Configuring auditing disposition
An audit disposition configuration consists of parameters that control how the disposition process is performed and an audit disposition schedule. The schedule specifies one or more time slots; each time slot defines a schedule for an audit disposition background task by specifying when the task starts and how long it runs. If the times of multiple time slots overlap, the overlapping time slots are effectively combined.
To configure auditing disposition
- In Enterprise Manager, right-click the FileNet P8 domain, site, virtual server, or server instance and click Properties.
- On the Auditing Configuration tab, select the check box to enable audit disposition.
- Enter values for the following fields:
- Click Create to create a time slot or click Edit to edit a time slot. Enter values for the following fields:
- Day of the week: The day of week that the audit disposition background task will start.
- Start time past midnight: The time of day that the text indexing or audit disposition background task will start. The starting time of the time slot is expressed as a number of minutes past midnight, relative to the local time of the server that is running the background task. For example, a value of 0 indicates midnight, 60 indicates 1 AM, and 1380 indicates 11 PM (that is, 60 times 23), local time. Values from 0 to 1439 are allowed. The start time is not an absolute Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), so given the same time slot, different servers can start at different times, depending on their time zones. In distributed environments, you might want to configure specific time slots at the specific server instance level to isolate audit disposition processing to non-business-critical periods.
- Duration: The length of time that the audit disposition background task runs for a time slot. The time is set in minutes, so a value of 60 indicates that the duration of the time slot is one hour. Integer values of 1 and greater are allowed, but if the value is 10080 (the number of minutes in a week) or greater, the background task runs continuously.