*Disclaimer* I have not tried running NLB in my Exchange 2010 environment. I used NLB in my Exchange 2003 environment and it performed quite well. I have 70,000 mailboxes (and a very heavy non-MAPI user profile) and used NLB on my 3 front-end servers to load-balance OWA, OMA, IMAP, POP, and authenticated SMTP traffic. The solution was in place 4 years and worked flawlessly to the end.
-jim James Rupprecht The University of Kansas Exchange/Active Directory Administrator From: Laurence Bryant [mailto:l...@cem.dur.ac.uk] Sent: Friday, June 17, 2011 10:55 AM To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues Subject: RE: Exchange 2010 design Thanks for the replies, they set me off on a lot of reading. Unfortunatly I've been told that a hardware load balancer is out of the question at the moment, but I did find this link for a highly available 500 mailbox design (http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/en/details.aspx?FamilyID=e0e93251-fc04-4a18-8aa0-23817b6d0c97) in my list archive, for an MS white paper which seems to describe an implementation that would fit with what I've been required to do. My only question would be, how "real world" are these white papers, if I followed a similar route would I end up with a practical solution? Thanks again, Laurence ________________________________________ From: Neil Hobson [mailto:neil.hob...@microsoft.com] Sent: 13 June 2011 15:30 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues Subject: RE: Exchange 2010 design In addition to what Phil said in his reply, for a good overview of the load balancing options I'd recommend reading this topic : http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff625247.aspx FYI, if you go down the hardware load balancer route, here's the page that lists the hardware load balancers that have completed solution testing with Exchange 2010 : http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/exchange/gg176682.aspx HTH, Neil From: Laurence Bryant [mailto:l...@cem.dur.ac.uk] Sent: 13 June 2011 13:59 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues Subject: Exchange 2010 design Hi Everyone, I'm a bit new to this so my apologies if I've not understood something correctly. I'm trying to plan new hardware to deploy Exchange 2010 (100 users, average mailbox size 500MB) and am looking at using two servers with CAS, HT and Mailbox roles installed on both and using DAG for high availability. I was thinking of using Windows NLB for load balancing,but have read that this can't be used with DAG (http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd979781.aspx). My question is, if I set up two additional servers with NLB installed and moved the CAS and HT roles to them, would this solution then provide the load balancing I'm looking for? Alternatively, would I be better off with two highly redundant servers and use one for Mailbox and one for CAS and HT? Thanks for any advice! Laurence --- To manage subscriptions click here: http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/ or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com with the body: unsubscribe exchangelist --- To manage subscriptions click here: http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/ or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com with the body: unsubscribe exchangelist --- To manage subscriptions click here: http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/ or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com with the body: unsubscribe exchangelist --- To manage subscriptions click here: http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/ or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com with the body: unsubscribe exchangelist