We also have limits but we don't restrict the receive.  that would be
considered counter productive.  It gets there attention when they cant
send. 
 
Mark
 
WTP project
Richland Wa

  _____  

From: David Mazzaccaro [mailto:david.mazzacc...@hudsonhhc.com] 
Posted At: Wednesday, May 06, 2009 5:27 AM
Posted To: Exchange List
Conversation: Exchange archiving
Subject: RE: Exchange archiving


Mailbox limits are 300MB warning, 320MB no send,  350MB no send/receive.
Am I being to strict???
I also have deleted item retention set for 14 days.
I figured these are pretty typical limits?  
 

  _____  

From: Stefan Jafs [mailto:sj...@amico.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, May 05, 2009 10:30 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange archiving



Yes I do

 

__________________________________________________
Stefan Jafs

 

From: Bob Fronk [mailto:b...@btrfronk.com] 
Sent: May-05-09 9:54 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange archiving

 

I have about 130 users and a 250GB store.... Wow.. you must have some
strict limits set.

 

Bob

 

From: David Mazzaccaro [mailto:david.mazzacc...@hudsonhhc.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, May 05, 2009 2:43 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange archiving

 

That's good to hear.

I have about 160 users and currently have a 24GB store.

What kind of hardware is SEA running on?  processor, storage?

How long are you archiving for?

thx

 

 

 

  _____  

From: Stefan Jafs [mailto:sj...@amico.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, May 05, 2009 1:20 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange archiving

I have recently installed the SEA solution. I'm impressed, everything
works, we had a bit of a challenge with RPC / HTTP, we had to get
another certificate etc. but it's all good now and I had any help I
needed from Sunbelt. The setup was included in the cost and Sunbelt came
in remotely and had it all configured in about 1,5 hours.

 

I have about 190 users so far I have archived 138 users, my store has
gone from 105 Gb  to less than 50Gb (or should have if I defragged).

It setup to auto archive automatically after 30 days. My external
Archived data is about 40 Gigs.

 

It's very seamless to the users, now I'm just trying to get the users to
move all their archives.pst back to the inbox.

 

Very happy SEA user.

 

___________________________________

Stefan Jafs

 

From: David Mazzaccaro [mailto:david.mazzacc...@hudsonhhc.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, May 05, 2009 11:28 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange archiving

 

Thanks for the reply.

We have just started discussing archiving, and while compliancy is a
goal, I suppose it would be nice to reduce the size of the store.

I would think that once you have enabled any archiving solution, you
will be reducing your store?

Won't messages that people are keeping now be archived (moved out of the
store) thus reducing the size, and allowing for lower mailbox limits?

 

Thx

 

 

 

 

  _____  

From: Eric Hanna [mailto:eri...@sunbelt-software.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, May 05, 2009 11:15 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange archiving

In my experience, the load on the Exchange server tends to depend on how
many mailboxes are being journaled, the amount of journaling mailboxes,
and how much traffic is being ran through the Exchange server. Based on
these factors, I would say you will probably see about a 5-15% increase
in utilization (rough estimate but is what I generally see). As for how
granular journaling is: Exchange 2003 is set on the store level while
Exchange 2007 can be set at the mailbox level.

 

Lastly, my 2pennies worth for the archiving: There are lots of solutions
out there for archiving from open source to products like Symantec
Vault. Enabling journaling for Exchange archiving is a popular way to go
as it ensures capture of inbound and outbound traffic instead of
interacting with individual mailboxes. While this gets your compliancy
side, it doesn't do anything for your store sizes. Products like SEA
(yes, a shameless plug) are able to archive your journaling mailbox (and
only keep a copy for the archives) and also archive mailboxes
individually. This will get your compliancy side as well as getting your
information store reduced. 

 

While all solutions serve their function, it really depends on what you
want to accomplish while archiving. Are you looking for archiving as a
compliancy solution and/or do you want to get your information store
sizes down? Is it more beneficial for you and your company to use a
hosting company or would you like to keep it in-house?   

 

Sincerely,

 

Eric Hanna

Lead Enterprise Technical Services Specialist

Sunbelt Software

  _____  

From: David Mazzaccaro [mailto:david.mazzacc...@hudsonhhc.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, May 05, 2009 10:43 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Exchange archiving

 

I am beginning to look into our options for archiving Exchange 2003. 
It seems like most solutions involve enabling journaling on the exchange
server and having the server grab a copy of every email that is sent and
received.

Then (with a hosted solution for example), the copies of emails get
securely sent over the internet to the hosting company's servers where
we can log in and view/retrieve them for an archive period.  Depending
on the length of archiving and the amount of data, cost seems to be
around $300 - $600 month.

I assume in-house solutions (where you have the journaling service send
copies of everything to your own in-house server) is also an option?

In either case, how do I know my server can handle enabling journaling?
There has to be some major performance impact?  Also I assume you can
enable journaling on a single (or couple) of test mailboxes?

Is this what others are doing?  

Thanks 

 

 

... 

 

 

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This email and any attached files are confidential and intended solely
for the intended recipient(s). If you are not the named recipient you
should not read, distribute, copy or alter this email. Any views or
opinions expressed in this email are those of the author and do not
represent those of the Amico Corpoartion company. Warning: Although
precautions have been taken to make sure no viruses are present in this
email, the company cannot accept responsibility for any loss or damage
that arise from the use of this email or attachments.

 

 


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