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Get the knowledge you need to deploy a top-quality Exchange service
The latest release of Microsoft's messaging system allows for easier access to e-mail, voicemail, and calendars from a variety of devices and any location while also giving users more control and freeing up administrators to perform more critical tasks. This innovative new field guide starts with key concepts of Microsoft Exchange Server 2013 and then moves through the recommended practices and processes that are necessary to deploy a top-quality Exchange service.
Focuses on the Exchange ecosystem rather than just the features and functions of the Exchange product
Focuses on scenarios facing real customers and explains how problems can be solved and requirements met
Zooms in on both on-premises deployments as well as Exchange Online cloud deployments with Office 365
Helps you thoroughly master the new version with step-by-step instruction on how to install, configure, and manage this multifaceted collaboration system
Whether you're upgrading from Exchange Server 2010 or earlier, installing for the first time, or migrating from another system, this step-by-step guide provides the hands-on instruction, practical application, and real-world advice you need.
Autorentext
Nathan Winters is an Exchange Technical Specialist at
Microsoft UK. He has worked with many of the UK's largest companies
across all sectors, helping them understand the value of their
messaging platform and deploy Microsoft Exchange and Lync Server.
Before joining Microsoft, he founded the Microsoft Messaging and
Mobility User Group UK. He is a four-time MVP for Exchange Server
and a regular speaker at major industry conferences in both the
U.S. and UK. Neil Johnson is a Senior Consultant with
Microsoft Consulting Services in the UK. He has over 16 years of
experience in enterprise design and architecture, and is the author
of the Exchange Client Network Bandwidth Calculator and the
Jetstress Field Guide. Neil can often be found presenting at
external events such as TechEd or Microsoft internal product
events. Nicolas Blank has more than 15 years of experience
with various versions of Exchange, and is the founder of and
Messaging Architect at NBConsult. A recipient of the MVP award for
Exchange since 2007, Nicolas is a Microsoft Certified Master in
Exchange and presents regularly at conferences in the U.S., Europe,
and Africa.
Zusammenfassung
**Get the knowledge you need to deploy a top-quality Exchange service
**The latest release of Microsoft's messaging system allows for easier access to e-mail, voicemail, and calendars from a variety of devices and any location while also giving users more control and freeing up administrators to perform more critical tasks. This innovative new field guide starts with key concepts of Microsoft Exchange Server 2013 and then moves through the recommended practices and processes that are necessary to deploy a top-quality Exchange service.
Inhalt
Introduction xix
Chapter 1 • Business, Functional, and Technical Requirements 1
Building the Foundation for Requirements 1
Establishing Project Roles 2
Getting Started with the Exchange Design 2
Requirements as Part of a Larger Framework 3
Understanding the Types of Requirements 4
Business Requirements 4
Technical Requirements 6
Constraints 7
Assumptions 8
Requirements Elicitation 8
Summary 9
Chapter 2 • Exchange Design Fundamentals 11
Introducing Design Documents 11
From Requirements to Design 11
No Single Way to Implement Exchange 12
How Much Detail Is Enough? 12
Section Guide 12
Section Index 13
Executive Summary 13
Business Requirements 14
Summary of Vision and Scope 14
Functional Specification 14
Architecture Summary 14
Compliance 15
External Publishing 15
Migration or Legacy Integration Requirements 15
Interoperation with Third-Party Applications 16
High-Availability Strategy and Requirements 16
Transport Design 17
Client Access Design 18
Mailbox Design 18
VM Requirements 19
Bandwidth Requirements 20
Exchange Solution Sizing 20
Moving Forward 24
A Living Document 24
How Do You Know When to Finish Designing? 24
Overengineering 25
Keep It Simple 25
Future Proofing 25
The Microsoft Way 25
Chapter 3 • Exchange Architectural Concepts 27
The Evolution of Exchange 2013 27
Exchange 2000/2003 28
Exchange 2007 30
Exchange 2010 34
Exchange 2013 39
Discontinued Features 42
Exchange 2013 Editions 42
Transport 42
Management 44
Role Separation 45
High Availability 54
Exchange Online Integration 57
Summary 57
Chapter 4 • Defining a Highly Available Messaging Solution 59
Defining Availability 59
Defining Availability Components 60
Defining the Cost of Downtime 62
Planning for Failure 63
Defi ning Terms for Availability 65
Service-Level Agreements 65
RPO and RTO 65
Defi ning High Availability and Disaster Recovery 66
Achieving High Availability 67
Building an Available Messaging System 69
Transport 69
Namespace Planning 69
Exchange Hybrid Deployment 72
Database Availability Group Planning 73
Summary 78
Chapter 5 • Designing a Successful Exchange Storage Solution 79
A Brief History of Exchange Storage 79
Exchange 4055 79
Exchange 20002003 80
Exchange 2007 80
Exchange 2010 81
Storage Changes in Exchange 2013 82
Issue 1: Storage Capacity Increasing 82
Issue 2: Mechanical Disk IOPS Performance Not Increasing 83
Issue 3: JBOD Solutions Require Operational Maturity 85
Issue 4: Mailbox Capacity Requirements Increasing 86
Issue 5: Everything Needs to Be Cheaper 86
Storage Improvements in Exchange Server 2013 87
Automatic Database Reseed 88
Multiple Databases for Each JBOD Disk Spindle 88
Designing a Successful Exchange Storage Solution 90
Requirements Gathering 90
Making Sense of the Exchange Mailbox Server Role Requirements Calculator 93
Selecting the Right Storage Hardware 95
Storage Validation Using Jetstress 96
Summary 98
Chapter 6 • Management 101
Trends in Management of Platforms 101
Role-Based Access Control 102
RBAC Overview 103 Understanding the Components of the RBAC Permissions Mode...