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How does ShareGate crawl workspaces to detect inactive teams and groups?
How does ShareGate crawl workspaces to detect inactive teams and groups?
Updated this week

To detect inactive teams or groups, ShareGate looks for user or system-generated activity and extracts the dates of these activities. We call this activity crawling.

User-generated activity can occur when a member modifies a document or when an admin uses ShareGate Migrate to copy a SharePoint site. System-generated activity may occur if you have automated system messages in Teams.

Note: Teams messages that originate from webhooks aren't considered activity. In other words, inactive teams and groups won't be re-activated due to automated messages coming from other third-party applications.

ShareGate crawls for activity in the following workspaces:

  • Outlook conversations

    • Delivery dates of email conversations.

  • Outlook Calendar

    • Creation and Last Modified dates for both recurring and non-recurring events.

  • SharePoint
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  • Teams

    • Message and reply dates (creation and edits).

    • Message and reply reaction dates.

Workspaces are shown on the Manage page and in the team and group details.

ShareGate checks to see if the workspace's most recent activity exceeds the limit in your Inactivity detection policy. A workspace icon is displayed in color if it's active and dimmed if it's inactive as shown below:

workload icons screenshot

A team or group is considered inactive if all workspaces are inactive.

Note: A workspace will not be displayed if ShareGate does not have access to it or if it is not present in your team or group. For example, Teams might not be enabled for all your groups, or, ShareGate may not be able to crawl Outlook calendars in private groups unless you are also an owner of that group.

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