Frequently asked questions-Email archiving in 2008 FAQ
FAQ(Email archiving in 2008 FAQ)-Frequently-Asked-Questions <<previous|next>> :How can companies get internal sponsorship for an email archiving project?FAQ:
What are the differences among journaling, scrubbing log files and stubbing?
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Stubbing messages after messages are in the archive. You tend to have a copy in the primary inbox and then one in the archive. If you have that copy in the secondary archive you can actually create a link and remove the first copy. So now you're only storing one copy of the message, and you have a "stub." That preserves access, and even though the message is in the primary inbox you can still access it via the stub or the link because the message is being stored in the archive itself. This is where the storage cost/savings comes into play. If you're doing mailbox grooming, scanning messages that are older than 30 days so you can move them out to a secondary environment, during that scanning process is when a stub is left as the messages are moved over to the secondary environment.
So it's key to understand that stubbing really is a benefit because it reduces storage costs, while log scraping and journaling are methods used to get messages into an archive.
Go back to the beginning of the Email Archiving in 2008 FAQ Guide.
03 Apr 2008
Storage Management Strategies for the CIO