|
I was thinking about that today and
thought “there must be reason not to do it that way since no one else has
mentioned it.” Does the white space in a DB exist in the mailbox, or the
DB level? Moving to a new mailbox store will definitely get rid of the white
space? From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Al Mulnick I don't believe I've seen the reason that
you want to defrag in the first place. Any reason you would choose to
defrag vs. just moving the users to a new db? Safer and faster IMHO than taking 3-10 hours to defrag and
backing up the mail while doing so. Al From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Medeiros, Jose Keep in
mind that this was a DELL Server Xeon 4 way 800 MHZ system with a Perc 2
controller with U160, 10,000 rpm drives and the database resided on the DAS
external array. I am sure that it will run much faster on the newer 3.0 GHZ
Xeon's with Ultra 320 15,000 rpm Drives. |
Title: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:Exchange 2003 SP1 bloat
- RE: [ActiveDir] OT:Exchange 2003 SP1 bloat Douglas M. Long
- RE: [ActiveDir] OT:Exchange 2003 SP1 bloat Michael B. Smith
- RE: [ActiveDir] OT:Exchange 2003 SP1 bloat Bernard, Aric
- RE: [ActiveDir] OT:Exchange 2003 SP1 bloat Michael B. Smith
- RE: [ActiveDir] OT:Exchange 2003 SP1 bloat Medeiros, Jose
- RE: [ActiveDir] OT:Exchange 2003 SP1 bloat deji
- RE: [ActiveDir] OT:Exchange 2003 SP1 bloat Michael B. Smith
- RE: [ActiveDir] OT:Exchange 2003 SP1 bloat Brett Shirley
- RE: [ActiveDir] OT:Exchange 2003 SP1 bloat Douglas M. Long
- RE: [ActiveDir] OT:Exchange 2003 SP1 bloat Douglas M. Long
- RE: [ActiveDir] OT:Exchange 2003 SP1 bloat Michael B. Smith
