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
Relationship between FCI classification and other classification methods
Enterprise Vault 14.1 includes the next generation of our Veritas Information Classifier engine for classifying all new and existing archived content. The new engine provides multifaceted classification through advanced proximity searches, regular expressions, default keywords and patterns, and checksum validation. It can also classify content by confidence level and hit rate.
You can use the new Veritas Information Classifier in addition to or as an alternative to FCI classification. However, not only are the classification options in the Veritas Information Classifier more sophisticated than those in FCI classification but they are easier to implement. For this reason, the Veritas Information Classifier is the recommended way to classify archived content.
For more information on the Veritas Information Classifier, see the Classification using the Veritas Information Classifier guide. This guide includes instructions on how to convert FCI classification rules for use with the Veritas Information Classifier.