Introduction to Exchange 2003 Server - Routing Groups
Exchange 2003 can easily route both internal and external email. For routing email within your Exchange Organization,
the best choice is a Routing Group Connector; while internet email is best served by an SMTP connector. X.400 Connectors are used to transfer email between Exchange and older types of email systems.
Both Active Directory's sites and Exchange's routing groups are physical entities. My point is that planning and configuring routing groups is separate from logical structures like OUs or even domains.
The situation
with routing groups is that the Exchange servers are on different subnets, separated by routers. There is often a suspicion of a slow link, or an unreliable connection between routing groups. However, even if you have high
speed links, there are benefits in organizing servers into routing groups. For example, you gain control over the message size and timing. You can also restrict the users and addresses that can
send email through that connector. Such control is not possible when all Exchange 2003 servers are in the same routing group.
Guy Recommends: SolarWinds LANSurveyor
LANSurveyor will produce a neat diagram of your network topology. But that's
just the start;
LANSurveyor can
create an inventory of the hardware and software
of your machines and network devices. Other neat features include dynamic
update for when you add new devices to your network. I also love the ability to export
the diagrams
to Microsoft Visio.
Finally, Guy bets that if you take a free trial of LANSurveyor then you will
find a device on your network that you had forgotten about, or someone else
installed without you realizing!
What surprises newcomers is that they cannot find the Routing Groups folder in Exchange System Manager. The reason could be that it's hidden. So check by navigating to the top of the
interface, then right click Exchange Organization, properties, tick Display Routing Groups. Simply re-open the Exchange System Manager and now you should see the Routing Groups folder.
Once the Routing Group folder is visible, you are ready to create a second Routing Group. Amazingly, and slightly unnervingly, you can drag and drop an Exchange server object into the second routing group.
Now the scene is set for you to create a connector. This process may sound tricky, but it is actually an easy configuration task with the Exchange System Manager. Once you join two routing
groups, the email can start flowing between the servers in different routing groups.
If you wish to
connect two of your own Exchange 2003 servers in different routing groups, then the Routing Group Connector would be your first choice. Whereas, to transfer email to and from the internet,
you need an SMTP type of connector. The only use I have for the X.400 connectors is for troubleshooting or connecting to ancient SMTP messaging systems.
Routing Group Connector
The Routing Group Connector
is native to Exchange 200x. It's suspiciously like the site connector in Exchange 5.5, in fact you
can transfer email to Exchange 5.5 using this connector. Technically, the Routing Group Connector is a one way street, that is why you always need a pair, one for each direction (inbound
and outbound). Creating a Routing Group Connector is straightforward, and the wizard prompts you to generate a corresponding connector in the other group.
Bridgehead is a key concept where you have more than one server in each routing group. All the mail in one group is physically routed through the bridgehead server.
Your bridgehead options are extremely flexible. Either you nominate one server on each side of the connector as a bridgehead, or all servers can be bridgeheads.
From the connector, click the Remote Bridgehead
tab to check servers in the other group.
Exchange SMTP Connector
The SMTP connector is essential for internet email. You could also setup an SMTP connector as an alternative or backup to the Routing Group Connectors. Actually, the Virtual Server have
their own built-in SMTP connector, but it's best to create a configurable connector here in the Routing Groups folder. See much more about SMTP connectors
here.
♠
X.400 Connector
X.400 connectors are reliable, but slow. My advice is to confine the X.400 to troubleshooting when all the other connectors fail to transfer the email. However, there is one other possibility, you need to connect to
another (old) X.400 messaging system.
There are two flavours of Microsoft Exchange 2003 X.400 connector, TCP and X25.
Guy Recommends:
The SolarWinds Exchange Monitor
Here is a
free tool to monitor your Exchange Server. Download and
install the utility, then inspect your mail queues, monitor the Exchange
server's memory, confirm there is enough disk space and check the CPU
utilization. This is the real deal - there is no catch. SolarWinds
provides this fully-functioning product for free, as part of their commitment to
supporting the network management community.
Summary Exchange Server 2003 Routing - Component and Terminology Check
Routing Groups - Folder holding a bunch of servers.
Connectors - Configurable 'pipes' that join the servers in different routing groups.
Routing Group Connector - Native Exchange method to transfer email to other servers.
SMTP Connector - Internet connector.
X.400 Connector - Little used method of transmitting email messages.
Bridgehead - One or more servers that have physical links to servers in other routing groups.
Routing Group Master - Co-ordinates routing information to all servers in the group
Guy Recommends: SolarWinds Engineer's Toolset v10
The Engineer's Toolset v10 provides a
comprehensive console of utilities for troubleshooting computer problems. Guy says
it helps me monitor what's occurring on the network, and the tools
teaches me more about how the system literally operates.
There are so many good gadgets, it's like having free rein of a
sweetshop. Thankfully the utilities are displayed logically: monitoring, discovery, diagnostic, and Cisco tools.
Download your copy of the Engineer's Toolset v 10
Learn how to find settings in the Exchange System Manager. Advice configuring your Exchange Server. Tips on how to get the most from your Exchange 2003 server.
Over 50 printer friendly pages Word and PDF format