Exchange Server Cookbook
(Sprache: Englisch)
Ask network administrators what their most critical computer application is, and most will say "email" without a moment's hesitation. If you run a network powered by Windows 2000 or Windows Server 2003, Microsoft Exchange occupies much of your time....
Leider schon ausverkauft
versandkostenfrei
Buch
43.00 €
Produktdetails
Produktinformationen zu „Exchange Server Cookbook “
Ask network administrators what their most critical computer application is, and most will say "email" without a moment's hesitation. If you run a network powered by Windows 2000 or Windows Server 2003, Microsoft Exchange occupies much of your time. According to Microsoft, 110 million Exchange seats have been deployed, but 60% of you are still running Exchange 5.5. That's a problem, because the difference between version 5.5 and the more efficient Exchange 2000 and Exchange Server 2003 is profound.
Don't fret. Exchange Server Cookbook offers you a comprehensive how-to guide to these newer versions of Exchange. You'll find quick solutions for the most common tasks you need to perform--everything from installation and maintenance to configuration and optimization, with proven recipes for the most useful tools and utilities. The book also has solutions to some uncommon tasks (that you may not know are possible) and advanced procedures that aren't part of day-to-day operations. These include tasks for critical situations, such as using a recovery storage group.
Our reliable desktop reference even shows you how to write scripts for Exchange management and deployment tasks. That's right. While not every Exchange job can be scripted, many can, and we provide lots of working VBScript examples for accomplishing particular goals. Whatever your particular need, you'll find it quickly, because chapters in this Cookbook are laid out by recipe, with cross references to other pertinent solutions in the book. With this guide, you'll learn:
* The relationship between Exchange and Active Directory
* When to use the GUI, the command line, or scripting
* How to prepare forests, domains, and servers
* How to use Group Policy to control Exchange
* Diagnostic logging, measure performance, and administrative privileges
* Recipient management: user accounts, mailboxes, mail-enabled groups
* Mailbox and public folder database management
* Message routing and transport functions
* Security, backup, restore, and recovery operations
For every question you have about Exchange 2000 or Exchange Server 2003, our Cookbook has the answer--one that you can find and implement without a moment's hesitation.
Klappentext zu „Exchange Server Cookbook “
Ask network administrators what their most critical computer application is, and most will say "email" without a moment's hesitation. If you run a network powered by Windows 2000 or Windows Server 2003, Microsoft Exchange occupies much of your time. According to Microsoft, 110 million Exchange seats have been deployed, but 60% of you are still running Exchange 5.5. That's a problem, because the difference between version 5.5 and the more efficient Exchange 2000 and Exchange Server 2003 is profound.Don't fret. Exchange Server Cookbook offers you a comprehensive how-to guide to these newer versions of Exchange. You'll find quick solutions for the most common tasks you need to perform--everything from installation and maintenance to configuration and optimization, with proven recipes for the most useful tools and utilities. The book also has solutions to some uncommon tasks (that you may not know are possible) and advanced procedures that aren't part of day-to-day operations. These include tasks for critical situations, such as using a recovery storage group.Our reliable desktop reference even shows you how to write scripts for Exchange management and deployment tasks. That's right. While not every Exchange job can be scripted,many can, and we provide lots of working VBScript examples for accomplishing particular goals. Whatever your particular need, you'll find it quickly, because chapters in this Cookbook are laid out by recipe, with cross references to other pertinent solutions in the book. With this guide, you'll learn: The relationship between Exchange and Active Directory When to use the GUI, the command line, or scripting How to prepare forests, domains, and servers How to use Group Policy to control Exchange Diagnostic logging, measure performance, and administrative privileges Recipient management: user accounts, mailboxes, mail-enabled groups Mailbox and public folder database management Message routing and transport functions Security, backup, restore, and
... mehr
recovery operationsFor every question you have about Exchange 2000 or Exchange Server 2003, our Cookbook has the answer--one that you can find and implement without a moment's hesitation.
... weniger
Ask network administrators what their most critical computer application is, and most will say "email" without a moment's hesitation. If you run a network powered by Windows 2000 or Windows Server 2003, Microsoft Exchange occupies much of your time. According to Microsoft, 110 million Exchange seats have been deployed, but 60% of you are still running Exchange 5.5. That's a problem, because the difference between version 5.5 and the more efficient Exchange 2000 and Exchange Server 2003 is profound.
Don't fret. Exchange Server Cookbook offers you a comprehensive how-to guide to these newer versions of Exchange. You'll find quick solutions for the most common tasks you need to perform-everything from installation and maintenance to configuration and optimization, with proven recipes for the most useful tools and utilities. The book also has solutions to some uncommon tasks (that you may not know are possible) and advanced procedures that aren't part of day-to-day operations. These include tasks for critical situations, such as using a recovery storage group.
Our reliable desktop reference even shows you how to write scripts for Exchange management and deployment tasks. That's right. While not every Exchange job can be scripted, many can, and we provide lots of working VBScript examples for accomplishing particular goals. Whatever your particular need, you'll find it quickly, because chapters in this Cookbook are laid out by recipe, with cross references to other pertinent solutions in the book. With this guide, you'll learn:
- The relationship between Exchange and Active Directory
- When to use the GUI, the command line, or scripting
- How to prepare forests, domains, and servers
- How to use Group Policy to control Exchange
- Diagnostic logging, measure performance, and administrative privileges
- Recipient management: user accounts, mailboxes, mail-enabled groups
- Mailbox and public folder database management
- Message routing and transport functions
- Security, backup, restore, and recovery operations
For every question you have about Exchange 2000 or Exchange Server 2003, our Cookbook has the answer-one that you can find and implement without a moment's hesitation.
Don't fret. Exchange Server Cookbook offers you a comprehensive how-to guide to these newer versions of Exchange. You'll find quick solutions for the most common tasks you need to perform-everything from installation and maintenance to configuration and optimization, with proven recipes for the most useful tools and utilities. The book also has solutions to some uncommon tasks (that you may not know are possible) and advanced procedures that aren't part of day-to-day operations. These include tasks for critical situations, such as using a recovery storage group.
Our reliable desktop reference even shows you how to write scripts for Exchange management and deployment tasks. That's right. While not every Exchange job can be scripted, many can, and we provide lots of working VBScript examples for accomplishing particular goals. Whatever your particular need, you'll find it quickly, because chapters in this Cookbook are laid out by recipe, with cross references to other pertinent solutions in the book. With this guide, you'll learn:
- The relationship between Exchange and Active Directory
- When to use the GUI, the command line, or scripting
- How to prepare forests, domains, and servers
- How to use Group Policy to control Exchange
- Diagnostic logging, measure performance, and administrative privileges
- Recipient management: user accounts, mailboxes, mail-enabled groups
- Mailbox and public folder database management
- Message routing and transport functions
- Security, backup, restore, and recovery operations
For every question you have about Exchange 2000 or Exchange Server 2003, our Cookbook has the answer-one that you can find and implement without a moment's hesitation.
Inhaltsverzeichnis zu „Exchange Server Cookbook “
Preface 1. Getting Started Cooking with Exchange Where to Get Tools Finding More Information 2. Installation and Infrastructure 2.1 Verifying Your Current Infrastructure Is Ready for Exchange Server 2003 2.2 Preparing a Windows 2000 Server Computer for an Exchange Installation 2.3 Preparing a Windows Server 2003 Computer for an Exchange Installation 2.4 Preparing an Active Directory Forest for Exchange 2.5 Preparing an Active Directory Domain for Exchange 2.6 Verifying That Forest and Domain Preparation Completed 2.7 Installing Exchange on a Member Server 2.8 Installing Exchange on a Domain Controller 2.9 Using Exchange Setup in Unattended Mode 2.10 Checking the Expiry Date of an Evaluation Version of Exchange 2.11 Upgrading the Evaluation Version of Exchange 2.12 Upgrading from Standard Edition to Enterprise Edition 2.13 Enumerating All Existing Exchange Servers 2.14 Enumerating All Exchange Connectors 2.15 Switching Exchange from Mixed Mode to Native Mode 2.16 Creating the First Administrative Group with a Custom Name 2.17 Viewing Administrative Groups in Exchange System Manager 2.18 Creating Administrative Groups 2.19 Removing Administrative Groups 2.20 Moving Objects Between Administrative Groups 3. Active Directory Integration 3.1 Determining Which Domain Controllers Exchange Is Using 3.2 Forcing Exchange to Use Specific Domain Controllers 3.3 Determining and Specifying the DC That ESM Uses 3.4 Removing Exchange from Active Directory 3.5 Changing the Forest Functional Level 3.6 Controlling Exchange Settings Through Group Policy Objects 3.7 Installing Additional Recipient Update Service Instances 3.8 Troubleshooting DSAccess Topology Discovery 3.9 Checking Which Account or Group Has Been Assigned Permissions During ForestPrep 4. Exchange Server and Organization Management 4.1 Installing ESM on Windows XP 4.2 Starting and Stopping Exchange 4.3 Controlling Message Tracking Settings 4.4 Determining
... mehr
Whether a Server Is a Front-End Server 4.5 Applying Exchange System Policies 4.6 Monitoring Exchange Service Status 4.7 Controlling Diagnostic Logging 4.8 Measuring Exchange Performance 4.9 Delegating Administrative Control 4.10 Setting Default Send and Receive Size Limits 5. Recipient Management 5.1 Creating a User Account and Mailbox 5.2 Creating a Mailbox for an Existing User 5.3 Removing a Mailbox for an Existing User 5.4 Creating a Mail-Enabled Group 5.5 Controlling Mailbox Size Limits 5.6 Moving Mailboxes 5.7 Getting Mailbox Access and Logon Information 5.8 Determining the Size of a Mailbox 5.9 Recovering a Deleted Mailbox 5.10 Bulk-Adding Mailboxes from an Excel Worksheet 5.11 Creating a Mail-Enabled Contact 5.12 Creating Multiple Address Lists 5.13 Creating Query-Based Distribution Groups 5.14 Granting Full Access to Mailboxes 5.15 Getting the List of Delegates for a Mailbox 5.16 Changing the Display Name Format in the GAL 5.17 Hiding or Revealing Items in Address Lists 5.18 Setting a Default Reply-to Address for a Mailbox 5.19 Creating Recipient Policies 5.20 Limiting Who Can Send Mail to a Distribution Group 5.21 Granting Send-as Permissions 5.22 Granting Send on Behalf of Permissions 5.23 Granting Users or Groups Permission to Access Other Mailboxes 5.24 Limiting the Number of Recipients to Which Messages Can Be Sent 5.25 Creating and Using Offline Address Lists 5.26 Using Mailbox Manager 5.27 Using ADModify.NET to Update User Attributes 5.28 Setting Properties on User Accounts 5.29 Retrieving Properties on User Accounts 6. Mailbox and Public Folder Database Management 6.1 Creating a Storage Group 6.2 Deleting a Storage Group 6.3 Enumerating the Storage Groups on a Server 6.4 Creating a Mailbox Database 6.5 Creating a Public Folder Database 6.6 Deleting a Database 6.7 Mounting a Database 6.8 Dismounting a Database 6.9 Moving Databases and Logs to Different Disks 6.10 Determining How Much Whitespace Is in a Database 6.11 Finding the Low Anchor Log File 6.12 Rebuilding a Database File from Logs 6.13 Enumerating Connected Mailboxes in a Database 6.14 Turning on Circular Logging for a Storage Group 6.15 Controlling the Online Maintenance Process 6.16 Performing an Offline Defragmentation 6.17 Shrinking a Database That Exceeds the 16 GB Size Limit for Standard Edition 7. Transport, Routing, and SMTP 7.1 Creating a New SMTP Virtual Server 7.2 Choosing the Correct Connector 7.3 Creating a Routing Group Connector 7.4 Creating an SMTP Connector 7.5 Configuring a Connector to Allow Routing of Messages from Specific Senders 7.6 Allowing Large Messages Through Specific Connectors 7.7 Creating a Routing Group 7.8 Removing a Routing Group 7.9 Designating the Routing Group Master 7.10 Moving a Server Between Routing Groups 7.11 Examining Your Routing Structure 7.12 Listing the SMTP Queues on a Specific Virtual Server 7.13 Inspecting the Contents of a Queue 7.14 Deleting Messages from a Queue 7.15 Moving SMTP Queues to a New Location 7.16 Deleting Messages from the Badmail Folder 7.17 Sharing an SMTP Domain Between Exchange and a Foreign Mail System 7.18 Accepting Mail for Multiple Domains 7.19 Controlling Mail Relaying 7.20 Filtering Messages Based on Recipient 7.21 Setting IP Address Restrictions for Multiple Servers 7.22 Using a DNS Block List on Exchange Server 2003 7.23 Controlling Global and Internet Message Format Settings 7.24 Setting Up a Role Email Address 7.25 Verifying Your External DNS Configuration for Inbound SMTP 7.26 Testing SMTP Manually 8. Client Connectivity 8.1 Blocking Specific Versions of Outlook from Connecting 8.2 Configuring Attachment Blocking for Outlook 8.3 Fixing Mailbox Folder Names That Appear in the Wrong Language 8.4 Configuring Attachment Blocking for OWA 2003 8.5 Configuring Freedoc Access for OWA 2003 8.6 Controlling OWA 2003 Spellchecking 8.7 Enabling SSL for OWA 8.8 Configuring Form-Based Authentication for OWA 2003 8.9 Allowing Password Changes Through OWA 8.10 Changing OWA 2003 Session Timeouts 8.11 Using the OWA Web Administration Tool 8.12 Creating OWA 2003 Themes 8.13 Forcing Users to Use a Specific OWA Theme 8.14 Enabling the Use of FBA/SSL with Outlook Mobile Access and Exchange ActiveSync 8.15 Enabling Support for "Unsupported" Outlook Mobile Access Devices 8.16 Adding Mobile Carriers for Exchange ActiveSync 8.17 Disabling Exchange ActiveSync Certificate Checking 8.18 Installing a Root Certificate for Use with EAS 8.19 Configuring the POP3 Server for User Access 8.20 Configuring the IMAP4 Server for User Access 8.21 Configuring NNTP for Newsgroup Feeds 8.22 Disabling User Access to POP3, IMAP4, and HTTP 8.23 Using Protocol Logging 8.24 Making Exchange Work Behind a Cisco PIX Firewall 9. Public Folder Management 9.1 Using the Public Folder Migration Tool 9.2 Rehoming Public Folders 9.3 Getting and Setting Public Folder Permissions 9.4 Forcing Public Folder Replication 9.5 Replicating the Public Folder Hierarchy 9.6 Getting Properties of the Public Folder Tree 9.7 Creating and Deleting Public Folders 9.8 Mail-Enabling or Mail-Disabling a Public Folder 9.9 Finding All Replicas of a Public Folder 9.10 Working with a Specific Server's Replica List 9.11 Controlling Who Can Create Top-Level Public Folders 9.12 Recreating the Schedule+ Free/Busy Folder 9.13 Controlling Public Folder Replication Settings 9.14 Finding or Changing the Site Folder Server 10. Exchange Security 10.1 Scanning Exchange Servers for Security Patches 10.2 Securing SMTP Authentication 10.3 Enabling IPsec Between Front- and Back-End Servers 10.4 Enabling IPsec on an Exchange Server 2003 Cluster 10.5 Enabling SSL Offloading 10.6 Setting Up S/MIME in Outlook 10.7 Creating a Custom DNS Block List 10.8 Controlling Anonymous Address Resolution 10.9 Disabling Unnecessary Exchange Services 10.10 Setting Up RPC over HTTPS 10.11 Setting Up TLS Security for SMTP 10.12 Changing Server Banners 11. Backup, Restore, and Recovery 11.1 Backing Up an Individual Mailbox 11.2 Backing Up a Database 11.3 Backing Up a Storage Group 11.4 Restoring One or More Databases to the Same Server 11.5 Restoring a Storage Group to the Same Server 11.6 Restoring a Database to a Different Machine in Exchange 2000 11.7 Restoring a Database to a Different Machine in Exchange Server 2003 11.8 Recovering an Individual Mailbox from a Database Backup 11.9 Performing Disaster Recovery of a Cluster Node to a Nonclustered Server 11.10 Using the Exchange Server 2003 Mailbox Recovery Center to Recover a Mailbox 11.11 Recovering to a Recovery Storage Group in Exchange Server 2003 11.12 Performing Dial-Tone Recovery with Exchange Server 2003 11.13 Using the Mailbox Reconnect Utility Index
... weniger
Autoren-Porträt von Paul Robichaux, Missy Koslosky, Devin Granger
Devin L. Ganger, a systems administrator with over 9 years of experiencein Windows and Unix networks, got his lucky break as an author when hisboss at 3Sharp LLC told him to co-write the Exchange Cookbook and stopwhining. Despite the work involved, he enjoys writing. He relaxes byspending time with his kids, doting on his wife, tinkering with his homenetwork, and playing roleplaying games. In between compulsive Babylon 5viewing sprees, he also attempts to write novels, play guitar, and learnTexas Hold'em well enough to prevent his co-workers from taking hismoney each week. He plans to retire from IT at the age of 40 and settledown to the comfortable life of a dilettante, science fiction novelist,and despot of a banana republic.Missy Koslosky has been working with Exchange server since 1997, and hasbeen a Microsoft MVP for Exchange Server since 1999. Missy's first experience with Exchange was managing a 120-site Exchange 4.0 organization, which taught her how to fix an interesting mix of things. She has worked for the Federal government, for an Application Service Provider, and as a Technology Consultant specializing in Exchange and Active Directory for of a large services organization. She is a Product Manager in the Exchange Solutions group at Quest Software. Missy is happily married; her husband Bryan is a PGA Golf Professional who has temporarily put golfing aside to raise their two amazing daughters, Bryce and Natalie.Paul Robichaux is the Senior Vice President of Infrastructure Solutions at 3Sharp where he manages their global operations and is responsible for the formulation, management and execution of long-term strategies, executive client relationships and business solutions.Paul is well known for his intimate knowledge and understanding of Microsoft 's collaboration and communications products. Microsoft has recognized Paul's contributions to the worldwide community of Exchange Server professionals by naming him as a Microsoft Most Valuable Professional
... mehr
(MVP) each year since 2003. He has authored multiple books on Microsoft Exchange and related topics. Paul is a senior contributing editor for Windows IT Pro magazine, where he writes the weekly "Exchange UPDATE" column and feature articles on Exchange Server, Office Communications Server, and related topics.
... weniger
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autoren: Paul Robichaux , Missy Koslosky , Devin Granger
- 2005, 437 Seiten, Maße: 18 x 23,9 cm, Kartoniert (TB), Englisch
- Verlag: O'Reilly Media
- ISBN-10: 0596007175
- ISBN-13: 9780596007171
Sprache:
Englisch
Kommentar zu "Exchange Server Cookbook"
0 Gebrauchte Artikel zu „Exchange Server Cookbook“
Zustand | Preis | Porto | Zahlung | Verkäufer | Rating |
---|
Schreiben Sie einen Kommentar zu "Exchange Server Cookbook".
Kommentar verfassen