So a quota won't be freed up until the retention time is over?

________________________________

From: John Cook [mailto:john.c...@pfsf.org] 
Sent: Monday, June 22, 2009 9:43 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: exchange 2003 db cleanup



Depends on your deleted items retention. The Exchange MB will contain
deleted items held until the retention period passes. 
John W. Cook 
Systems Administrator 
Partnership For Strong Families 
Sent to you from my Blackberry in the Cloud

________________________________

From: Jason Benway 
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues 
Sent: Mon Jun 22 09:42:45 2009
Subject: RE: exchange 2003 db cleanup 


I'm with you on the process, I'm just trying to figure out why outlook
is telling me one mailbox size and exchange is telling me another.
I found this:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/891789
 
The reg keys on in the exchange server.
 
jb

________________________________

From: Sherry Abercrombie [mailto:saber...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Monday, June 22, 2009 9:19 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: exchange 2003 db cleanup


The "clean up" processes do run automatically on an Exchange server.
However, I believe that your perception of what they will do is in
error.  Look for an event id 1221 in the application log on your
Exchange server, you should have multiples of this event daily depending
on how many information store databases you have.  This event informs
you that the online defragmentation has completed on a specific store
and how much free space (white space) is available.  You will not
recover that free space in any way shape form or fashion unless you run
eseutil.  This is not a recommended process to run unless directed to by
Microsoft PSS.  Your Exchange server will run much more effeciently with
available white space in its databases.  It will not have to grow a
database to accomodate the need for more space if that white space is
already available to it.  

Most Exchange admins allow their Exchange servers to run in this
fashion.  Eseutil is to be avoided unless you want to screw up your
Exchange server.  It can be used if there are serious issues with an
information store that need to be resolved and really should only be
done at the direction of PSS.  


On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 7:56 AM, Jason Benway <benw...@jsjcorp.com>
wrote:


        Normally isn't there a scheduled task/event that runs within
exchange to cleanup the db and free up whitespace.
        Before we moved over a bunch of mailboxes from another org we
archived all mailboxes so they where smaller than 100megs. But now that
we moved them over a bunch of them are larger than 100 megs, but viewing
through outlook they should be below 100. I'm thinking the db cleanup
process should run and correct this. I've ran a full backup, which
didn't reclaim any of the space.
         
        I know about eseutil, but I thought the cleanup processes ran by
themselves.
         

        Jason Benway
        System/Storage Engineer 
        616-847-8474 telephone
        616-850-1208 fax
        www.jsjcorp.com <http://www.jsjcorp.com/>  

         JSJ Corporation
700 Robbins Road
Grand Haven, MI 49417   
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-- 
Sherry Abercrombie

"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." 
Arthur C. Clarke


 

 


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