Kruijf said:
Hi there,
I was wondering if anybody knows a way or got a program to split pst files.
The situation is that we got a policy that limits the pst files to 1.5 GB.
This because we find lots of problems with pst files that are bigger then 1.5
GB.
The problem is that users have pst files bigger then 1.5 GB, how they did it
i dont know but i would like to know a way to split those files so we can use
those pst files again. We cant get the policy off, this is because its just
on accidentalbase.
Hope you guys can help me!
Greets Tom
So why not use the auto-archive feature in Outlook to reduce the size of the
message store (default .pst file) by moving old items into an archive .pst
file?
You can even chain the archiving to include the archive files. Just be sure
the archive .pst file(s) are loaded in Outlook (File -> Open) so Outlook can
actually read and write to them. You could use a global archiving setting
of moving old stuff over a year old into your first archive .pst file, or go
to each folder and set its independent archiving interval. Alas, for the
archive .pst files opened in Outlook that you want archived into an even
older archive, you would have to set the archive interval on its folders.
So you could have items over 1-year old moved into a "1yearold.pst" file,
and having archiving configured in the folders for "1yearold.pst" to archive
items that are over 2 years old into a "2yearold.pst" file, and so on. You
can chain together as many archives as you want. If the number of e-mails
accumulated into a .pst file take longer than 1 year to get close to the 2GB
(1.87GiB) barrier for .pst file size, you could make that interval longer,
like archiving 5-year old items into "archive1.pst" and archiving items
older than 10 years in "archive1.pst" into "archive2.pst", and so on.
The other solution is to use an add-on that strips out attachments to a
known default folder and leaves behind a file URL in the e-mail to indicate
there was an attachment and to where it got removed and saved. This would
reduce the size of your message store if you get lots of e-mails with big
attachments. You can buy add-ins to manually or automatically extract,
remove, and save attachments. There is a free macro you can use in Outlook
(can't find it right now but someone else might chime in with a URL).