Your security and request-processing requirements determine the appropriate configuration for your auditing and recovery managers. If you find that the default settings do not meet your requirements, you can modify the settings.
You can use Provisioning Manager to administer auditing and recovery managers as follows:
You control auditing and recovery by modifying the properties of auditing and recovery managers. You set properties for all auditing and recovery managers, not for specific servers.
You can modify the following transaction properties for auditing and recovery managers:
For more information about how to configure auditing and recovery managers properties, see Change how auditing and recovery managers handle transactions.
The information provided in Provisioning Manager about each auditing and recovery manager includes the server name and state (running or stopped) of each auditing and recovery manager.
For more information, see To view the names and status of provisioning servers.
When you stop an auditing and recovery manger on a server, it prevents error detection and prevents transactions from being moved from the transaction log database to the audit log database. If an auditing and recovery manager is stopped for too long, the transaction log can fill up, which prevents logging of subsequent transactions.
For more information, see To start or stop the Provisioning Auditing and Recovery service on a server.
For more information about auditing and recovery managers, see Auditing and recovery managers.
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