Prev | Current Page 204 | Next

Joezer Cookey-Gam, Brendan Keane, Jeffrey Rosen, and Jonathan Runyon

"Professional Windows PowerShell for Exchange Server 2007 Service Pack 1"

To add an email address to an existing mailbox, you
need to store the mailbox configuration in a variable and modify the EmailAddresses field of that
variable. After storing the EmailAddresses field in the variable, use either of the following methods to
add two more addresses to the ExchUser mailbox:
$Temp = Get-Mailbox -Identity
$Temp.EmailAddresses.Add(???smtp:ExchUser@2ndEmail.ExchangeExchange.local???)
$Temp.EmailAddresses += (???smtp: ExchUser@3rdEmail.ExchangeExchange.local???)
Set-Mailbox -Instance $Temp
Creating a Resource Mailbox
The New-Mailbox cmdlet is also used to create a new resource mailbox. As described earlier in this chapter,
in Exchange Server 2007, two resource mailbox types can be created: the room and equipment resource
mailboxes. Note that you can also create as shared mailbox, but use of this mailbox type is de -emphasized
in Exchange Server 2007. Also mentioned earlier was the fact that the Active Directory user account
associated with a resource mailbox is a disabled Windows account. After creating the resource mailbox,
re - enabling this account is not recommended. If access is needed to a resource mailbox using a MAPI client
or Outlook Web Access, then grant the account full access rights as you would a delegate.
To create a room mailbox, specify the Room switch parameter in addition to other parameters as
shown here:
New-Mailbox -database ???EX7B\First Storage Group\Mailbox Database??? -Name MediaRoom -
OrganizationalUnit ???Conference Rooms??? DisplayName ???MediaRoom??? -UserPrincipalName
MediaRoom@ExchangeExchange.


Pages:
192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216
pustaki szklane House Extension Kąty Rybackie noclegi kasyno Kołobrzeg