I underlined I have bought the migration pack of SBS .Have a look !
 
GuidoElia
HELPPC
 

  _____  

Da: Amer Karim [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Inviato: sabato 5 aprile 2008 20.34
A: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Oggetto: RE: Exchange w/ two different Windows domains



I'm pretty sure you can't do this with SBS; the SBS has to be the FSMO role 
holder and, except for temporary situations, cannot be 'joined' to another 
domain in a subsidiary role.  And, parroting Michael, "two-way trust with 
SBS"??  

 

To quote:

You cannot establish any type of trust between the Windows Small Business 
Server domain and any other domain. A trust is a logical relationship 
established between domains to allow user accounts and global groups defined in 
one domain to be given rights and permissions in another domain. 

 

>From http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/sbs/2003/plan/gsg/appx_d.mspx

 

The situation you are describing would require the removal of SBS and migration 
to 'regular' servers.

 

Regards,

Amer Karim

Nautilis Information Systems

 

From: HELP_PC [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: April-05-08 1:03 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: R: Exchange w/ two different Windows domains

 

I am in a situation where I have to do the same thing for a corporate . I 
bought the migration pack of SBS, but is still not clear if they want them (SBS 
customer) to join the corporate domain and to estabilish relationship with 
trusts for the internal LAN. In other words they have a WAN connection with the 
Corporate and the SBS server will remain only for DHCP ,DNS and routings

 

GuidoElia

HELPPC

 

 

  _____  

Da: Michael B. Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Inviato: venerdì 4 aprile 2008 19.35
A: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Oggetto: RE: Exchange w/ two different Windows domains

You have a two-way trust with SBS? How did you do that?

 

The short answer to your question is "no". You can create mailboxes with 
disabled user accounts on the abc.local server and set the 
associatedExternalAccount for the mailbox to an account in the xyz.local 
domain. This means that the passwords don't have to match, but you've still got 
two accounts involved.

 

IIFP is the standard solution for doing this, I'd say. Damifiknow whether it 
works with SBS though.

 

Regards,

 

Michael B. Smith

MCSE/Exchange MVP

http://TheEssentialExchange.com

 

From: Edward Baichtal [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, April 04, 2008 11:31 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Exchange w/ two different Windows domains

 

 

I have two different Windows domains, abc.local and xyz.local, and abc.local 
has Exchange SBS 2003 on it. xyz.local has NO Exchange in it's Windows domain 
at all.

 

There is a two-way domain trust between the two domains. 

 

The e-mail xyz.local is already received in the abc.local Exchange server. I 
would like to Exchange-enable the users in xyz.local so they can login with 
their accounts and get e-mail from abc.local.

 

Can this be done WITHOUTcreating an abc.local account for the user, and having 
them log in to that domain, thus having two accounts?

 

-Ed

 

 

 

 

 

 


 


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