alexbrassington.com
SharePoint Surveys and the mystery of the missing partial response | Share and PowerShell
http://alexbrassington.com/2014/07/10/sharepoint-surveys-and-the-mystery-of-the-missing-partial-response
SharePoint Surveys and the mystery of the missing partial response. Note: this applies to SharePoint 2010 and 2013, it is not viable for SharePoint online / Office 365. Fun fact, SharePoint, if you’ve got branching logic in your survey, allows you to save your response to a survey! This is great news. However on TechNet. Someone asked if it were possible to find these incomplete posts to remind the user that they haven’t finished? When you look at the object in PowerShell you can see that there’s a...
alexbrassington.com
Survey | Share and PowerShell
http://alexbrassington.com/tag/survey
SharePoint Surveys and the mystery of the missing partial response. Note: this applies to SharePoint 2010 and 2013, it is not viable for SharePoint online / Office 365. Fun fact, SharePoint, if you’ve got branching logic in your survey, allows you to save your response to a survey! This is great news. However on TechNet. Someone asked if it were possible to find these incomplete posts to remind the user that they haven’t finished? When you look at the object in PowerShell you can see that there’s a...
alexbrassington.com
Alex | Share and PowerShell
http://alexbrassington.com/author/admin
I'm a Microsoft SharePoint specialist with an interest in performance, scripts and bug hunting. Splitting Office 365 Audit Logs. Office 365 audit exports are quite complicated behind the scenes. If you look at the data in CSV format you’ll quickly see there’s four fields; Time, User, Action and Detail. The script below is a first draft at a script to split the content up into separate logs for future analysis. This entry was posted in Office 365. And tagged Office 365. Office 365 Audit Log. March 3, 2016.
alexbrassington.com
CSOM | Share and PowerShell
http://alexbrassington.com/tag/csom
Creating SharePoint Site Collection through PowerShell CSOM. This is based on another blog post here: http:/ blog.scoreman.net/2013/02/create-site-collections-in-sharepoint-online-using-csom/. In that article the author shows how to use the CSOM with C# to create a Site Collection in Office 365. I’ve tested this on Office 365 but haven’t tried it with On-Premise SharePoint 2013 so far. This entry was posted in Uncategorized. August 20, 2014. Splitting Office 365 Audit Logs. Exporting Office 365 audit logs.
alexbrassington.com
SharePoint 2013 | Share and PowerShell
http://alexbrassington.com/tag/sharepoint-2013
Tag Archives: SharePoint 2013. SharePoint Surveys and the mystery of the missing partial response. Note: this applies to SharePoint 2010 and 2013, it is not viable for SharePoint online / Office 365. Fun fact, SharePoint, if you’ve got branching logic in your survey, allows you to save your response to a survey! This is great news. However on TechNet. Someone asked if it were possible to find these incomplete posts to remind the user that they haven’t finished? When you look at the object in PowerShell y...
alexbrassington.com
SharePoint database growth settings | Share and PowerShell
http://alexbrassington.com/2014/07/18/sharepoint-database-growth-settings
SharePoint database growth settings. This is a basic topic but one that crops up time and time again. By default SharePoint will create databases with settings to grow 1 MB at a time. That means that if you add a 5 MB file the database will grow 5 times to fit it in. If you add a 250 MB file (the default largest size file for a 2013 farm) that means a worrying 250 growth operations will be needed. Why is growth bad? How long does growing take. Growth Size / MB. Average time / ms. Average time per MB.
alexbrassington.com
save | Share and PowerShell
http://alexbrassington.com/tag/save
SharePoint Surveys and the mystery of the missing partial response. Note: this applies to SharePoint 2010 and 2013, it is not viable for SharePoint online / Office 365. Fun fact, SharePoint, if you’ve got branching logic in your survey, allows you to save your response to a survey! This is great news. However on TechNet. Someone asked if it were possible to find these incomplete posts to remind the user that they haven’t finished? When you look at the object in PowerShell you can see that there’s a...
alexbrassington.com
missing | Share and PowerShell
http://alexbrassington.com/tag/missing
SharePoint Surveys and the mystery of the missing partial response. Note: this applies to SharePoint 2010 and 2013, it is not viable for SharePoint online / Office 365. Fun fact, SharePoint, if you’ve got branching logic in your survey, allows you to save your response to a survey! This is great news. However on TechNet. Someone asked if it were possible to find these incomplete posts to remind the user that they haven’t finished? When you look at the object in PowerShell you can see that there’s a...
alexbrassington.com
PowerShell | Share and PowerShell
http://alexbrassington.com/tag/powershell
Splitting Office 365 Audit Logs. Office 365 audit exports are quite complicated behind the scenes. If you look at the data in CSV format you’ll quickly see there’s four fields; Time, User, Action and Detail. The fun is in the Detail field, it’s really a JSON object with all of the interesting data that the audit log holds. Whilst it’s possible to use Excel to expand those objects and convert them into usable CSV content it’s a bit clumsy. This entry was posted in Office 365. And tagged Office 365. This s...
alexbrassington.com
PowerShell | Share and PowerShell
http://alexbrassington.com/category/powershell
Splitting Office 365 Audit Logs. Office 365 audit exports are quite complicated behind the scenes. If you look at the data in CSV format you’ll quickly see there’s four fields; Time, User, Action and Detail. The fun is in the Detail field, it’s really a JSON object with all of the interesting data that the audit log holds. Whilst it’s possible to use Excel to expand those objects and convert them into usable CSV content it’s a bit clumsy. This entry was posted in Office 365. And tagged Office 365. Normal...