I'm sure all of us implementing OpsMgr can't wait for SP1 to arrive. There's been so many promises, especially wrt the speed of the UI and a number of other quirks (bugs?) that we hope will be fixed. Seems first week of November is the target date, as this blog by Clive Eastwood indicates.
I'll gladly kiss the dev team's feet for this one! Bring it on!
Friday, November 2, 2007
Thursday, November 1, 2007
Configure Mail Flow Monitoring in Exchange 2003
Configuring Mail Flow monitoring is a little bit of a mission, but the instructions are pretty clear, and as long as one sticks to it, all should be OK. I am not going to repeat all the steps here, but I post some links that may be helpful. This is looking at using the OpsMgr 2007 MP. Just some pointers:
-> Use the latest version of the Exchange 2003 MP Wizard (currently 06.05.7903, and is a prereq for OpsMgr 2007 monitoring); trust me, it is more stable.
-> Pre-configure the Mailbox access account and the mailbox accounts. The release notes seem to suggest that running the wizard will take care of this, but this is not (always?) the case. Take special care to perform all the tasks as a Full Exchange Admin.
-> If you are managing geographically dispersed sites, provide some time for all the information to replicate in AD. It goes without saying that your site replications are working correctly (Check it!)
-> Before you run the wizard, send mail to the test mailboxes to ensure "normal" messaging is working OK.
-> I don't particularly think you need to have a test mailbox for each store, but if you do want to remember to name the mailbox "<servername>MOM#" where # can be any number or word.
-> Save your config file after you ran the wizard...and save some time later.
-> If you have some time on hands, I suggest not enabling the "Mail Flow" until you are sure all the other components work. You should see the following events on *all* your configured servers if all goes OK:
* EventId: 19998 - MAPI logon verification : No unexpected exceptions
* EventId: 19980 - MAPI logon verification : All attempted logins of test mailboxes residing on this server succeed
* EventId: 19950 - Exchange MOM : All Mailbox and Public Folder Stores are mounted
* EventId: 19960 - Check service(s) state : All specified services are running
* EventId: 19016 - Exchange MOM - MailFlow : No unexpected exceptions
* EventId: 19556 - Exchange MOM - MailFlow : All mail flow destination addresses were resolved without problems
* EventId: 19554 - Exchange MOM - MailFlow : All expected messages received successfully
-> Once again, be patient, note any errors/warnings on all servers before starting all over again.
-> If you do want to start from scratch (as in deleting all the test mailboxes), ensure the user and mailbox is deleted (and purged), and check for lingering objects in HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Exchange MOM.
-> The main issue is to ensure permissions on the test mailboxes are correct (esp post E2K3 SP2!). Mail flow monitoring will not work if this is not correct... Also, it might seem strange, but you disable the Mailbox test users (works fine for me).
-> Although you can run the wizard on one server to configure all the others, I like to run config separately for front-end servers. The reason: services monitored on FE's are not the same as BE, so you get unnecessary alerts when the scripts start looking for a IS service on the FE's
-> There are some specific caveats wrt monitoring OWA/OMA/EAS on FE servers, but I will blog on that later on.
Enough said...some good info on these sites:
Exchange Server Management Pack Guide for MOM 2005
Managing Exchange 2003 With MOM 2005
Creating a MOM test Mailbox
Top Three Configuration Issues with Exchange Management Pack
-> Use the latest version of the Exchange 2003 MP Wizard (currently 06.05.7903, and is a prereq for OpsMgr 2007 monitoring); trust me, it is more stable.
-> Pre-configure the Mailbox access account and the mailbox accounts. The release notes seem to suggest that running the wizard will take care of this, but this is not (always?) the case. Take special care to perform all the tasks as a Full Exchange Admin.
-> If you are managing geographically dispersed sites, provide some time for all the information to replicate in AD. It goes without saying that your site replications are working correctly (Check it!)
-> Before you run the wizard, send mail to the test mailboxes to ensure "normal" messaging is working OK.
-> I don't particularly think you need to have a test mailbox for each store, but if you do want to remember to name the mailbox "<servername>MOM#" where # can be any number or word.
-> Save your config file after you ran the wizard...and save some time later.
-> If you have some time on hands, I suggest not enabling the "Mail Flow" until you are sure all the other components work. You should see the following events on *all* your configured servers if all goes OK:
* EventId: 19998 - MAPI logon verification : No unexpected exceptions
* EventId: 19980 - MAPI logon verification : All attempted logins of test mailboxes residing on this server succeed
* EventId: 19950 - Exchange MOM : All Mailbox and Public Folder Stores are mounted
* EventId: 19960 - Check service(s) state : All specified services are running
* EventId: 19016 - Exchange MOM - MailFlow : No unexpected exceptions
* EventId: 19556 - Exchange MOM - MailFlow : All mail flow destination addresses were resolved without problems
* EventId: 19554 - Exchange MOM - MailFlow : All expected messages received successfully
-> Once again, be patient, note any errors/warnings on all servers before starting all over again.
-> If you do want to start from scratch (as in deleting all the test mailboxes), ensure the user and mailbox is deleted (and purged), and check for lingering objects in HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Exchange MOM.
-> The main issue is to ensure permissions on the test mailboxes are correct (esp post E2K3 SP2!). Mail flow monitoring will not work if this is not correct... Also, it might seem strange, but you disable the Mailbox test users (works fine for me).
-> Although you can run the wizard on one server to configure all the others, I like to run config separately for front-end servers. The reason: services monitored on FE's are not the same as BE, so you get unnecessary alerts when the scripts start looking for a IS service on the FE's
-> There are some specific caveats wrt monitoring OWA/OMA/EAS on FE servers, but I will blog on that later on.
Enough said...some good info on these sites:
Exchange Server Management Pack Guide for MOM 2005
Managing Exchange 2003 With MOM 2005
Creating a MOM test Mailbox
Top Three Configuration Issues with Exchange Management Pack
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