So if I disable it, would it stop mail2 sending emails?

________________________________

From: Michael B. Smith [mailto:mich...@smithcons.com] 
Sent: 16 August 2010 13:56
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange 2010 send connector question



The send connector you see in the Exchange 2010 EMC is the Exchange 2003
send connector.

Regards,

Michael B. Smith

Consultant and Exchange MVP

http://TheEssentialExchange.com

From: Andy Lawrence [mailto:and...@ansltd.info] 
Sent: Monday, August 16, 2010 5:31 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange 2010 send connector question

Thanks for the comprehensive reply.

I'm still a little confused however (it is Monday morning!)

There is a send connector configured on the Exchange 2010 box which must
have been transferred / imported from the Exchange 2003 setup. To the
uninitiated (me) it looks like a normal outgoing email connector. It has
an address space of * and a cost of 1 and is routing all mail via our
3rd party spam supplier. Nothing is configured in source server and
there is no mention of mail2 here. I ran wireshark and emails are
definitely going out via mail2.

So is this send connector being used? I will disable it to see.

Are the RCGs visible in the EMC or do I need to go to the command shell.

Thanks again

Andy

________________________________

From: Neil Hobson [mailto:nhob...@gmail.com] 
Sent: 16 August 2010 10:20
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange 2010 send connector question

Presumably you have an SMTP Connector configured on Exchange 2003 with
an address space of * and whatever cost you assigned to it, meaning all
Internet email goes via this connector.  When you introduced Exchange
2010, it created a two-way interop RGC between the Exchange 2010 server
and the Exchange 2003 server you selected during installation (mail2 in
your case).  As far as routing is concerned, Exchange 2010 is now aware
that there is an SMTP Connector with an address space of * available to
it, and it has to traverse the interop RGC to reach it.  As this is
currently the only route out for users on Exchange 2010, Internet email
is routed over the interop RGC and then through the SMTP Connector.

If you now want Internet email to go out directly from Exchange 2010,
you need to create a new Send connector on Exchange 2010 with an address
space of *.  The cost of the of the RGC and the SMTP Connector on
Exchange 2003 will make the new route more attractive to those mailbox
users on Exchange 2010.  However, mailbox users on Exchange 2003 will
likely still use the SMTP Connector due to the cost of the RGC and the
Send connector but this really depends on how you've got your costs
currently configured.  In short, once you've confirmed that the Send
connector is working correctly, you can either raise the cost of the
SMTP Connector to make it less attractive or remove it completely.

I typically set a new Exchange 2010 Send connector with a specific
address space and test message access to this one domain first, before
opening the floodgates.  For example, I set the Send connector address
space to silversands.co.uk then send myself a test message.  I then
examine the message headers and confirm the new route is working
correctly before changing the Send connector address space to *. 

From: Andy Lawrence [mailto:and...@ansltd.info] 
Sent: 16 August 2010 09:40
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange 2010 send connector question

I thought I might have to, but I am interested to understanding how the
current send connector is configured. I cannot see any reference to
mail2 from the GUI. Would I have to resort to the command line to see
this information or am I missing something?

Thanks

Andy

________________________________

From: Michael B. Smith [mailto:mich...@smithcons.com] 
Sent: 15 August 2010 04:04
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange 2010 send connector question

You have to create a new Send Connector of Internet type.

Regards,

Michael B. Smith

Consultant and Exchange MVP

http://TheEssentialExchange.com

From: Andy Lawrence [mailto:and...@ansltd.info] 
Sent: Saturday, August 14, 2010 5:51 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Exchange 2010 send connector question

Following on from some emails to the list last week I have decided to
install Exchange 2010. The current email system is Exchange 2003. The
install went fine, at some point I was asked a question regarding
routing groups (I think it was this) and I chose one of the current mail
servers mail2.

Everything is working ok but I noticed that when I send emails they seem
to go via mail2. Looking at the send connectors it seems to have
imported them from the connectors on mail2 but they don't seem to
mention mail2 in any of the tabs. How do I make the email go out
directly from the new Exchange 2010 server?

Thanks

Andy 

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