You need 1 Enterprise RUS and 1 RUS for each domain that has Exchange
recipients.
Just a thought. Do you really need 20 Admin Groups? It sounds like quite a
lot for an organization of your size.
Remember that an AG is an administrative boundary and not a messgae routing
boundary.
Re: Exchange in a Child domain ... Service (RUS) problem. ... Do your recipients have valid e-mail addresses, ... MVP - Exchange... in the child domain on the parent domain Exchange Server.... (microsoft.public.exchange.setup)
Hiding recipients from Global Address List Exchange 2k ... I have been through the process to hide recipients from the GAL in Exchange 2k, however the recipient is still visible in the GAL when viewed in Outlook. ... I have forced the RUS to perform an update but no joy.... (microsoft.public.exchange.admin)
Re: Problem w. RUS in one subdomain ... Do you mean that after you rebuild RUS, there is a delay before email ... Or the RUS does not stamp... I would like to let you know that it is necessary to run Exchange setup... whether there is an Exchange 2000/2003 server in the domain as Exchange ... (microsoft.public.exchange.admin)
Re: Problem w. RUS in one subdomain ... Coming back to office this morning and checking Exchange server logs and user properties, it looks like everything is in top order now:). ... Do you mean that after you rebuild RUS, there is a delay before email addresses are stamped into newly-created objects? ... Generally, when we create a new mailbox-enabled user in Exchange 2003 Server, the Recipient Update Service in Exchange will try to stamp the e-mail addresses to it, and this procedure may take several minutes. ... (microsoft.public.exchange.admin)
Re: exchange doesnt create new email ... In ESM, selct the RUS... > rebuild, it would change some email addresses which I have ... >>The Recipient Update Service creates and maintains ... > Exchange, and then ... (microsoft.public.exchange2000.admin)