You can depend on round-robin DNS to do this, or implement Windows Network
Load Balancing or, preferably, a hardware load balancing device to take care
of this for you.

Round-robin DNS will effectively balance load but doesn't tolerate failures,
i.e., if one of two front-end servers fail, about one in two requests will
fail.  Load balancing is fault tolerant.

Ed Crowley MCSE+Internet MVP
Freelance E-Mail Philosopher
Protecting the world from PSTs and Bricked Backups!T

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tony Hlabse
Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2003 12:44 PM
To: Exchange Discussions
Subject: multiple OWA servers

I was looking a bit and didn't see anything on this but was curious. If you
have mutiple OWA front-end servers (E2K) and when you publish the url for
users to access their email via the web client. How Exchange handles which
user get which server. Do they all hit the default OWA server and it just
knows which OWA server handles that user mailbox?  I never saw this
explained very well. Has anybody seen a write-up on this and could forward a
link for this. Also an install guide for this type of config.

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