I'll toss in a vote for Jim McBee's Exchange 2000 24/7 also.  Very accessible for new 
users, very thorough for advanced users.

-----Original Message-----
From: Daniel Chenault [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Posted At: Thursday, February 28, 2002 4:00 PM
Posted To: MSExchange Mailing List
Conversation: Logfiles
Subject: Re: Logfiles


Like I said, anything by Redmond or Robichaux.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Mike Tonazzi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Exchange Discussions" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2002 3:55 PM
Subject: AW: Logfiles


Sure! I like books that cover practical issues :-)

Do you think of Tony Redmond, Microsoft Exchange Server for Windows 2000, ISBN 
1555582249?


-----Urspr�ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Daniel Chenault [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 28. Februar 2002 22:46
An: Exchange Discussions
Betreff: Re: Logfiles


Yes.

May I suggest any book appropraite to your version written by Tony Redmond or Paul 
Robichaux.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Mike Tonazzi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Exchange Discussions" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2002 3:17 PM
Subject: AW: Logfiles


Right now it's a test server that's coming productive. We will back it up with 
BackupExec Exchange Agent. If I understand you right: The logfiles will be commited 
and deleted as soon as we back it up - and Exchange will understand that we are 
backing it up?

-----Urspr�ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Martin Blackstone [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 28. Februar 2002 20:50
An: Exchange Discussions
Betreff: RE: Logfiles


Those are the logfiles. Do not delete them. You need to run an Exchange aware backup 
program. That will commit the logs and then flush them after the backup.

What are you using now to backup, and is it Exchange aware?

-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Tonazzi [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2002 8:08 AM
To: Exchange Discussions
Subject: Logfiles


I have a Xchange2000 Server running on a W2K Server SP2.

I have found in the program folder under .\MDBDATA dozens of logfiles named 
Exxxxxx.log. They use a huge amount of my Disk. I cannot find any explanaiton for 
these logfiles in MS's knowledgebase. What are they for and how can I remove them or 
make them smaller?

Thanks for any help
Mike

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