Hi chaps, Can I toss over some thoughts with you ?
Say I have two sites, Site A and B, each connected via a VPN. Each site has a primary line (SDSL) and a backup line (ADSL). The VPN is setup on the primary line, and when/if the backup line kicks in the VPN drops as the site in question will be on a different IP. Now, say that each site has one server running Windows 2003 with Exchange 2003. Each exchange install is in the same organisation. The MX record for the domain (mydomain.com) points to SITEA which takes the email and routes it to the correct mailbox, taking care of routing it over the VPN to the other server if needed. Ok, so, with this setup, if the VPN fails at either end, the email from SITEA wont get to SITEB and vica-versa. Is there a way to get Exchange 2003 to 'fall back' to sending emails over the internet, perhaps using TLS for a bit of security ? I thought about specifying SMTP Connectors for each site, with the 'public' route over the internet at a higher cost, but if I recall the connector needs to be targeted to specific something (ie emails to a given domain or sub domain etc). I've also thought about giving each site their own sub domain, so [EMAIL PROTECTED] etc and having each subdomain assigned it's own MX, so basically emails to [EMAIL PROTECTED] go to site A directly and emails to [EMAIL PROTECTED] go directly to site B. Emails between sites could be routed using DNS or a connector. However that then negates the need for a VPN which is part of the project requirements. Any suggestions on whether there is another way? Basically I'm trying to rule out the need for a vpn firewall that supports multiple destination IP addresses for the same VPN (ie supports SITE B being on either xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx for the SDSL or yyy.yyy.yyy.yyy when on the ADSL); something that will cost around £900 i reckon. Olly ~ Upgrade to Next Generation Antispam/Antivirus with Ninja! ~ ~ <http://www.sunbelt-software.com/SunbeltMessagingNinja.cfm> ~
