Notice that when using the Set-ReceiveConnector cmdlet with permission groups, you have to write
all the permissions over again and not simply the permission you want to add, or else the existing
permissions are overwritten.
Chapter 7: Confi guring the Hub Transport Role
207
Figure 7-13
Several other configurable attributes exist on each Receive Connector and can be modified using the
Set-ReceiveConnector cmdlet. These include changing the response banner for the server,
MaxMessageSize limit, MessageRateLimit , and so forth. For a detailed list of attributes that can be
configured, run get-help set-receiveconnector -detailed in the Exchange Management Shell.
Part II: Working with Server Roles
208
Configuring Send Connectors
Send Connectors provide one - way outbound connections to a next hop or final destination for message
delivery. They are functionally the same as SMTP connectors in Exchange Server 2000/2003 and can be
configured to use DNS to route mail or forward to a smart host. They can be configured to send mail to
other SMTP servers on the Internet, an Edge Transport server, or an Exchange 2000/2003 server in the
same organization.
Unlike the Receive Connectors, by default when a Hub Transport or Edge Transport server is installed
no explicit Send Connectors are created.
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