Microsoft Exchange server 2013 design, deploy, and deliver an enterprise messaging solution

Get the knowledge you need to deploy a top-quality Exchange serviceThe 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 pe...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Winters, Nathan (-)
Otros Autores: Johnson, Neil, Blank, Nicolas
Formato: Libro electrónico
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Indianapolis, Ind. : Sybex c2013.
Edición:1st edition
Materias:
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull:https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009628371006719
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Chapter 1 Business, Functional, and Technical Requirements; Building the Foundation for Requirements; Establishing Project Roles; Getting Started with the Exchange Design; Requirements as Part of a Larger Framework; Understanding the Types of Requirements; Business Requirements; Technical Requirements; Constraints; Assumptions; Requirements Elicitation; Summary; Chapter 2 Exchange Design Fundamentals; Introducing Design Documents; From Requirements to Design; No Single Way to Implement Exchange; How Much Detail Is Enough?; Section Guide; Section Index
  • Executive SummaryBusiness Requirements; Summary of Vision and Scope; Functional Specification; Architecture Summary; Compliance; External Publishing; Migration or Legacy Integration Requirements; Interoperation with Third-Party Applications; High-Availability Strategy and Requirements; Transport Design; Client Access Design; Mailbox Design; VM Requirements; Bandwidth Requirements; Exchange Solution Sizing; Moving Forward; A Living Document; How Do You Know When to Finish Designing?; Overengineering; Keep It Simple; Future Proofing; The Microsoft Way; Chapter 3 Exchange Architectural Concepts
  • The Evolution of Exchange 2013Exchange 2000/2003; Exchange 2007; Exchange 2010; Exchange 2013; Discontinued Features; Exchange 2013 Editions; Transport; Management; Role Separation; High Availability; Exchange Online Integration; Summary; Chapter 4 Defining a Highly Available Messaging Solution; Defining Availability; Defining Availability Components; Defining the Cost of Downtime; Planning for Failure; Defining Terms for Availability; Service-Level Agreements; RPO and RTO; Defining High Availability and Disaster Recovery; Achieving High Availability; Building an Available Messaging System
  • TransportNamespace Planning; Exchange Hybrid Deployment; Database Availability Group Planning; Summary; Chapter 5 Designing a Successful Exchange Storage Solution; A Brief History of Exchange Storage; Exchange 4.0-5.5; Exchange 2000-2003; Exchange 2007; Exchange 2010; Storage Changes in Exchange 2013; Issue 1: Storage Capacity Increasing; Issue 2: Mechanical Disk IOPS Performance Not Increasing; Issue 3: JBOD Solutions Require Operational Maturity; Issue 4: Mailbox Capacity Requirements Increasing; Issue 5: Everything Needs to Be Cheaper; Storage Improvements in Exchange Server 2013
  • Automatic Database ReseedMultiple Databases for Each JBOD Disk Spindle; Designing a Successful Exchange Storage Solution; Requirements Gathering; Making Sense of the Exchange Mailbox Server Role Requirements Calculator; Selecting the Right Storage Hardware; Storage Validation Using Jetstress; Summary; Chapter 6 Management; Trends in Management of Platforms; Role-Based Access Control; RBAC Overview; Understanding the Components of the RBAC Permissions Model; Planning Your Management Strategy; Understanding Built-in Management Roles, Role Groups, and Role Association; Role Assignments
  • Under the Hood