SharePoint 2010 delivers a comprehensive set of document management features.
In this article, we continue our series dedicated to uncovering those features
with a look at how the Content Organizer works.
Challenge:
We use SharePoint document libraries in our portal to manage all of our electronic documents. The document libraries sometimes contain folders in a logical hierarchy structure to help us organize the documents. In SharePoint 2010, the upload process is better in the sense that you can choose a folder to upload to, but many of our users don't really know to which folder a document should be uploaded.
Is there a way to automatically upload and store the electronic documents based on some criteria such as the contents of a metadata field?
Solution:
With the Content Organizer, a new feature of SharePoint 2010, you can create rules that will automatically move an uploaded document to the appropriate/designated location based on content type and site columns. Follow these steps:
Step 1 – Activate the Content Organizer Feature
First, you need to activate this feature, and note that since this is a Site Scope feature, it is found under Site Actions > Site Settings menu on the Ribbon.
Click on Activate to make this feature available for your site:
Step 2 – Content Organizer Settings
Once you have activated the Content Organizer feature for a site, you will find two new menu options under Site Settings: Content Organizer Settings and Content Organizer Rules.
The other thing that happens after the activation is that SharePoint will create a document library named DropOffLibrary along with a RoutingRules list. The Drop Off Library will be the default destination when a user tries to upload a document to this site. The Routing Rules list, as its name implies, contains the rules for how a document is to be routed to its final destination.
Next, configure your settings:
Redirect Users to the Drop Off Library: Set this check box
to force all uploads to go to the Drop Off Document Library. When an
individual document is uploaded, the document properties window for Drop Off
Library is displayed, at which point metadata properties can be filled in and
the submission process completed. After submission, the routing rules are
applied to route the document appropriately and the user is shown the final URL
for the item.
Sending to Another Site: Set this property to allow rules
to be created that direct uploads in the current site to be sent to another site
in your SharePoint Web app. The destination site must also have the Content
Organizer feature installed and activated. You can only route documents within a
SharePoint Web application.
Folder Partitioning: This features allow you to create a
threshold limit on how many documents can be stored in a document library.
SharePoint 2010 recommends a maximum of 5,000 documents per folder. Once the
limit is reached, you can instruct SharePoint to automatically create a new
folder, route documents to that new folder, and let the user know about the URLs
of the final destination.
Duplicate Submissions: Use this option to let SharePoint decide what
to do when you upload an item that already exists in the library. You have the
option to create a new version (if versioning is enabled in the document
library), or to append unique characters to the end of the new file.
Preserving Context: Set this check box to send the audit logs and
properties of the documents along with the documents when you route the item to
another site.
Rule Managers: Add the users or groups that you want to be able to
manage rules used by the Content Organizer. These users must also have Manage
Web Site permission in order to edit rules.
Step 3 – Content Organizer Rules
Next, click on the Content Organizer Rules link to go to the popup form where you specify the rules.
Rule Name: Set a name.
Rule Status and Priority: Enable the rule and choose a priority for
the rule, from 1 (highest priority) to 9 (lowest priority). This is useful when
you have more than one rule and want to be able to select which one should be
applied first to the uploaded documents.
Submission's Content Type: Select a Content Type to apply the rules.
The drop down list box only shows the content types that are based on the
Document content type. The alias check box allows you to define the same
content types that were renamed in other sites. When the document is uploaded
and its content type matches the names, the rule will apply to them as well.
Conditions: the Conditions setting is where the real power of this
feature lies. You can create up to six conditions where the properties of the
items must meet certain values. In this example, we will set a condition where
a document begins with the prefix “SA12” in its title.
Target Location: Select a destination folder (it could be on the same
site or a different document library in a different site) to route the document
to when it has met all the criteria you set above. Note that you must enable
cross-site routing (see settings in the section above) in order to see the site
routing options in this form. You can also set the folder naming convention if
you choose to create a new folder.
Step 4 – Upload
Let’s try it out. Go to any document library on your site and use the Add new document link.
Select a document to upload. Once the document has been uploaded, you will see the properties form below. Note the title of the form where it says “Drop Off Library”? Remember that when you add a Content Organizer rule to the site, it automatically adds any document to the Drop Off Library.
This form also gives you a warning that the document will be moved. Fill in the properties for this document, and make sure you follow the rules. In our exmaple, we will add a “SA12” prefix to the Title of the document. Next, click the submit button:
You will then receive a notification indicating where the document was routed to. Note that if the document cannot be moved, whether there is an issue or if your conditions are not met, SharePoint will leave the document in the Drop Off Library.
In conclusion, the Content Organizer is a very cool feature in SharePoint 2010. It allows you to capture a set of standard documents and route them to the proper destination, and the end user doesn't have to worry about where it should go. This feature should be used in conjunction with Document IDs, Term Sets, and Metadata publishing in order to design an effective document management strategy for your SharePoint portal.
Notes:
The Content Organizer has the following limitations that you should beware of:
Reference:
http://community.bamboosolutions.com/blogs/sharepoint-2010/archive/2010/11/03/sharepoint-2010-cookbook-content-organizer-for-document-library.aspx
Challenge:
We use SharePoint document libraries in our portal to manage all of our electronic documents. The document libraries sometimes contain folders in a logical hierarchy structure to help us organize the documents. In SharePoint 2010, the upload process is better in the sense that you can choose a folder to upload to, but many of our users don't really know to which folder a document should be uploaded.
Is there a way to automatically upload and store the electronic documents based on some criteria such as the contents of a metadata field?
Solution:
With the Content Organizer, a new feature of SharePoint 2010, you can create rules that will automatically move an uploaded document to the appropriate/designated location based on content type and site columns. Follow these steps:
Step 1 – Activate the Content Organizer Feature
First, you need to activate this feature, and note that since this is a Site Scope feature, it is found under Site Actions > Site Settings menu on the Ribbon.
Click on Activate to make this feature available for your site:
Step 2 – Content Organizer Settings
Once you have activated the Content Organizer feature for a site, you will find two new menu options under Site Settings: Content Organizer Settings and Content Organizer Rules.
The other thing that happens after the activation is that SharePoint will create a document library named DropOffLibrary along with a RoutingRules list. The Drop Off Library will be the default destination when a user tries to upload a document to this site. The Routing Rules list, as its name implies, contains the rules for how a document is to be routed to its final destination.
Next, configure your settings:
Next, click on the Content Organizer Rules link to go to the popup form where you specify the rules.
Let’s try it out. Go to any document library on your site and use the Add new document link.
Select a document to upload. Once the document has been uploaded, you will see the properties form below. Note the title of the form where it says “Drop Off Library”? Remember that when you add a Content Organizer rule to the site, it automatically adds any document to the Drop Off Library.
This form also gives you a warning that the document will be moved. Fill in the properties for this document, and make sure you follow the rules. In our exmaple, we will add a “SA12” prefix to the Title of the document. Next, click the submit button:
You will then receive a notification indicating where the document was routed to. Note that if the document cannot be moved, whether there is an issue or if your conditions are not met, SharePoint will leave the document in the Drop Off Library.
In conclusion, the Content Organizer is a very cool feature in SharePoint 2010. It allows you to capture a set of standard documents and route them to the proper destination, and the end user doesn't have to worry about where it should go. This feature should be used in conjunction with Document IDs, Term Sets, and Metadata publishing in order to design an effective document management strategy for your SharePoint portal.
Notes:
The Content Organizer has the following limitations that you should beware of:
- Content Organizer feature is only available in SharePoint 2010 Server and is not part of the SharePoint Foundation 2010.
- Content Organizer will only work on content types that are of, or derive from the Document content type, so make sure that you inherit from this content type when creating a custom document library.
- You cannot route documents to a Document Set. This one should be on the wish list for the next release!
- The routing action is performed using the App Pool account of your Web applications.
- You cannot route the document outside of a Web app, farm, or SharePoint at all. All of this could be done with workflow rules instead. In fact, there are a lot of things that should be done with workflow instead of Content Organizer, which is designed to handle document uploads.
- There are a whole bunch of events that effect a document library; you should
beware the order of executions that could affect the handling of these
documents:
- Any workflow that is attached to a document library will be run first
- Next to be executed is Event Receiver, although the actual priority can be set programmatically by the developers
- Last is the Content Organizer.
Reference:
http://community.bamboosolutions.com/blogs/sharepoint-2010/archive/2010/11/03/sharepoint-2010-cookbook-content-organizer-for-document-library.aspx
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