Re: Move from POP3 Connector to Exchange SMTP
- From: "SuperGumby [SBS MVP]" <not@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 26 Oct 2007 08:39:56 +1000
The pointer (PTR) record, what you refer to as 'reverse DNS', is not
_necessary_ but it will help remote systems accepting your email rather than
rejecting it as SPAM.
Just to point out. MX records carry a 'weight', the lower the number the
higher the priority. Your record for the SBS needs to be lowest number,
highest priority.
The 'Use DNS to route email' is only used outgoing, you either send directly
to other servers or through a certain server (normally your ISP's), commonly
called a 'smart host'. Whether you need to or not, or whether this is
desirable, has no bearing on your ability to receive by SMTP.
SMTP and the POP connector are not exclusive choices, you can enable 'Use
Exchange' and 'email is delivered directly to my server' while continuing to
use the POP connector, until everything is in place and propogated in DNS.
Using the POP connector and mailboxes at the ISP as a backup is a kludge. It
actually means maintaining a system which you hope to in fact never need. If
forced to I might consider using a 'global' mailbox at the ISP but the fact
is I do not expect SBS to be down for anywhere near the period of time that
would cause email to start bouncing with no backup. If SBS is down I have
bigger problems than accessing email.
mail.example.com may be reused as the backup MX, implemented by whatever
method.
Something many forget about is the SMTP Banner. Google it and you'll see all
sorts of instructions on changing it. I actually don't go as far as what is
advised though ('telnet mickmalloy.dyndns.org 25' to see mine). It should
reflect the public server name. Doing so is quite easy, SBS console,
Advanced Management, First Org (Exch), Servers, SBS, Protocols, SMTP, call
up the properties for the default SMTP Virtual Server, on the delivery tab,
Advanced, change the fully qualified name to sbs.example.com.
Probably the final step is to implement the IMF (Intelligent Message
Filter), but that deserves a thread of it's own.
"TerryM" <TerryM@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:7BE76BCE-0829-48F6-A871-7F63755A5E86@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Hello
We are finally planning on migrating from the POP3 connector to Exchange
SMTP on our SBS 2003 R2 box. But I am not IT pro (just the designated IT
guy), and want to make sure I understand the steps correctly. For this
discussion our domain name is "example.com"
We already have an 'A' record in the form "SBS.Example.com" that points to
the static IP address our our SBS. We use this for remote access.
Please correct me if I am wrong, but all we should need to do is
1 Get our ISP (in our case not the same company that hosts our domain) to
create a Reverse DNS record for our static IP (not sure how this works).
2 Create a new MX record that points to SBS.Example.com with a higher
number priority than the pop service currently has, and wait a few days
for the records to propagate.
3 On the change over day run CEICW and change email delivery to "Use DNS
to route e-mail" and add "Use Exchange (e-mail is delivered directly to my
server)" to the retrieval method.
4 Then promote the new MX record to the top of the heap.
5 Wait a few days then run CEICW again and get rid of the "Use Microsoft
Connector for POP3 Mailboxes" retrieval method.
Is this right?
The only thing I don't know yet is if our domain host offers a backup MX
service. If they do then we could add a lower priority MX record for that
then ditch the old pop MX records?
If we keep the keep our POP3 accounts could this act as a backup service
that would allow us to use there webmail should our server be down for an
extended period?
Do I need to change the CNAME record that currently exists for
"mail.example.com" that points to "mail.domainhost.com" to something else?
Thanks
Terry Mc
.
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