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ControlPoint 8.7 - User Guide

Preface Getting Started with ControlPoint Using Discovery to Collect Information for the ControlPoint Database Cache Searching for SharePoint Sites Managing SharePoint Objects Using ControlPoint Policies to Control Your SharePoint Environment Managing SharePoint User Permissions Data Analysis and Reporting
Specifying Parameters for Your Analysis Analysis Results Display Generating a SharePoint Summary Report Analyzing Activity Analyzing Object Properties Analyzing Storage Analyzing Content Generating a SharePoint Hierarchy Report Analyzing Trends Auditing Activities and Changes in Your SharePoint Environment Analyzing SharePoint Alerts Analyzing ControlPoint Policies Analyzing Users and Permissions The ControlPoint Task Audit Viewing Logged Errors
Scheduling a ControlPoint Operation Saving, Modifying and Running Instructions for a ControlPoint Operation Using the ControlPoint Governance Policy Manager Using Sensitive Content Manager to Analyze SharePoint Content for Compliance Using ControlPoint Sentinel to Detect Anomalous Activity Provisioning SharePoint Site Collections and Sites Default Menu Options for ControlPoint Users About Us

Viewing Logged Errors

The Logged Errors Report lets you view the contents of the ControlPoint Services (xcAdmin) database error log for a specified date range.  You can use this detail with guidance from Quest Support to diagnose potential issues in your environment.

To view logged errors:

1From the Manage ControlPoint panel, choose Schedule Management and Logging > Logged Errors Report.

2Select a Start date and End date representing the time period for which you want to view logged errors.

Now you can:

·run the operation immediately (by clicking the [Run Now] button)

OR

·schedule the operation to run at a later time or on a recurring basis.

OR

·save the operation as XML Instructions that can be run at a later time.

Logged Error Report results contain a time-stamped entry for each error logged within the specified date range, followed by detailed error text.

Logged Error Results

Scheduling a ControlPoint Operation

The ControlPoint scheduler lets you set up ControlPoint operations to run in the background at a specified date and time, such as when system resource usage is low.  Depending on your ControlPoint permissions, you can schedule:

·an Advanced Search

·any ControlPoint analysis

·most ControlPoint actions.

This feature is especially useful for:

·operations that might take a significant amount of time to complete (such as a an analysis run on a large farm)

·operations that you want to run during off-peak hours (such as moving an active site)

·enforcing corporate or regulatory policies (for example, by ensuring that user permissions are always set at the proper levels)

·analyses that you want to run and distribute on a regular basis (such as weekly site activity or storage usage).

Results of scheduled ControlPoint analyses can be sent to email distribution lists and/or posted to a SharePoint document library as a .pdf, an Excel formatted spreadsheet, or a csv file.  Individual data sets within analyses can also be saved as SharePoint lists for use in creating dashboards.

ControlPoint uses a different (typically larger) limit on the number of line items that can be returned when an analysis is run on a scheduled basis than when run interactively.  ControlPoint Application Administrators can, however, modify this limit.  

NOTE:  In a multi-farm installation, operations can only be scheduled for the home farm.

Scheduling a Recurring Analysis for Which a Specific Date Range or Time Period was Selected

If a ControlPoint analysis is scheduled to run on a recurring basis and includes a date range or time period, the ControlPoint scheduler will interpret it as a relative date range or time period (that is, relative to the date when the scheduled job is run).  The first time the scheduled job runs, the analysis will cover the date range specified in the Parameters section.  For subsequent job runs, the date range will be updated accordingly.

EXAMPLES:

·If you initiate an Audit Log analysis on a Monday for a date range that covers the the previous week, then schedule it to run on a recurring basis:

Schedule Date Range Example

§the first time the scheduled job runs, the analysis will include data for the first week in January (that is, the week you specified)

Schedule Date Range FIRST RUN

§the second time the scheduled job runs (at the end of the following week), the analysis will include data for the second week in January

Schedule Date Range SECOND RUN

§and so on.

·If you schedule a SharePoint Summary Report to run every 30 days, the analysis will include activity that occurred 30 days ending on the date the scheduled job runs, regardless of the date on which the report was initiated.

 

How Scheduled Jobs are Handled

·The ControlPoint scheduler is driven by a SharePoint timer task, called the ControlPoint Scheduled Job Review.  This task both checks for and initiates the scheduled jobs.  By default, the timer task performs these activities every time it runs (by default, every 10 minutes).  ControlPoint Application Administrators can, however, override this default so that the running of scheduled jobs is performed at less frequent intervals.  See "Number of Minutes Scheduler Will Wait Before Next Group of Jobs (OVERIDESCHEDULETIMERMINUTES)" in the ControlPoint Administration Guide.

·By default, up to five scheduled jobs can be running at any given time.  ControlPoint Application administrators can, however, change this default value to allow more—or fewer—jobs to run concurrently  See "Maximum Number of Scheduled Jobs to Submit at One Time (MAXSUBMIT)" in the ControlPoint Administration Guide.

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