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I have an Exchange Server configured. We are using RPC over HTTPS, so
all of our users are able to send mail from anywhere without messing with VPNs and SMTP server settings. Things are good. The issue: We have added a Cisco Unity server. It delivers voicemail to Outlook using IMAP. If a user wants to forward a voice message to a third party it is sent using the SMTP server that is associated with the IMAP account. This poses an obvious problem as we do not have an SMTP server that is accessible from outside of our network. Is there a way to tell Outlook to send all messages using the Exchange server and to never use the SMTP server? |
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#2
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Glate wrote:
I have an Exchange Server configured. We are using RPC over HTTPS, so all of our users are able to send mail from anywhere without messing with VPNs and SMTP server settings. Things are good. The issue: We have added a Cisco Unity server. It delivers voicemail to Outlook using IMAP. IMAP is for receiving - not sending. Can't the Unity server be integrated directly into your Exchange organization, or send mail to the mailbox directly using SMTP? I'd be very surprised if this configuration was standard or mandatory; it could become a real administrative nightmare. If a user wants to forward a voice message to a third party it is sent using the SMTP server that is associated with the IMAP account. This poses an obvious problem as we do not have an SMTP server that is accessible from outside of our network. It doesn't need to be accessible from outside your network, does it?. If you do want to stick with this configuration in Outlook, you could set up the IMAP account to use your Exchange server for SMTP, and authenticate to it. Authenticated relay is enabled by default. Is there a way to tell Outlook to send all messages using the Exchange server and to never use the SMTP server? Exchange *is* an SMTP server - I think you mean, use the Exchange *account* instead of the Internet mail account. See above....but again, there has to be a better way. Check out http://www.microsoft.com/technet/tec...e/default.aspx for starters....but you might also post in microsoft.public.exchange.admin for more help. |
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Once again since you decided to comment on the wording of my post
rather than try to provide a solution: - We have 1 Account configured right now: Exchange (RPC/HTTPS) and one we are looking to add: IMAP/SMTP - All of our users have laptops and travel a lot. The same users are used to having email simply "work". They do not need to select which account to send with, they do not need to mess with SMTP settings when they are on different networks. They simply send email and it gets delivered. This is how it must work going forward. - We do not have an SMTP server that is "available on the internet" for the users to relay mail through. We use Microsoft Exchange Hosted Services (frontbridge) for our email, meaning that SMTP (port 25) is not open to the internet. We have an access list that only allows connections by selected hosts. I am looking for a solution that would tell Outlook that when an email is received, regardless of how it was received.. it needs to be sent using the Exchange Server. It would obviously need to use the Exchange ACCOUNT to do that. This is for a Unity Connection server, which uses IMAP, not SMTP, and cannot integrate into Exchange. On Apr 19, 5:38 am, "Lanwench [MVP - Exchange]" ahoo.com wrote: Glate wrote: I have an Exchange Server configured. We are using RPC over HTTPS, so all of our users are able to send mail from anywhere without messing with VPNs and SMTP server settings. Things are good. The issue: We have added a Cisco Unity server. It delivers voicemail to Outlook using IMAP. IMAP is for receiving - not sending. Can't the Unity server be integrated directly into your Exchange organization, or send mail to the mailbox directly using SMTP? I'd be very surprised if this configuration was standard or mandatory; it could become a real administrative nightmare. If a user wants to forward a voice message to a third party it is sent using the SMTP server that is associated with the IMAP account. This poses an obvious problem as we do not have an SMTP server that is accessible from outside of our network. It doesn't need to be accessible from outside your network, does it?. If you do want to stick with this configuration in Outlook, you could set up the IMAP account to use your Exchange server for SMTP, and authenticate to it. Authenticated relay is enabled by default. Is there a way to tell Outlook to send all messages using the Exchange server and to never use the SMTP server? Exchange *is* an SMTP server - I think you mean, use the Exchange *account* instead of the Internet mail account. See above....but again, there has to be a better way. Check outhttp://www.microsoft.com/technet/technetmag/issues/2005/01/UnityExcha... for starters....but you might also post in microsoft.public.exchange.admin for more help. |
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