Exchange 2003 configuration step by step
Configuring your new Exchange 2003 server for internet email with POPcon
for downloading the email from POP3 mailboxes isn't hard if you just do
it step by step as shown in this configuration sample. In this guide we
will step through a sample installation of Exchange 2003 for a company
we will call "Mycompany". Mycompany consequently owns the internet
domain name "mycompany.com".
Actually it only takes these simple steps:
- Adding your internet domain name to the recipient policies
- Configuring the SMTP server for inbound email
- Adding a SMTP Connector for outbound emails
- Configuring the email addresses of your users
- Installing and configuring POPcon, Exchange POP3 Connector
- (Optional) Check out the ChangeSender Exchange Send-as Outlook Add-in
And this is how to configure the Exchange Server to accept email for a domain like "mycompany.com" and cooperate with POPcon:
First install the Exchange server software from the CD or DVD. You may
have to go back to the "Add/remove Software" utility in the control
panel to add NNTP support if you did not do so during initial setup of
your windows installation. Then open the Exchange System Manager and
configure the new Exchange installation.
1. Adding your internet domain name to the recipient policies
Open the Exchange System-Manager. It should look like this:
One of the problems most often encountered when configuring an Exchange
2003 Server system is the fact that often the internet domain nane you
want to receive email for ("mycompany.com") does not match your standard
active directory domain name (i.e. "servername.mycompany.com"). The
Exchange 2003 Server component handling incomming emails - the SMTP
server - does not accept emails for other domains than the ones entered
in the "recipient policies", even if you entered the correct email
addresses ("user@mycompany.com") in the active directory.
To make Exchange accept email for additional domains like your internet
domain you need to add the domain names to the default recipient policy
like this:
On the main tree panel of the exchange system manager expand the tree
"Recipients" and then click on "Recipient Policies". The policies will
be shown on the right panel. Normally only the "Default Policy" will be
there:
Open the properties of the "Default Policy" by double-clicking it:
In the Default Policy Properties please choose the tab "E-Mail
Addresses". There you will find a list of domains supported by your
exchange server. Usually only your internal active directory server
domain will be listed here:
Like you can see, after installing our Exchange Server from scratch only
our AD domain "Christensen.local" was listed as accepted SMTP address.
But emails from the internet will be comming in addressed to
"@mycompany.com" and not Christensen.local!
Choose "New..." here to add another accepted inbound domain. Since
emails on the internet are sent via the SMTP protocol we want to add an
"SMTP Address":
Now enter the domain name you want to receive email for. Please add a
leading "@" to the domain name. This is what we entered to support
emails addressed to @mycompany.com:
This is how the Default Policy Properties look like after entering the additional SMTP domain:
Enable the newly created entry with a check mark next to it:
When you OK the above dialog, Exchange will ask you with the next dialog
box if you want to add the new address to all new users. Usually you do
want exactly that to save some typing later.
Please note: You may need to restart your server to activate the new domain!
2. Configuring the SMTP server for inbound email
Next we will configure the SMTP-Server. This is the part of Exchange
that accepts incomming emails from POPcon. No special settings are
needed to work with POPcon but these are the standard settings in any
case:
You will find the settings for the SMTP server under
Servers/Protocols/SMTP/Default SMTP Virtual Server. Open the properties
by right-clicking on the Default SMTP Virtual Server and choosing
"Properties":
The settings on tab "General" can normally be left to the defaults.
On the tab "Access" you can find some configuration settings that might interfere with POPcon.
POPcon only works with a standard SMTP connection WITHOUT
authentication, so allow "Anonymous access" in the "Authentication"
dialog:
Choose "Connection" to grant or refuse the right to connect to the SMTP
server to individual or multiple IP Address Ranges. Please ensure the
system POPcon runs on does have the right to connect granted. With this
setting ALL systems will have access to your SMTP server:
Under "Relay..." you can assign the right to relay through your
SMTP-Server to some systems. This might be needed in some configuration
and to be sure you should grant the system POPcon runs on relay rights.
All other systems will need to authenticate before accessing the SMTP
server to prevent unauthorized users using your system to relay spam:
Under the "Messages" tab you can restrict message size and number of
messages accepted for each connection. Please make sure these settings
are liberal enough to allow POPcon to transmit large messages to your
server.
Also, on this tab you can choose an internal additional recipient for
copies of the non-delivery reports. These NDRs will be sent back to
senders of mails addressed to recipients unknown in your Exchange Server
and they include a copy of the original message sent. You can use these
postmaster copies of the NDRs to manually forward emails sent to
mistyped recipients to the correct users.
Under tab "Delivery" some more configuration settings for outgoing emails can be found:
3. Adding the SMTP Connector for outbound emails
Now we need to add an SMTP-Connector (vs. SMTP Server) to handle outgoing email to the Internet.
Right-click "Connectors" in the Exchange System Manager and choose
"New", "SMTP-Connector" to start adding the new connector and name it
appropriately (like "SMTP-Out" in our case):
On the "General" tab you can now choose wether Exchange will send
outgoing emails directly to the recipients system ("Use DNS...") or if
all emails should be relayes through a SMTP relay server ("smart host").
The first option, DNS, is more direct but can sometimes cause problems
when you use a dialup internet connection because some recipient systems
will not accept emails that are coming from you ISP's dialup IP range
while pretending to come from your real internet domain. Sending via
your ISP's smart host / smtp relay server is the better option in this
case. We chose our ISPs smtp relay server here.
Also, on this tab you need to add the "local bridgehead" server (as shown above)
On the tab "Address Space" we need to add a wildcard address space for
SMTP. We want to allow emails to any domain, so we use the wildcard "*"
here:
Side note about the "Cost" entry: If you want to send emails to some
domains via a different route you can create multiple SMTP connectors
and set the "Cost" entry of this wildcard connector to a higher value
while setting the cost entry of the special domain route to a lower cost
but with only the special domain allowed on this page. This is
especially useful if you generally want to send via DNS and only route
to some systems that won't accept your email via some relay server.
If your ISP's SMTP server requires authentication (and almost all of
them do today) you can set the username and password on the "Advanced"
tab of the SMTP connector. Select "Outbound Security":
Select "Basic authentication" and chose "Modify" to enter the username and password:
And that's alreay it - Your Exchange is now configured to send email to
the internet and receive an SMTP email feed like it will come from
POPcon or a direct internet connection. All you should do now is
configure your users' email addresses in the Active directory.
4. Configuring your user's email addresses in the Active Directory
You can set one or multiple email addresses for each user to receive
email at. We will step through the neccessary actions when creating a
new user called John Galt.
First open the active directory and right-click the "Users" item to select "New", "User":
The resulting dialog will allow you to create a new AD user to log into
your server and creates an Exchange mailbox all in one wizard pass:
Now the wizard continues into the Exchange Server realm and lets us create a new exchange mailbox
We just accepted the default alias here. Next...
Ok, fine - but wait: What about our desired email address?
john@servolutions.com? We need to add this mail address manually. We are
back at the AD configuration console and select the properties of our
new user "John Galt" by right-clicking on the name:
Lot's of tabs on this resulting dialog:
We go to the "E-mail Addresses" tab:
And surprise: john@servolutions.com is already there, but in
suspiciously non-bold print. Actually, Exchange automatically entered
this additional email address because we choose so during the editing of
the default recipient policies. But we want this address to be the
primary address meaning all email sent by John will get this address as
the "senders" and "reply" addresses in the mail headers. So we click on
"Set As Primary" and are done:
We could also add more email addresses like info@servolutions.com or
sales@servolutions.com but only one of these addresses can be the
primary address that will be the default senders' address in all emails
sent out by john.
And that's really it - just step through you other user's AD entries and
set the appropriate primary and additional email addresses.
5. Installing and configuring POPcon or POPcon PRO
After going through the above 4 steps your Exchange is configured to
send out email but it still can't pull down email from POP3 or IMAP
mailboxes on your provider server. For this you need to install and
configure POPcon.
Configuring POPcon is quite straightforward. You need to follow these steps:
a) Configure a Postmaster email address on the GENERAL configuration tab.b) Add one or more POP3 mailboxes on the POP3/IMAP tab.c) Configure the Exchange server name on the EXCHANGE configuration tab.
Download and run the self-extracting installer of POPcon or POPcon PROand
follow the instructions during the installation. It will install the
POPcon Administrator program and the POPcon service that runs in the
background on your system.
Run POPcon Adminstrator from Start > Programs > POPcon
POPcon Screenshot
Click on "Configure" to open up the POPcon configuration screen.
a) Configure a Postmaster email address on the GENERAL configuration tab.
On this first configuration page you only need to enter the email address of your Postmaster or Administrator user. The Postmaster will receive all emails without a valid recipient as well as general POPcon status notifications. It is very important to define a real email address from inside your exchange server here because mails can be lost irretrievably if POPcon forwards some mail with no recipient information to the postmaster and that account does not exist in your exchange server.You can leave the log file options to their default settings for now.
Next go to the POP3/IMAP tab to configure the POP3 or IMAP mailbox accoutns you want POPcon to download email from.
b) Add one or more POP3 mailboxes on the POP3/IMAP tab.
POPcon PRO collects mail from as many POP3 accounts you like. Just click on Add to add another POP3 host or account to the list of Polled POP3 Hosts. For each server or account you need to fill in the POP3 server settings as shown below.If you are using catch-all style mailboxes (mailboxes that receive email for a whole domain, regardless of the recipient part before the "@") POPcon needs to filter recipients from incoming mail so only the recipients at your own internet domain are accepted. Please add the domain you consider your own in the "Accepted Recipient Domains" box. This is the same domain you configured earlier in the Exchange Default Policy.
Individual account settings
This dialog lets you input the specifics about a POP3 or an IMAP server you want to have polled by POPcon PRO.This is the information POPcon PRO needs to know about each server:Server type:
Here you can select on the four supported server types:POP3: Default. POP3 servers are by far the most common mail server types on the internet.POP3-SSL: Some POP3 Servers need SSL encryption enabled for the connection in order to protect passwords and sensitive information. Choose this type to have a SSL-encrypted connection to a POP3 server.IMAP: IMAP Servers are also quite common and theoretically allow the client to manipulate email folders and move email between folders online. In our case the protocol is used to download email from the INBOX of the IMAP server to your exchange server.IMAP-SSL: Supports SSL connections to IMAP servers for added protection.
Access:
Configure the server name, account name and password to connect to the mail server here.Servername: The name the server you want to have polled. You can also enter the IP address directly.Username: The username needed to log into your POP3 or IMAP mail server.Password: The password needed to log into your mail server.IP portnumber: Almost always the TCP/IP port for POP3 mail is 110. Under some circumstances, internet routers or firewalls change the port number. Please ask your network administrator or internet provider. The standard port for POP3-SSL is 995, for IMAP it is 143 and for IMAP-SSL this should be set to 993.Timeout: Leave this to the default value.Please ask your POP3 mailbox hosting provider if you do not have the above information.
Type of mailbox / distribution:
POPcon PRO supports both catch-all and single user mailboxesCatch-all mailbox ("*@domainname.com"): For this type of mailbox, POPcon PRO will distribute the email retrieved from this server according to what it finds in the TO:, CC:, BCC: and other header-fields of the mail. If you choose this option, don’t forget to add your internet domain name(s) to the "Accepted Recipient Domains" box. on the POP3/IMAP configuration dialogSingle user mailbox ("user@domainname.com"):This type of mailbox receives email for only one specific Exchange mailbox. You need to specify the receiver of the email here. POPcon PRO will then direct all mail retrieved from this server to the recipient email address given here.
Delete / keep email on the server:
This block allows you to configure POPcon PRO to either delete email after downloading or keep it on your POP3 or IMAP server for a specified amount of time or indefinitely.Delete downloaded email: This is the default setting – POPcon PRO will delete the Email on your POP3 or IMAP server after successfully downloading it.Leave a copy of downloaded email (indefinitely):This option will cause POPcon PRO to leave a copy of the email on the server. Only use this option during testing or when you are sure the mail will be deleted eventually, i.e. by another system periodically downloading an deleting email.Leave a copy of downloaded email for n number of days: Causes POPcon PRO to leave a copy of the email on the POP3/IMAP server for the specified number of days before deleting it. You can use this option to allow access to a single POP3 or IMAP mailbox by two different systems.
c) Configure the Exchange server name on the EXCHANGE configuration tab.
On this configuration screen you can specify the Exchange™-(SMTP) Server you want the mail to be directed to. Normally this will be the computer name of your Exchange™ server (like "MYSERVER").You can leave all other settings default
These three steps to configure POPcon will provide you with a working
set-up. Test it out by confirming the new configuration with OK and then
use the "Trigger mail retrieval" button on the POPcon Administrator
main screen to start the first mail download. You can follow what is
happening in the scrolling log display on that screen. Watch out for any
error messages there. There is also a POPcon log file (c:\program
files\POPcon\POPconSrv.log – open with notepad) that you can view at
your leisure.
6. Check out the ChangeSender Outlook Add-in
ChangeSender Exchange Send-as Add-in adds one important piece of functionality to Microsoft Outlook when used with Exchange Server: It allows you to send as any
of your email addresses and even group addresses or those of other
users if allowed by the administrator. Effectively this is the Exchange Send-as function without the limitations of the ActiveDirectory
Without the ChangeSender Exchange send-as components, Exchange
always sends out emails on your default email address fixed in the
ActiveDirectory even when answering emails received on one of your
additional email addresses. Also, Exchange does not allow sharing the
same email address (i.e. department-wide or company-wide email
addresses) between users. ChangeSender solves both problems by adding a configurable "send as" selection box to your Outlook email form.
ChangeSender Features
- Automatically selects the right send-as address when replying to emails. ChangeSender uses the address of the original email as sender address for replies.
- Easy selection of send as addresses for new emails via a new sender address selection box in Outlook.
- Multiple users can send from the same sender address (i.e. send as sales@yourcompany.com or support@yourcompany.com)
- Sender appearance fully configurable as "Any name" <any@address.com> for each individual email address. Does notshow up as "sent on behalf of...".
- Very simple installation and administration.
- Administrator can restrict or allow user choices for the sender address and prevent users from sending as other users.
- Works with Exchange 2010, 2007, 2003, 2000 and with Outlook 2010, 2007, 2003, 2002, 2000 versions.
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