Thanks Speshalyst, I merged the tape and was able to restore by session to "the original location" - since as far as Arcserve is concerned, this is the same server (same name, organization, site).
Regards,
Kuria surrounding yourself with dwarfs does not make you a giant.
This is my scenario. I have been doing an Arcserve backup of my Exchange 5.5 using the Exchange Agent. I now need to transfer the Email service to another server. I have reinstalled Exchange according to the MS specifications (same name et al) and tested that configuration using an offline...
Hello there, I am running Arcserve 2000 SP2 with all the patches on an NT box Compaq DL760 2 processors 1GB RAM. I backup onto a Compaq DLT Array 40/80 GB. I backup 10 servers over the network and all seems to be fine. I have one troublesome server that runs our Intranet. Sometimes I ran backup...
Well, I have done it couple of times and no problems. The worst that can happen is that the text is not appended. No possiblity for server crash or anything nasty like that.
All the Best.
kuria surrounding yourself with dwarfs does not make you a giant.
XP is reputed to also have some residents in the Boot sector that might stop you from installing win2K even with formatting. Do FDISK with the MBR option to clear the Master Boot Record. surrounding yourself with dwarfs does not make you a giant.
clock Tools, Services, Microsoft Exchange Server, Properties, Advanced and click on Add under Open these Additional Mailboxes.This works for my Exch 5.5 with Outlook 2000. Hope it does for you.
Kuria
surrounding yourself with dwarfs does not make you a giant.
You might need to right-click on the message (without opening it) and click Options. Outlook will display the headers for the mail and from there you might find out where it came from. I am not sure whether this works as I don't have and Inbound failure mail in my inbox. I have over 500 users...
The archived file is a normal pst and you can set it up and open it like a normal pst.
Kuria surrounding yourself with dwarfs does not make you a giant.
If you open the mailbox properties on the server, on the advanced tab, you will find an option of hiding the mailbox from the GAL. this means those who know the address can send mail and it will go through but your local users will not be seeing the duplicate entries in their Outlook...
There virtually no implications specific to Exchange as far as changing IP address is concerned.This is of course assuming that the MX record at your ISP does not point to the IP address you are changing. You also need cater for how the clients on your network connect to the Exch server ie, do...
I really don't understand your problem. Are these users on your LAN or are they working from remote locations? Do they have email accounts on your Exchange server?
With this info I might be able to help you.
It is posible to add the disclaimer using the IMSEXT.DLL in Resource Kit but as for adding each users email address and Name as a variable, you will have to use Outlook autosignature - Microsoft is not that bright.
Kuria
Yes this update does not allow you to receive any potentially harmful attachments and that is about all the attachments you get. Uninstall it from the control Panel, add/remove programs.
Kuria
That is a bit complicated because Outlook saves the signature file to the local hard disk and this signature is specific to the Outlook Profile that is in use. In this case it will be a bit hard to share it within the GAL. However, if you are looking at applying a standard message to all...
A distribution list is treated as custom recipient by exchange. It will therefore be in your Directory Database but not in the information store as it does not store any mail. It just redirects the mail to the relevant mailboxes.
In other words, you can regain mail sent to a DL through restore...
If the user's mail was being stored in a pst, then all this information that you seek will be found there. Just locate the pst and add it as a service to your Outlook profile - hoping the user had not protected it with a password in which case you are at loss.
If the mail was being stored in the...
a typical installation will have your internal email flowing fine. For exteral email as you might have discovered by now, you just need to set up an Internet Mail Service. If you need more info, let me know.
Regards.
kuria
Your scenario is a bit crazy but try this, configure the exchange server's default gateway to be the IP address of the Proxy Server and use the ISP's DNS servers as the DNS servers on the Exchange Server. Sounds to me like Exchange does not know where to route your mail through. If this works...
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