault installation folder permissions required by the Vault Service account
      3.  
        File server registry hive permissions required by the Vault Service account
    7.  
      Permissions required by the Vault Service account to support the FSA resource on clustered file servers
    8.  
      FSA target share and folder permissions required by the Vault Service account

About adding target volumes, target folders, and archive points for FSA

You must add shares on a target file server as target volumes for FSA to process. You can use the New Volume wizard or the New-EVFSAVolume PowerShell cmdlet to add a volume.

When you add a target volume, you can specify the following:

  • The vault store to use for the files that are archived from the volume.

  • The File System Archiving task to use to process the volume.

  • The volume policy to apply when files are archived from the volume.

If FSA Reporting is configured, the New Volume wizard also lets you choose whether to enable FSA Reporting for this volume. For information on FSA Reporting, see the Reporting guide.

After you add a target volume you must add one or more target folders to control which folders FSA can archive from. You can use the New Folder wizard or the New-EVFSAFolder PowerShell cmdlet to add a folder.

When you add a target folder the New Folder wizard lets you do the following:

  • Specify the archiving policy to use for the target folder and its subfolders.

  • Create an archive point for the folder, and for each of its immediate subfolders, if required. Each archive point defines the top of a folder structure that Enterprise Vault archives within a single archive.

To create an archive point at the root of a target volume you can specify a backslash ( \ ) as the path to the target folder when you add the target folder.

If you want, you can choose to auto-enable the creation of archive points on the immediate subfolders of a target folder. The target folder is then referred to as an auto-enabling folder. When the File System Archiving task runs in normal mode it creates archive points for any new subfolders that are immediately below the auto-enabling folder. Auto-enabling can be useful for example when a target folder contains a subfolder for each user, and you want a separate archive for each user. When you add a subfolder for a new user, the File System Arching task creates an archive point on the subfolder during the next normal archiving run.

To ensure that an archive does not fill up too quickly you need to consider the size of the folder structure below each archive point.

When an archive point is created, it has no archive ID immediately assigned to it. An archive ID is normally assigned on the first occasion that a File System Archiving task processes the folder. When a File System Archiving task finds an archive point with no archive ID or an invalid archive ID it checks the Directory database to determine whether any archive IDs are already associated with the folder path. If the folder path has no associated archive IDs, Enterprise Vault creates an archive and assigns the archive ID to the archive point. If one or more archives already exist for the folder path, Enterprise Vault assigns the oldest existing archive to the archive point. In the case where multiple archives exist for a folder path, Enterprise Vault reports this fact.

See About the checks for existing archives for an FSA folder path.

By default the File System Archiving task gives an archive the same name as the folder to which the archive point applies. The site defaults are used to supply the other attributes of the archive. You can override these defaults if you want.