Prev | Current Page 326 | Next

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

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

Instead of using the New-MailboxDatabase cmdlet, to create a Public folder database
use the New-PublicFolderDatabase cmdlet:
New-PublicFolderDatabase -Name < String > -StorageGroup
< StorageGroupIdParameter > [-CopyEdbFilePath < EdbFilePath > ]
[-DomainController < Fqdn > ] [-EdbFilePath < EdbFilePath > ] [-HasLocalCopy
< $true | $false > ] [-TemplateInstance < PSObject > ] [ < CommonParameters > ]
Following is an example:
New-PublicFolderDatabase -Name ???Public Folder DB??? -StorageGroup ???mb100\Public
Folder Storage Group???
The output in Figure 8 - 9 shows the error if creating multiple Public folder stores on a server is attempted.
Figure 8-9
Chapter 8: Confi guring the Mailbox Server Role
233
Summary
The mailbox server is the heart of Exchange. User and mailbox management is probably where administrators
will spend most of their time. This chapter covered storage group and database installation and
configuration. The next topic covered in detail was user quotas. This demonstrated PowerShell ??™ s built - in
conversion capabilities. Another point to remember is the status parameter, which gives extra information
about a mailbox database. Without it, key information such as if a database is mounted would be
left out. A very common mistake is the first time administrators use the GUI console to delete a mailbox
and they end up deleting the Active Directory account.


Pages:
314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338
Apartamenty Świnoujście noclegi hel Lokaty jednodniowe projekty domków letniskowych męskie skarpetki rowerowe