Overview of Content search
Φιλοδώρημα
eDiscovery (preview) is now available in the new Microsoft Purview portal. To learn more about using the new eDiscovery experience, see Learn about eDiscovery (preview).
Use the Content search tool in the Microsoft Purview compliance portal to quickly find email in Exchange mailboxes, documents in SharePoint sites and OneDrive locations, and instant messaging conversations in Skype for Business. You can use the content search tool to search for email, documents, and instant messaging conversations in collaboration tools such as Microsoft Teams and Microsoft 365 Groups.
Φιλοδώρημα
If you're not an E5 customer, use the 90-day Microsoft Purview solutions trial to explore how additional Purview capabilities can help your organization manage data security and compliance needs. Start now at the Microsoft Purview trials hub. Learn details about signing up and trial terms.
The first step is to starting using the Content search tool to choose content locations to search and configure a keyword query to search for specific items. Or, you can just leave the query blank and return all items in the target locations.
- Create and run a Content search.
- Build search queries and use conditions to narrow your search.
- Feature reference for Content search.
- Configure search permissions filtering so that an eDiscovery manager can only search subset of mailboxes or sites in your organization.
- Search cloud-based mailboxes for on-premises users in Microsoft 365.
- View keyword statistics for the results of a search and then refine the query if necessary.
- Search for third-party data that your organization has imported to Microsoft 365.
- Preserve Bcc recipients so you can search for them.
- Search for Microsoft 365 Copilot and Microsoft Copilot data (user prompts and Copilot responses) stored in custodian mailboxes.
After you run a search and refine it as necessary, the next step is to do something with the results returned by the search. You can export and download the results to your local computer or in the case of an email attack on your organization, you can delete the results of a search from user mailboxes.
- Export the results of a content search and download them to your local computer..
- Search for and delete email messages, such as messages that content a virus, dangerous attachments, or phishing messages.
- Export a report about the results of a content search, without exporting the actual results.
Content search is easy to use, but it's also a powerful tool. Behind-the-scenes, there's a lot going on. The more you know about it and understand its behavior and its limitations, the more successful you'll be using it for your organization's search and investigation needs.
- Content search limits, such as the maximum number of searches that you can run at one time and the maximum number of content locations you can include in a single search.
- Estimated and actual search results and the reasons why there might be differences between them when you export and download search results.
- Partially indexed items in Exchange and SharePoint and how to include or exclude them when you export and download search results.
- Investigate partially indexed items and determine your organization's exposure to them.
- De-duplication in search results that you can enable when you export email messages that are the results of a search.
Sometimes you have to perform more advanced, complex, and repetitive content search tasks. In these cases, it's easier and faster to use commands in Security & Compliance PowerShell.
To help make this easier, we've created several Security & Compliance PowerShell scripts to help you complete complex content search-related tasks.
- Search specific mailbox and site folders (called a targeted collection) when you're confident that items responsive to a case are located in that folder.
- Search the mailbox and OneDrive location for a list of users.
- Create, report on, and delete multiple searches to quickly and efficiently identify and cull search data.
- Clone a content search and quickly compare the results of different keyword search queries run on the same content locations; or use the script to save time by not having to re-enter a large number of content locations when you create a new search.