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Microsoft Exchange Server 2013: Design, Deploy and Deliver an Enterprise Messaging Solution [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 416 pages, height x width x depth: 236x183x25 mm, weight: 590 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Aug-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Sybex Inc.,U.S.
  • ISBN-10: 1118541901
  • ISBN-13: 9781118541906
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 416 pages, height x width x depth: 236x183x25 mm, weight: 590 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Aug-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Sybex Inc.,U.S.
  • ISBN-10: 1118541901
  • ISBN-13: 9781118541906
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Describes the key concepts, practices, and processes of Microsoft Exchange Server 2013, covering such topics as architectural concepts, management, compliance, and Exchange clients.

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.

Introduction xix
Chapter 1 Business, Functional, and Technical Requirements
1(10)
Building the Foundation for Requirements
1(1)
Establishing Project Roles
2(1)
Getting Started with the Exchange Design
2(1)
Requirements as Part of a Larger Framework
3(1)
Understanding the Types of Requirements
4(4)
Business Requirements
4(2)
Technical Requirements
6(1)
Constraints
7(1)
Assumptions
8(1)
Requirements Elicitation
8(1)
Summary
9(2)
Chapter 2 Exchange Design Fundamentals
11(16)
Introducing Design Documents
11(1)
From Requirements to Design
11(1)
No Single Way to Implement Exchange
12(1)
How Much Detail Is Enough?
12(1)
Section Guide
12(12)
Section Index
13(1)
Executive Summary
13(1)
Business Requirements
14(1)
Summary of Vision and Scope
14(1)
Functional Specification
14(1)
Architecture Summary
14(1)
Compliance
15(1)
External Publishing
15(1)
Migration or Legacy Integration Requirements
15(1)
Interoperation with Third-Party Applications
16(1)
High-Availability Strategy and Requirements
16(1)
Transport Design
17(1)
Client Access Design
18(1)
Mailbox Design
18(1)
VM Requirements
19(1)
Bandwidth Requirements
20(1)
Exchange Solution Sizing
20(4)
Moving Forward
24(3)
A Living Document
24(1)
How Do You Know When to Finish Designing?
24(1)
Overengineering
25(1)
Keep It Simple
25(1)
Future Proofing
25(1)
The Microsoft Way
25(2)
Chapter 3 Exchange Architectural Concepts
27(32)
The Evolution of Exchange 2013
27(12)
Exchange 2000/2003
28(2)
Exchange 2007
30(4)
Exchange 2010
34(5)
Exchange 2013
39(18)
Discontinued Features
42(1)
Exchange 2013 Editions
42(1)
Transport
42(2)
Management
44(1)
Role Separation
45(9)
High Availability
54(3)
Exchange Online Integration
57(1)
Summary
57(2)
Chapter 4 Defining a Highly Available Messaging Solution
59(20)
Defining Availability
59(3)
Defining Availability Components
60(2)
Defining the Cost of Downtime
62(1)
Planning for Failure
63(2)
Defining Terms for Availability
65(2)
Service-Level Agreements
65(1)
RPO and RTO
65(1)
Defining High Availability and Disaster Recovery
66(1)
Achieving High Availability
67(2)
Building an Available Messaging System
69(9)
Transport
69(1)
Namespace Planning
69(3)
Exchange Hybrid Deployment
72(1)
Database Availability Group Planning
73(5)
Summary
78(1)
Chapter 5 Designing a Successful Exchange Storage Solution
79(22)
A Brief History of Exchange Storage
79(3)
Exchange 4.0-5.5
79(1)
Exchange 2000-2003
80(1)
Exchange 2007
80(1)
Exchange 2010
81(1)
Storage Changes in Exchange 2013
82(5)
Issue 1 Storage Capacity Increasing
82(1)
Issue 2 Mechanical Disk IOPS Performance Not Increasing
83(2)
Issue 3 JBOD Solutions Require Operational Maturity
85(1)
Issue 4 Mailbox Capacity Requirements Increasing
86(1)
Issue 5 Everything Needs to Be Cheaper
86(1)
Storage Improvements in Exchange Server 2013
87(3)
Automatic Database Reseed
88(1)
Multiple Databases for Each JBOD Disk Spindle
88(2)
Designing a Successful Exchange Storage Solution
90(8)
Requirements Gathering
90(3)
Making Sense of the Exchange Mailbox Server Role Requirements Calculator
93(2)
Selecting the Right Storage Hardware
95(1)
Storage Validation Using Jetstress
96(2)
Summary
98(3)
Chapter 6 Management
101(36)
Trends in Management of Platforms
101(1)
Role-Based Access Control
102(25)
RBAC Overview
103(1)
Understanding the Components of the RBAC Permissions Model
104(1)
Planning Your Management Strategy
105(2)
Understanding Built-in Management Roles, Role Groups, and Role Association
107(4)
Role Assignments
111(1)
Under the Hood
112(1)
Creating New Roles
113(1)
Creating New Management Scopes
114(1)
Creating and Managing Role Groups
115(1)
Creating New Role Assignments
115(2)
Understanding Role Assignment Policies
117(2)
Applying Business Logic Using Unscoped Top-Level Roles
119(2)
Reporting Effective Permissions and Cmdlet Usage
121(2)
Understanding Split Permissions
123(2)
Using EAC to Manage RBAC
125(2)
Administration
127(9)
The Exchange Management Tools
131(1)
What's New in EAC?
132(2)
Securing Access to EAC
134(1)
Hybrid Deployments and EAC
135(1)
PowerShell and Exchange Management Shell
135(1)
Summary
136(1)
Chapter 7 Exchange 2013 Hybrid Coexistence with Office 365
137(22)
What Is Exchange Hybrid?
137(3)
High-Level Infrastructure Overview
137(3)
Why Consider Exchange Hybrid?
140(3)
Benefits of Exchange Online
140(1)
Trade-offs of Exchange Online
141(2)
Design Considerations
143(13)
Solution Requirements
143(1)
Solution Design
144(1)
Proof of Concept
145(1)
Deployment Planning and Preparation
145(5)
Common Deployment Hurdles
150(6)
Summary
156(3)
Chapter 8 Designing a Secure Exchange Solution
159(40)
Why and What to Secure?
159(3)
What Does Security Mean?
159(1)
How Real Is the Threat Today?
160(1)
What Is Necessary to Secure?
161(1)
Handling Security Conversations
162(8)
The Challenges
162(2)
Trustworthy Computing
164(6)
Designing a Secure Exchange Solution
170(13)
Protecting against Malware and Spam
170(7)
Protecting against Unauthorized Network Access
177(6)
Protecting against Unauthorized Data Access
183(14)
Security of Data in Transit
184(2)
Security of Data at Rest
186(7)
Security of Data in Long-Term Storage
193(1)
Auditing and Reporting
193(4)
Summary
197(2)
Chapter 9 Compliance
199(32)
Overview of Messaging Compliance
199(1)
Regulations
200(3)
Designing Your Policies
203(3)
Discussions with the Legal Department
203(1)
Typical Requirements
203(2)
Compliance Policy
205(1)
Compliance Solutions
206(23)
Exchange Functionality
206(3)
Exchange 2013 Compliance Scenarios
209(20)
Communication
229(1)
Summary
229(2)
Chapter 10 Collaborating with Exchange
231(30)
What Is Collaboration?
231(1)
Basic Collaboration with Email
232(3)
The Client Experience
232(1)
Helping Users Learn to Collaborate
233(1)
The Address Book: a Place to Find and Get to Know People
234(1)
Shared Mailboxes
235(3)
Creating and Managing Shared Mailboxes
236(1)
Automatic Mailbox Mapping
237(1)
Accessing Shared Mailboxes from Mobile Devices
237(1)
Resource Mailboxes
238(2)
Implementing Resource Mailboxes
238(2)
Public Folders
240(2)
Structure of Modern Public Folders
241(1)
Distribution Groups
242(3)
Site Mailboxes
245(14)
Implementing Site Mailboxes
247(1)
SharePoint 2013 Prerequisites
247(1)
Configuring the SharePoint Server
248(7)
Preparing the Exchange 2013 Server
255(1)
Creating and Configuring a Connection from SharePoint to Exchange
256(3)
Configuring the Connection from Exchange to SharePoint
259(1)
Summary
259(2)
Chapter 11 Extending Exchange
261(38)
Accessing Exchange Programmatically
261(3)
Where Do I Start?
262(1)
Taking EWS for a Test Drive without Writing Any Code
263(1)
How Do You Connect Your Code to Exchange?
263(1)
Where Do You Run Your Code?
263(1)
Considerations for the Cloud
263(1)
Choosing the Right API for Exchange Development in Exchange 2013
264(4)
Other Exchange APIs
268(1)
Exchange Web Services in Exchange 2013
268(22)
EWS Managed API
269(1)
Web Services Description Language Proxy Objects
269(1)
Raw SOAP
269(1)
Connection and Authentication
270(4)
Accessing Mailbox Data
274(4)
Searching for Items
278(1)
In-Place eDiscovery in Exchange 2013
279(4)
Creating Items Using Exchange Web Services
283(3)
Other EWS features
286(4)
Migrating a CDO 1.2 VBS Script to a PowerShell EWS Managed API Script
290(2)
Connecting to the Target Exchange Mailbox
290(1)
Establishing a Connection to the Mailbox's Contacts Folder
290(1)
Filtering the Contents of the Contacts Folder for Those That Contain a Photo
291(1)
Downloading the Contact Photo Attachment
291(1)
Mail Apps for Outlook and the Outlook Web App
292(4)
How Mail Apps Work
293(1)
JavaScript API for Office
294(1)
Permission Levels in Mail Apps
294(1)
Using Exchange Web Services within Mail Apps
295(1)
Getting Started with a Mail App
296(1)
Installing a Mail App
296(1)
Best Practices When Writing EWS Code
296(1)
Exchange, the Microsoft Stack, and Other Third-Party Products
297(1)
Summary
297(2)
Chapter 12 Exchange Clients
299(22)
Types of Exchange Client
299(6)
Messaging Application Programming Interface (MAPI/RPC)
300(1)
Exchange Web Services
300(1)
POP/IMAP
301(1)
Web Browsers
302(1)
Exchange ActiveSync
303(1)
Collaboration Data Objects
304(1)
Why Does Client Choice Matter?
305(5)
User Experience
305(1)
Supportability
306(3)
Regulatory Compliance
309(1)
Organization Security Compliance
309(1)
Performing a Client Inventory
310(3)
Messaging API (MAPI/RPC)
310(1)
Web Clients (EWS, EAS, and OWA)
311(1)
POP3 and IMAP4
312(1)
Scripting
313(1)
Design Considerations
313(6)
Supportability
313(1)
Security
314(1)
Client Performance
315(2)
Network Usage
317(1)
Exchange 2013 User Throttling
318(1)
Summary
319(2)
Chapter 13 Planning Your Deployment
321(10)
Exchange 2013 Information Resources
321(1)
Required Documentation
321(1)
Preparing Active Directory
322(1)
Extending the Schema
322(1)
Creating or Updating the Exchange Organization
323(1)
Preparing or Updating Active Directory Domains
323(1)
Designing a Rollout Process
323(2)
Installing into an Existing Organization
324(1)
SMTP Considerations for Existing Organizations
325(1)
Certificate Considerations
325(1)
Choosing a Load Balancer
326(1)
Making the Choice
326(1)
Deploying Operating System-Based Antivirus Programs
327(1)
Firewalls and Exchange
327(1)
Publishing Exchange to the Internet
328(1)
Preparing Clients
328(1)
Preproduction Load Testing
329(1)
User Acceptance Testing
329(1)
Summary
330(1)
Chapter 14 Migrating to Exchange 2013
331(24)
Inter-Org Migrations
331(5)
Outlook Client Reconfiguration
331(1)
Availability Data Sharing
332(1)
Global Address List Synchronization
332(1)
Public Folder Data Synchronization
333(1)
Mail Flow
333(1)
Mailbox Permissions
334(1)
Mobile Device Reconfiguration
334(1)
External URL Publishing
335(1)
Exchange Application Integration
335(1)
Offline Address Book
336(1)
Distribution Groups
336(1)
Intra-Org Migrations
336(2)
Outlook Client Reconfiguration
337(1)
Availability Data Sharing
337(1)
Global Address List Synchronization
337(1)
Public Folder Data Synchronization
337(1)
Mail Flow and Mailbox Permissions
337(1)
Mobile Device Reconfiguration
338(1)
External URL Publishing
338(1)
Exchange Application Integration
338(1)
Offline Address Book
338(1)
Distribution Groups
338(1)
Moving Mailboxes
338(5)
Mailbox Replication Service
339(1)
Preparing for Inter-Org Mailbox Moves
340(2)
Storage Capacity
342(1)
Content Indexing
343(1)
Modern Public Folder Data Migration
343(3)
Intra-Org Migration to Exchange Server 2013
345(1)
Foreign Systems
346(2)
Lotus Notes
346(1)
Novell GroupWise
347(1)
Other IMAP
347(1)
Legacy Exchange Migrations
348(1)
Version-to-Version Upgrade
348(1)
Double-Hop Inter-Org Migration
349(1)
Migrating to Office 365
349(1)
Migrating to Exchange Server 2010
349(1)
Common Migration Problems
349(4)
Failure to Get Business Support
350(1)
Insufficient Planning
350(1)
Incorrect End-User Expectations
351(1)
Seamless vs. Velocity
351(1)
Application Integration
352(1)
Compliance
353(1)
Migration Improvements in Exchange 2013
353(1)
Batch Moves
353(1)
Migration Endpoints
353(1)
Summary
354(1)
Chapter 15 Operating and Monitoring Exchange Server 2013
355(18)
Monitoring
356(1)
Alerting
357(1)
Reporting
358(7)
Types of System Availability
358(1)
Trending
358(7)
Inventory
365(2)
Monitoring Enhancements in Exchange 2013
367(4)
Managed Availability
367(2)
Workload Management
369(2)
Summary
371(2)
Index 373
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.