What should you do?
You are the Exchange administrator for your company. The Exchange organization contains three servers that run Exchange Server 2003.
All users send and receive e-mail messages by using Microsoft Outlook.
One Exchange server is configured as a bridgehead server for Internet e-mail.
The other two servers are configured as mailbox servers. Each mailbox server contains one storage group that contains one public store and two mailbox stores.
Each mailbox server has two CPUs and 1 GB of RAM.
Users report that Outlook requires more than one minute to open. Each e-mail massage requires more than two minutes to send or open.
You monitor the mailbox servers and discover that the primary bottleneck is insufficient RAM.
You add an additional 1 GB of RAM to each mailbox server. Users report no change in the performance of Outlook.
You need to modify each mailbox server to maximize its performance.
What should you do?
Which two actions should you perform?
You are the Exchange administrator for your company. The network currently consists of a two-node Exchange Server 2003 active/passive cluster.
Three hundred HTTP client computers connect to the Exchange servers by using SSL.
Users report that the response time of their Microsoft Outlook Web Access screen refreshes is unacceptably slow.
You add two more servers to the existing Exchange environment.
You need to ensure that your HTTP client computers have redundancy and acceptable client response times.
Which two actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution, choose two.)
What should you do?
You are the Exchange administrator for your company. The network consists of a single Active Directory domain.
The mixed-mode Exchange organization consists of two administrative groups named London and Paris. The company’s Paris site contains a computer that runs Exchange Server 5.5.
The London administrative group contains a computer named Mail1 that runs Exchange Server 5.5 and computer named Mail2 that runs Exchange 2000 server.
Mail2 fails and is replaced with a new computer named Mail2 that runs Exchange Server 2003. You create an SMTP connector on Mail3.
When you view the site configuration in the Exchange Administrator account on Mail1, you notice that the new SMTP connector is not shown.
You need to ensure that configuration changes on the Exchange server 2003 computers are replicated to the Exchange server 5.5 computers.
What should you do?
What are two possible ways to achieve this goal?
You are the Exchange administrator for your company. The company’s network consists of a single Active Directory forest.
The forest contains three domains named Domain1, Domain2, and Domain3. The functional level of the domains is Windows 2000 mixed.
Domain1 contains a single Exchange 2000 Server computer named Exch1. Domain2 contains a single Exchange 2000 Server computer named Exch2.
Domain3 contains a single Exchange Server 5.5 computer named Exch3, which runs Windows 2000 Server.
Exchange 2000 Server Active Directory Connector (ADC) is installed on Exch1 and Exch2. There is a two-way connection agreement on Exch1.
This connection agreement replicates changes between Domain1 and Exch3. There is also a two-way connection agreement on Exch2. This connection agreement replicates changes between Domain2 and Exch3.
You upgrade ADC on Exch1 to Exchange server 2003 ADC. The connection agreement updates and replicates normally.
Then you notice that the connection agreements on Exch2 stop replicating.
You need to ensure that all connection agreements are replicating properly.
What are two possible ways to achieve this goal? (Each correct answer presents a complete solution. Choose two)
What should you do?
You are the Exchange administrator for your company. The company operates three offices.
The network consists of a single Active Directory domain. Each office has one domain controller that runs Microsoft Windows Server 2003.
You plan to deploy one Exchange Server 2003 computer in each office. Each Exchange server must be placed in a separate administrative group.
The forest and the domain are already prepared to support Exchange Server 2003.
When you try to install the first Exchange server, you discover that you cannot choose an administrative group in which to place the server. You cancel the installation.
You need to ensure that you can choose an administrative group during installation.
What should you do?
What should you do?
Your network consists of two Active Directory domains named contoso.com and region1.contoso.com.
The Exchange organization contains Exchange Server 2003 servers in both domains.
You create a global security group named Sales in the contoso.com domain. Members of the Sales group access a shared folder named Folder1.
You need to ensure that users who have mailboxes on the Exchange servers can send e-mail messages to the Sales group. The solution must allow members of the Sales group to access Folder1.
What should you do?
What should you do?
You have an Exchange Server 2003 organization.
You create a new recipient policy named Sales_pol. You apply the policy to users in a department named Sales,
After one day you discover that a user from the Sales department named User1 fails to receive the policy settings.
All other users from the Sales department receive the policy settings.
You need to ensure that User1 receives the policy settings.
What should you do?
What should you do?
Your network consists of a single Active Directory domain named contoso.local. You deploy Exchange Server 2003 on the network.
You need to ensure that all mailbox-enabled users are assigned a SMTP e-mail address that uses the firstName.lastName@contoso.com format.
What should you do?
What should you do?
You are the Exchange administrator for your company. The Exchange organization contains 10 servers that run Exchange Server 2003, All users send and receive e-mail messages by using Microsoft Outlook.
Your company has many different departments and a total of 10,000 users. For each department, management asks you to create one address list that contains all users in that department.
Management also asks you to create a confidential address list. The membership of the confidential address list will consist of several users from every department.
For each department, you create an address list that uses the department attribute.
Now you need to create the confidential address list. You must ensure that members of the Managers group are the only user; who can identify the members of the list by using outlook.
You must not affect any existing e-mail functionality.
What should you do?
What audit should you enable?
Your network contains a single Exchange Server 2003 server.
You have a mail-enabled group named Group1. You need to audit changes to Group1’s membership.
What audit should you enable?