Enterprise Vault™ Reporting
- About this guide
- Introducing Enterprise Vault Reporting
- Overview of implementing Enterprise Vault Reporting
- Installing Enterprise Vault Reporting
- Configuring Enterprise Vault Reporting
- Configuring FSA Reporting
- Configuring FSA Reporting
- Preparing for an FSA Reporting proxy server
- Adding a file server as an archiving target with FSA Reporting data collection enabled
- Enabling FSA Reporting data collection for an existing target file server
- Enabling or disabling FSA Reporting data collection for a file server target volume
- Setting the defaults for FSA Reporting data collection
- Setting the storage location for FSA Reporting's temporary files
- Verifying the placeholders on Dell EMC Celerra/VNX devices
- Including NetApp filer snapshot folders in FSA Reporting scans
- Checking that the configuration of FSA Reporting was successful
- Accessing the reports
- About accessing Enterprise Vault Reporting's reports
- Administrator roles that provide access to Enterprise Vault Reporting's reports
- Accessing Enterprise Vault Reporting's reports from SQL Server Reporting Services Report Manager
- Accessing Enterprise Vault Reporting's reports from the Administration Console
- Managing FSA Reporting
- Managing FSA Reporting
- Viewing the status of FSA Reporting
- Running an unscheduled FSA Reporting scan on a file server
- Stopping FSA Reporting scans
- Disabling all FSA Reporting data collection
- Changing the default FSA Reporting data collection schedule
- Changing a file server's FSA Reporting database
- Maintaining the FSA Reporting databases
- Changing the FSA Reporting proxy server for a non-Windows file server
- Modifying the FSA Reporting data collection parameters
- Obtaining data for a specific file type in the FSA Reporting reports
- Upgrading the FSA Agent
- Troubleshooting Enterprise Vault Reporting
- Appendix A. Report overviews
- The Enterprise Vault Reporting operation reports
- Archive Quota Usage report
- Archived Items Access report
- Archived Items Access Trends report
- Content Provider Ingest History report
- Content Providers Licensing and Usage Summary report
- Domino Mailbox Archiving Status report
- Domino Server Journal Mailbox Archiving Health report
- Domino Server Journal Mailbox Archiving Trends report
- Enterprise Vault Server 24-hour Health Status report
- Enterprise Vault Server Seven Day Health Status report
- Exchange Mailbox Archiving Status report
- Exchange Server Journal Mailbox Archiving Health report
- Exchange Server Journal Mailbox Archiving Trends report
- IMAP usage report
- Items Archival Rate report
- Move Archive report
- Single Instance Storage Reduction by File Type report
- Single Instance Storage Reduction per Vault Store Group report
- Single Instance Storage Reduction Summary report
- SMTP Provisioning report
- Vault Store Savesets report
- Vault Store Usage by Archive report
- Vault Store Usage by Billing Account report
- Vault Store Usage Summary report
- The FSA Reporting data analysis reports
- Archive Points Space Usage Summary report
- Drive Space Usage on a Server report
- Drive Space Usage Summary report
- Duplicate Files on a Server report
- Duplicate Files Summary report
- File Group Space Usage on a Server report
- File Group Space Usage Summary report
- Inactive Files on a Server by File Group report
- Inactive Files on a Server by User report
- Inactive Files Summary report
- Storage Summary report
- Storage Trends report
- File Space Usage on an Archive Point report
- Largest Files Per Volume report
- Largest Files of a Specified File Type Per Volume report
- Top Duplicate Files Per Volume report
- The Enterprise Vault Reporting operation reports
Verifying the placeholders on Dell EMC Celerra/VNX devices
When FSA Reporting scans a Dell EMC Celerra/VNX device it assumes by default that any file that has the offline attribute set is an Enterprise Vault placeholder. This assumption enables faster scans of Celerra/VNX devices.
FSA Reporting uses the placeholder count when it calculates the space that is saved by archiving for the following reports:
Archive Points Space Usage Summary
File Group Space Usage on a Server
File Group Space Usage Summary
Storage Summary
File Space Usage on an Archive Point
If programs other than Enterprise Vault set the offline attribute on Celerra/VNX files, these reports may therefore show incorrect space saving information.
If you have programs other than Enterprise Vault that set the offline attribute on Celerra/VNX files, you can configure FSA Reporting to perform an enhanced scan. The enhanced scan uses an HTTP call to each file that has the offline attribute set, to determine whether the file is a placeholder. The reports can then show accurate space savings.
Note:
Placeholder verification can lengthen the time of an FSA Reporting scan on a Celerra/VNX device significantly.
To configure FSA Reporting to verify the placeholders you must set a registry value on the proxy server for FSA Reporting.
To verify the placeholders on Celerra/VNX devices
- Log on with the Vault Service account to the FSA Reporting proxy server for the Celerra/VNX device.
- Open the registry editor and go to the following registry key:
On a 32-bit installation of Windows:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \SOFTWARE \KVS \Enterprise Vault \FSA \ReportingOn a 64-bit installation of Windows:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \SOFTWARE \Wow6432Node \KVS \Enterprise Vault \FSA \Reporting - Add a DWORD registry value named
CheckEVPHOnCelerra. - Set the registry value to 1 to configure FSA Reporting to verify placeholders.
Set the registry value to 0 to revert to the default identification of placeholders by using the offline attribute.
- If the proxy server is an Enterprise Vault server, restart the Enterprise Vault Admin service. Otherwise, restart the Enterprise Vault File Collector service on the proxy server.