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Steve Seguis

"Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Administration"

The Calendar is made up of calendar events
and schedules. Schedules are periods of time within a 24-hour clock when a policy is
active. For example, you may want a specific policy to be active during business hours
and a different one to be active off hours. Calendars specify a start date and time as well
as an end date and time where a particular policy will become active. They can also be
used in conjunction with schedules to set a date range when a schedule will take effect.
For example, you may want the business hours and off hours schedule to happen during
the month of January. Following are the types of calendar events:
?–? One Time Create a one-time event when a policy is active. This requires a
start date and time and an end date and time.
?–  Recurring Event Like a recurring meeting in Outlook, you can use this to
schedule recurring calendar events for your policies.
?–? Schedule Use to activate different resource allocation policies over the course
of a 24-hour period.
Figure 7-9. Specifying process matching criteria and CPU percentage
229 Chapter 7: Resource Management and Performance Monitoring
Hands-On Exercise: Creating a Calendar Event
Continuing on from our previous exercises, we will create a one-time calendar event
to make our Limit_Notepad resource allocation policy active for a specified two-week
period from June 15, 2007, at 6:00 a.m. to June 30, 2007, at 6:00 p.


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