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

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

For example, Authors can create items, read
items, and see the folder, but they can only edit and delete their own items. You can manage these rights
with the Outlook client. Select the public folder and right - click. Select Properties and choose the
Permissions tab. The dialog box is shown in Figure 5 - 4 .
Figure 5-4
That ??™ s great for users to use, but administrators can also manage client permissions with PowerShell.
One advantage of PowerShell is that an administrator can quickly make bulk changes. A typical example
is to grant Active Directory group permissions on every folder:
Get-PublicFolder \ -Recurse -ResultSize unlimited | Add-
PublicFolderClientPermission -User ???Public folder Supergroup??? -AccessRights
PublishingEditor
Part I: PowerShell for Exchange Fundamentals
146
This script first gets all the public folder in the IPM_Subtree and overrides the default result size of
10,000 folders. The public folder object is then piped to the Add-PublicFolderClientPermission
cmdlet where it grants the AD mail - enabled security group named ??? Public Folder Supergroup ??? the
Publishing Editor rights. Publishing Editor grants full rights to the folder, with the exception of setting
the group as the folder owner.
Client Folder Permissions Scripts
Four scripts are located in the Scripts directory, by default located in C:\Program Files\Microsoft\
Exchange Server\Scripts .


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