
This tutorial demonstrates how to use a text file with a list of mailbox names as the input for an Exchange Server 2007 or 2010 mailbox migration using PowerShell.
Microsoft Exchange Server News - Tips - Tutorials

This tutorial demonstrates how to use a text file with a list of mailbox names as the input for an Exchange Server 2007 or 2010 mailbox migration using PowerShell.

For an Exchange administrator there are a lot of different situations in which they may need to know how many mailboxes are in the organization. Fortunately this is made easy in Exchange Server 2010 with a few simple PowerShell commands.

In Exchange Server 2003 the last logon time for a mailbox was visible in the Exchange System Manager. For Exchange Server 2007 and 2010 the last logon time was removed from the Exchange Management Console, and so we need to use a differnet method to find this information.

An Exchange Server 2010 administrator may want to find out if any of the mailbox databases in the organization have been configured for circular logging. In this tutorial I’ll demonstrate how to find the mailbox database and how to reconfigure them all using the Exchange Management Shell.

n Exchange Server 2010 the Exchange Management Console doesn’t provide a way to visually locate mailboxes that have no storage quota, or mailboxes that have a non-standard storage quota configured. However you can find mailbox storage quota settings quickly using the Exchange Management Shell.

The Microsoft Exchange Team blog posted about an issue people are experiencing in the field in which certificate revocation status check failures prevent you from assigning a certificate to any Exchange services. Here I demonstrate how to use proxy settings to work around the problem in some scenarios.
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