Neither did I publishing my Exchange through ISA 2006. This included OWA
and RPC/HTTPS.
 
Todd

________________________________

From: MarvinC [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, March 31, 2008 2:56 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Host an email server


I didn't have any problems publishing my exchange servers through ISA. I
honestly would and might keep the ISA server to allow it to manage my
windows servers while sitting behind the Cisco device. I haven't touched
the latest version but the process in ISA 2004 was pretty straight
forward. 


On Mon, Mar 31, 2008 at 2:13 PM, Thomas Gonzalez
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


        That's the steps we took when I arrived here at Girl Scouts. We
utilized ISA and had so many issues with the rules to set in place. In
the past month we decommissioned the ISA server and placed a 5505 and
the level of control is a lot smoother than ISA; since implementing the
ASA, we have fewer attacks on the OWA / OMA and SMTP. 

         

         

        Thomas

         

         

        From: MarvinC [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
        Sent: Monday, March 31, 2008 12:20 PM
        To: NT System Admin Issues
        Subject: Re: Host an email server

         

        Just taking a shot here:

        First it depends on the firewall you're using because you'll use
it to publish smtp and any additional ports. Next decide what type of
server set up you want, ie a single exchange server or an OWA front end
with a separate exchange back end. You also "may" want to set up a
certificate authority on the DC in your internal network and create a
cert for the "mail". You don't have to but you "may" want to obtain a
static IP from your ISP and assign it to the external port on your
firewall. Then get with your ISP or whoever will manage your MX records.
Once installed you should be able to send email from your server by
default. You'll have to allow propagation before you can receive. That's
the small of it unless you need to set up a special SMTP connector. 

        I've done this in the past using ISA 2004 and am in the process
of moving from ISA to a Cisco ASA device. I'd like to keep ISA and set
it behind the Cisco device so that I can set up a separate linux mail
server using a different static IP but I'm not that knowledgeable with
Cisco yet. 

        There's an exchange list you can post to along with an ISA list,
if you have that software to use.

         

        [EMAIL PROTECTED]

        www.msexchange.org <http://www.msexchange.org/> 

        http://www.isaserver.org/

         

        hth & gl

        On Mon, Mar 31, 2008 at 12:42 PM, David W. McSpadden
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

        I have an Exchange 2003 server for my intranet.  I pay someone
else $1 an account to host my Internet email.

        I would like to cut out the middle man.  What books or links can
I read to become that guy that hosts his own Internet/intranet email??

         

         

         

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