Veritas Enterprise Vault™ Classification using the Veritas Information Classifier
- About this guide
- Preparing Enterprise Vault for classification
- Setting up Veritas Information Classifier policies
- Defining and applying Enterprise Vault classification policies
- About Enterprise Vault 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
- Appendix A. Enterprise Vault properties for use in custom field searches
- 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-EVClassificationPolicy
- Get-EVClassificationStatus
- Get-EVClassificationTestMode
- Get-EVClassificationVICTags
- Initialize-EVClassificationVIC
- New-EVClassificationPolicy
- Remove-EVClassificationPolicy
- Set-EVClassificationPolicy
- Set-EVClassificationTestMode
- Appendix C. Classification cache folder
- Appendix D. Migrating from FCI classification to the Veritas Information Classifier
- Appendix E. Monitoring and troubleshooting
About the Enterprise Vault index properties
When an item matches a Veritas Information Classifier policy that you have defined, Enterprise Vault records the fact in the metadata properties of the item. The chosen property and the tag that Enterprise Vault assigns to it determine what Enterprise Vault does with the item. You can search for the assigned tags in applications such as Enterprise Vault Search, Compliance Accelerator, and Discovery Accelerator.
As Table: Enterprise Vault index properties for classification explains, Enterprise Vault can process the tags that are stored in four predefined properties only.
Table: Enterprise Vault index properties for classification
You can assign several tags to each of the four properties. For example, an email that the built-in Veritas Information Classifier policies have processed could have two values assigned to its evtag.category property, "Intellectual-Property" and "Corporate-Ethics", to indicate that it may contain both intellectual property source code and terms that deviate from your corporate code of conduct. The evaction.discard property differs slightly because, although you can assign several tags to it, Enterprise Vault uses the first assigned tag only.