Enterprise Vault™ Discovery Accelerator Reviewer's Guide
- Introducing Discovery Accelerator
- Searching for items
- Manually reviewing items
- About reviewing with Discovery Accelerator
- About the Review pane
- Filtering the items in the Review pane
- Searching within the review set
- Finding all items in the same conversation
- Assigning review marks and tags to items
- Adding comments to items
- Viewing the history of items
- Displaying printable versions of items
- Downloading the original versions of items
- Copying the item list to the Clipboard
- Deleting items from Enterprise Vault archives
- Changing how the Review pane looks
- Setting your Review pane preferences
- Working with research folders
- About research folders
- Creating research folders
- Editing the properties of research folders
- Copying items to research folders
- Reviewing the items in research folders
- Exporting items from research folders
- Giving other users access to your research folders
- Removing items from research folders
- Converting research folders into cases
- Deleting folders
- Exporting and producing items
- Creating and viewing reports
- Appendix A. Enterprise Vault properties for use in Discovery Accelerator searches
- About the Enterprise Vault search properties
- System 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
Guidelines on using the NEAR operator condition in Discovery Accelerator rules
There are a number of guidelines that you must observe when you use the NEAR operator condition in a rule.
You must specify more than one value as input for the NEAR operator condition.
If you combine a condition that uses a NEAR operator with one or more other conditions, you can join the NEAR operator condition to the preceding and following conditions with an AND logical operator only - not an OR operator. For example, consider the following rule:
Subject contains 'Veritas' AND Content Near 'Veritas Investment' AND MailDate = '17/03/2010' OR Importance = 'Normal'
You cannot insert an OR operator between the Subject and Content conditions, or between the Content and MailDate conditions. However, it is acceptable to insert an OR condition between the MailDate and Importance conditions.
When a rule contains multiple NEAR operator conditions, they must all use the same search attribute (Subject, Content, or SubjectOrContent). For example, in a rule that contains two NEAR operator conditions, you cannot set the attribute of one condition to Subject and the other to Content.
You cannot insert brackets in a rule condition that uses a NEAR operator.
When a rule contains multiple NEAR operator conditions, and the search values that you specify are in different languages, the language of the first NEAR operator condition determines the language in which Discovery Accelerator conducts all the searches in the rule.