Searching the Help
To search for information in the Help, type a word or phrase in the Search box. When you enter a group of words, OR is inferred. You can use Boolean operators to refine your search.
Results returned are case insensitive. However, results ranking takes case into account and assigns higher scores to case matches. Therefore, a search for "cats" followed by a search for "Cats" would return the same number of Help topics, but the order in which the topics are listed would be different.
Search for | Example | Results |
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A single word | cat
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Topics that contain the word "cat". You will also find its grammatical variations, such as "cats". |
A phrase. You can specify that the search results contain a specific phrase. |
"cat food" (quotation marks) |
Topics that contain the literal phrase "cat food" and all its grammatical variations. Without the quotation marks, the query is equivalent to specifying an OR operator, which finds topics with one of the individual words instead of the phrase. |
Search for | Operator | Example |
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Two or more words in the same topic |
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Either word in a topic |
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Topics that do not contain a specific word or phrase |
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Topics that contain one string and do not contain another | ^ (caret) |
cat ^ mouse
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A combination of search types | ( ) parentheses |
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- Scheduled maintenance
- What is a scheduled task?
- Running a Scheduled Maintenance task
- Cost Estimate tool
- Access Scheduled Maintenance
- Check the execution details of a task
- Check the execution history of a task
- Create a change request from a Scheduled Maintenance task
- Create a Request record from a Scheduled Maintenance task
- Create a schedule for a task
- Create a Scheduled Maintenance task
- Create a Scheduled Maintenance task for an asset
- Create a Scheduled Maintenance task from an open record
- Create an Incident record from a Scheduled Maintenance task
- Define the effect and details of a Scheduled Maintenance task
- Force a task to run immediately
- Schedule intervals
- Set the demand criteria for a task
- Specify incremental repetition
- Specify manual repetition
- Specify quiescent repetition
- Use expressions and Format Control only in a Scheduled Maintenance task
- Use the Cost Estimate tool
- Administrative access to Scheduled Maintenance
- Scheduled Maintenance features
- Automated task generation
- Scheduled Maintenance commands in Configuration Management
- Scheduled Maintenance exception models
- Using a Scheduled Maintenance template
- Adding Scheduled Maintenance data using expressions
- Scheduled Maintenance overhead
- Running an extra Format Control record
Scheduled Maintenance overhead
Scheduled Maintenance relies on the problem background scheduler to call into the Scheduled Maintenance code at regularly scheduled intervals. If the problem scheduler is not running, no Scheduled Maintenance tasks run. When a Scheduled Maintenance task runs, it increases the load on the problem scheduler by a marginal amount.
Scheduled Maintenance does not put a large load on your system unless you are using the Scheduled Maintenance system to generate extraordinarily large numbers of incident records, change requests, or
If a Scheduled Maintenance task creates 20,000 Incident records at 2:00 AM, the task would slow the Service Manager system down somewhat. Scheduled Maintenance creates all 20,000 records consecutively, as though one user were opening 20,000 incident records consecutively. The increased load may be noticeable, but it will not be crippling.
Related topics
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