Re: Mail routing
- From: "Al Mulnick" <amulnick_No_SPAM@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 7 Jul 2005 12:48:43 -0400
Doesn't matter at all. By default Exchange can deal with delivering mail
this way. However, if you have only one inbound, it seems odd to me that
both would be allowed to send outbound. Not terribly odd, just odd.
Al
"AM" <AM@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:4CE2208E-2D02-4D26-9749-BA2BBD3DC842@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Does it matter for outbound mail routing, conceivably both servers could
> deliver email themselves, is there a downside to this rather then having
> one
> server deliver email?
>
> AM
>
> "Al Mulnick" wrote:
>
>> Inbound routing: Exchange will take care of that. It knows where the
>> user
>> mailboxes are located and will route accordingly.
>> Outbound routing: You may want to consider configuring a connector to
>> control the routing to the internet. See the help files for more
>> information
>> about connectors.
>>
>> Al
>>
>>
>> "AM" <AM@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
>> news:D7DB20A4-88F1-48A4-A440-757A3C5E21FA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> > We have to exchange servers in the same domain and same site at two
>> > different
>> > locations. Server A will be receiving email from the internet, how will
>> > the
>> > messages get routed to users whose mailboxes are on server B at a
>> > different
>> > physical site? How will outbound mail flow? Do we need to setup mail
>> > routing
>> > and if so how?
>> >
>> > AM
>>
>>
>>
.
- References:
- Mail routing
- From: AM
- Re: Mail routing
- From: Al Mulnick
- Re: Mail routing
- From: AM
- Mail routing
- Prev by Date: Re: MX Records
- Next by Date: exchange 2000 when dead domain
- Previous by thread: Re: Mail routing
- Next by thread: SPAM and Virus problem
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|