I think it queries active directory to find the exchange servers and dns has 
records of the services and it chooses the one with the lowest weight to it 
from there. 
-------------------------- 
Sent using BlackBerry 


________________________________

From: Ceron, Carlos <[email protected]> 
To: 'A list for BES Admin's to discuss issues, etc.' 
<[email protected]> 
Sent: Wed Aug 19 14:48:53 2009
Subject: Re: [Bes-admins] Finding out who your BES server is talking to 



Where can I find the tail agent logs?

 

Also, perhaps a dumb question but – how does a BES server know which exchange 
server(s) to talk to? I don’t recall seeing where to set this up. We recently 
(1 year ago) migrated from Exchange 2003 to 2007, we still have our 2003 
servers active and running but aren’t hosting any mailboxes or routing mail. In 
our 2007 environment currently we have an NLB for our CAS servers and have the 
MBs set up in an active/passive mode. 

 

thanks

 

 

Carlos Ceron
Network Analyst 
Office of Technology and Information Services
The University of Texas System 
Phone: (512) 579-5064 
Fax: (512) 499-4599
E-Mail: [email protected]

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kalnitsky, Yury
Sent: Wednesday, August 19, 2009 1:13 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Bes-admins] Finding out who your BES server is talking to

 

It is talking to MB servers to get the messages. Both servers are being 
“worked” at the same time via UDP notifications to the agent. If UDP does not 
work, then “long” store scans are performed. This would cause major delays - up 
to 15 minutes or so.

 

The easiest way to see what’s going on would be to tail agent logs (for both 
agents). Those would also contain the queue size and queue status.

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ceron, Carlos
Sent: Wednesday, August 19, 2009 12:16 PM
To: '[email protected]'
Subject: [Bes-admins] Finding out who your BES server is talking to

 

I have an Exchange 2007 environment with 2 CAS servers and 2 MB servers and 1 
BES server. Currently we are experiencing a pretty long lag getting messages to 
devices. Does anyone know if there is a way to find out which one of the 
servers BES is talking to?

 

 

Carlos Ceron
Network Analyst 
Office of Technology and Information Services
The University of Texas System 
Phone: (512) 579-5064 
Fax: (512) 499-4599
E-Mail: [email protected]

 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

This communication (including any attachments) is intended only for the person 
or entity to which it is addressed and may contain confidential and/or 
privileged information.  If you 
are not the intended recipient, any retransmission, dissemination, 
distribution, disclosing, copying, or using any of this information is strictly 
prohibited.  If you received this communication in error, please contact the 
sender immediately and delete or destroy the
material in its entirety.

_______________________________________________
Bes-Admins mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.dataoutages.com/mailman/listinfo/bes-admins
http://www.dataoutages.com
http://www.dataoutagenews.com
RSS Feed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/Bes-admins
---------------------------------

Reply via email to