Re: HT and Edge Design in Exchange 2007
- From: "Bharat Suneja [MVP]" <bharat@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 19 Feb 2007 09:12:35 -0800
If location B doesn't have any internet connectivity but has all the
Exchange servers, and location A has the internet but no Exchange servers,
it seems you have little choice. Either you setup Edge in location B and
configure your firewall in location A to forward SMTP to it over your
internal network, or you locate it in location A and have it talk to Hubs in
location B.
Edge servers can be configured to forward mail anywhere (including to other
AD Forests/messaging systems that don't use Exchange), and to any AD Site.
No significant impact as such - you're probably doing something similar to
get inbound mail to your Exchange servers.
--
Bharat Suneja
MVP - Exchange
www.zenprise.com
NEW blog location:
exchangepedia.com/blog
----------------------------------------------
"Jesus Martin" <jesus.martin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:uZryySEVHHA.3652@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Hi All,
Customer has 2 locations, location A is connected to the Internet and
location B is not. Location A and B are connected with 10 Mbps links.
Customer doesnt want to implement any Exchange Server at the location with
the Internet connection because all mailboxes/adminitrators are in
location B
My question is: Can we configure the Edge Server to send all the client
requests to the CAS/HT servers in the location B?
What could be the impact of deploying this model?
Thanks
.
- References:
- HT and Edge Design in Exchange 2007
- From: Jesus Martin
- HT and Edge Design in Exchange 2007
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