What would happen if we killed the X.400 and replication connectors on
the 5.5 server? Would messages to the users in the other sites still
seek out the X.400 connection and bounce back the messages to our
users, or would the messages simply go out via our Internet
connection? Would we need to remove all the disabled user accounts, or
could we keep them?
We really want to kill the 5.5 server and leave the disabled user
accounts intact in our global address list (even though it will grow
stale).
Thanks.
If I recall correctly, if you remove an ADC connection agreement, the
objects will remain in Active Directory. You could test that by removing
the CA and seeing what happens, knowing that you can restore the objects by
recreating the CA.
--
Ed Crowley MVP
"There are seldom good technological solutions to behavioral problems."
.
"Phantom" <beck...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:056ab86b-5e40-4c4d...@y10g2000prg.googlegroups.com...
I suppose it's also feasible to create new x.400 and directory
replication connectors on the SRS server, remove the ones on the 5.5
server, then eliminate the 5.5 server altogether?
> I've been around long enough to be familiar with what you're asking. X.400
> connectors came in two varieites. The X.400 site connector happened to be a
> better connector than the "regular" site connector in many situations.
> There was also a public X.400 connector that I never used. I am surmising
> from the context of your question that you are using the X.400 site
> connector. If you remove this site connector and have no other site
> connector, then you have no messaging path between your sites. So, what you
> can do is replace the X.400 connector between your Exchange 5.5 sites with
> the "regular" site connector before you remove the X.400 site connectors.
> If I recall correctly, when you remove a directory replication connector,
> all the recipients added to your directory by that connector will disappear
> from the directory.
>
> If I recall correctly, if you remove an ADC connection agreement, the
> objects will remain in Active Directory. You could test that by removing
> the CA and seeing what happens, knowing that you can restore the objects by
> recreating the CA.
> --
> Ed Crowley MVP
> "There are seldom good technological solutions to behavioral problems."
> .
>
> "Phantom" <becke...@gmail.com> wrote in message
"Phantom" <beck...@gmail.com> wrote in message
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