Enterprise Vault™ Utilities
- About this guide
- ArchivePoints
- Audit Viewer
- Backtrace
- CenteraPing
- Domino Archive Exporter
- Domino Profile Document Tool
- Domino Retention Plan Tool
- DTrace
- EVDominoExchangeMigration Tool
- About the EVDominoExchangeMigration tool
- Client requirements for the EVDominoExchangeMigration tool
- Adding the EVDominoExchangeMigration tool to the Windows Server firewall exceptions list
- EVDominoExchangeMigration tool and Binary Tree
- Using Quest Notes Migrator for Exchange and the EVDominoExchangeMigration tool
- Requirements for other migration software with the EVDominoExchangeMigration tool
- Running the EVDominoExchangeMigration tool
- EVDuplicateCleaner
- EVEARemovalUtility
- EVFSASetRightsAndPermissions
- EVrights
- EVservice
- EVSPShortcutManager
- EVSVR
- About EVSVR
- Starting EVSVR
- EVSVR commands
- EVSVR application states
- Creating an EVSVR operation file
- Editing an EVSVR operation file in which you have enabled checkpointing
- Running an EVSVR operation
- About the EVSVR operation settings
- Using the output from one EVSVR operation as input for another operation
- Viewing the EVSVR output log file
- Running EVSVR in interactive mode
- Improving EVSVR performance when processing CAB collections
- FSARunNow
- FSAUndelete
- FSAUtility
- NTFS to Centera Migration
- About NTFS to Centera Migration
- Managing migrator jobs using NTFS to Centera Migration
- Creating migrator jobs using NTFS to Centera Migration
- Deleting active jobs using NTFS to Centera Migration
- Deleting source files after migration using NTFS to Centera Migration
- NTFS to Centera Migration log files
- Permissions Browser
- Policy Manager (EVPM)
- About Policy Manager
- Policy Manager syntax
- Saving a Policy Manager initialization file as a Unicode file
- Policy Manager initialization file syntax
- Sections and keynames in Policy Manager initialization file
- [Directory] section of the Policy Manager initialization file
- [Archive] section of the Policy Manager initialization file
- [ArchivePermissions] section of the Policy Manager initialization file
- [Filter] section of the Policy Manager initialization file
- [Mailbox] section of the Policy Manager initialization file
- [Folder] section of the Policy Manager initialization file
- [PublicFolder] section in the Policy Manager initialization file
- [PSTdefaults] section in the Policy Manager initialization file
- [PST] section in the Policy Manager initialization file
- [PSTcheckpoint] section in the Policy Manager initialization file
- [NSFDefaults] section in the Policy Manager initialization file
- [NSF] section in the Policy Manager initialization file
- [NSFCheckPoint] section in the Policy Manager initialization file
- Policy Manager initialization file examples
- Policy Manager initialization file example 1
- Policy Manager initialization file example 2
- Policy Manager initialization file example 3
- Policy Manager initialization file example 4: PST migration
- Policy Manager initialization file example 5: NSF migration
- Policy Manager initialization file example 6: folder permissions
- About using the Provisioning API to run Policy Manager scripts
- ResetEVClient
- Vault Store Usage Reporter
EVEARemovalUtility example: processing a folder and its subfolders
Suppose that either of the following applies:
Enterprise Vault reports that it has failed to create the placeholders for several files in the folder
folder1and its subfolders on file serverfs1, sharee$, because the files contain extended attributes.Or you have migrated a folder structure from a UNIX system to a Windows file server and you want to remove extended attributes from the migrated files before you archive them with Enterprise Vault.
You might process the files with EVEARemovalUtility as follows:
You enter the following command on the Enterprise Vault server to create a log file that lists details of the extended attributes for all the files on the relevant path, including subfolders:
EVEARemovalUtility.exe \\fs1\e$\folder1 -s -l -d
You examine the log file
EVEARemovalUtility--timestamp.log, and decide that you want to remove the extended attributes from all of the listed files that contain them.You enter the following command to remove the extended attributes:
EVEARemovalUtility.exe EVEARemovalUtility--timestamp.log -f -r
As the -l parameter is not specified, the results of the removal appear in the command prompt window.
Alternatively, you can run the following command to remove the extended attributes from all of the files in
folder1and its subfolders. This command sends its output to a new log file:EVEARemovalUtility.exe \\fs1\e$\folder1 -s -l -r
The following command has the same effect, but runs in quiet output mode. The command outputs to a log file only the summary information about the number of files it has processed:
EVEARemovalUtility.exe \\fs1\e$\folder1 -s -l -r -q
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