Arctera Insight Information Governance Administrator's Guide
- Section I. Getting started
- Introduction to Arctera Insight Information Governance administration
- Configuring Information Governance global settings
- About scanning and event monitoring
- About filtering certain accounts, IP addresses, and paths
- About archiving data
- About Information Governance integration with Data Loss Prevention (DLP)
- Configuring advanced analytics
- About open shares
- About user risk score
- About bulk assignment of custodians
- Configuring Metadata Framework
- Section II. Configuring Information Governance
- Configuring Information Governance product users
- Configuring Information Governance product servers
- About node templates
- About automated alerts for patches and upgrades
- Configuring saved credentials
- Configuring directory service domains
- Adding a directory service domain to Information Governance
- Configuring containers
- Server Pools
- Section III. Configuring native file systems in Information Governance
- Configuring clustered NetApp file server monitoring
- About configuring secure communication between Information Governance and cluster-mode NetApp devices
- Configuring EMC Celerra or VNX monitoring
- Configuring EMC Isilon monitoring
- Configuring EMC Unity VSA file servers
- Configuring Hitachi NAS file server monitoring
- Configuring Windows File Server monitoring
- Configuring Arctera File System (VxFS) file server monitoring
- Configuring monitoring of a generic device
- Managing file servers
- Adding filers
- Adding shares
- Renaming storage devices
- Configuring clustered NetApp file server monitoring
- Section IV. Configuring SharePoint data sources
- Configuring monitoring of SharePoint web applications
- About the Information Governance web service for SharePoint
- Adding web applications
- Adding site collections
- Configuring monitoring of SharePoint Online accounts
- About SharePoint Online account monitoring
- Adding site collections to SharePoint Online accounts
- Configuring monitoring of SharePoint web applications
- Section V. Configuring cloud data sources
- Configuring monitoring of Box accounts
- Configuring OneDrive account monitoring
- Configuring Azure Netapp Files Device
- Managing cloud sources
- Section VI. Configuring Object Storage Sources
- Section VII. Health and monitoring
- Section VIII. Alerts and policies
- Configuring policies
- Managing policies
- Configuring policies
- Section IX. Remediation
- Configuring remediation settings
- Section X. Reference
- Appendix A. Information Governance best practices
- Appendix B. Migrating Information Governance components
- Appendix C. Backing up and restoring data
- Appendix D. Arctera Information Governance health checks
- About Information Governance health checks
- About Information Governance health checks
- Appendix E. Command File Reference
- Appendix F. Arctera Information Governance jobs
- Appendix G. Troubleshooting
- Troubleshooting FPolicy issues on NetApp devices
About open shares
A share is considered to be open due to the permissions assigned on it. You can define the parameters that determine whether a share should be considered as open. However, the open share policy does not allow you to define specific permissions that render a share open.
One of the following parameters determine whether a share is open:
If certain group has access to the data on a share, either directly or as a nested group.
If more than a certain number of users have access to the data on a share.
Additionally, you can also specify granular criteria for examination, such as:
The level at which Information Governance should start examining the paths.
The number of levels deep to examine the path permissions.
For example, you can define the following criteria to consider a share to be open:
List of groups: Domain Users or Everyone.
No of users who have access to the share: 500.
Level to start examining permissions: 1.
Depth to examine: 3.
According to the above specification, any share that is accessed by the Domain Users/Everyone group or by more than 500 users is considered to be open. For this purpose, the ACLs are examined from level 1 (share root level), and all folders three levels below the start level are examined. For example, examining will start from level 1 and will go up to level 4.
Defining an open share policy helps you to review the permissions assigned at share level and revisit entitlement decisions. You can view the details of the open shares, the size of the data in open shares, and the number of files in open shares on the Dashboard tab on the Management Console.
From Information Governance 6.2, you can exclude any user or group with a set of permissions while setting open share definitions. Those excluded users or groups having the same permissions as selected while setting an open share definition, will not contribute to open share computation.