Accepted domains may also include domains for
which the Exchange organization will receive emails and then relay them to another email
server outside the organization for delivery to the intended Recipient. Such domains could be
configured as internal relay or external relay domains.
Remote domains define settings for message delivery to external domains outside the Active
Directory forest. They override default delivery settings for all outbound messages.
Hence, determine what domains will be authoritative and what domains will be relay, then
create corresponding accepted domains. Similarly, if you have need to control the types of
messages that are sent to a specific domain, create a remote domain entry.
Figure 9 - 14 shows using the Get-AcceptedDomain cmdlet to view the configured accepted
domain ExchangeExchange.local . By default the domain name is configured as an
authoritative accepted domain. Now because this Exchange organization is authoritative for
ExchangeExchange.com , add it as an accepted domain with a DomainType of Authoritative.
Next, assume you acquired a subsidiary called Namedpipes.net and must relay for this domain.
Create a new accepted domain with a DomainType of InternalRelay to their email server.
Finally, assume you send regularly to a remote domain called Mailtask.
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