Just to add that they also put 5000 Mailboxes of 250MB on the server.


50GB / 5000 mailboxes = 10,24 MB of smtp queue/mailbox on average.


Of course you will want a minimum size, anyway the number of mailboxes!



Regards,

Mathieu CHATEAU

http://lordoftheping.blogspot.com


Tuesday, August 22, 2006, 10:45:44 PM, you wrote:


>

It all depend on the smtp traffic your company has...

And how fast you server process mail..


in the MS doc "Exchange Server 2003 Design and Architecture at Microsoft "


MS use a 50GB partition to hold the SMTP Queue.


In my opnion, it also depends who sends mail to the internet.


If you have a dedicated smtp gateway, then your exchange will empty it's queue on the smtp gateway (will always success)

while your smtp gateway will have to do many retries on many domain...


my two cents,


Regards,

Mathieu CHATEAU

http://lordoftheping.blogspot.com


Tuesday, August 22, 2006, 10:14:09 PM, you wrote:


>

I don’t guess I ever thought about moving mailroot, but that is a really good idea.  Here’s an article that tells how to do it just so no one has to go looking..

http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=822933

 


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Al Mulnick

Sent: Tuesday, August 22, 2006 3:02 PM

To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org

Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] Exchange question

 

Just to add my $0.04 worth: 

 

By the time you ask what's the minimum, it's usually too late and not enough. The SMTP queue drive should, as a general rule, not get below 10% free space.  The way the product works, every smtp message is accepted then acted upon. What that means to you is that SMTP messages are going to hit the disk hard. This indicates that you want to separate that I/O from the rest of the server where possible.  That would mean that you'd typically place this directory on a dedicated set of spindles and the smallest drive size you'll likely find these days is a 72GB drive.  If your average message is ~100KB, then you have approximately 72GB/(100KB-10%) of space before you would even want to consider that your drive should stop.  That's a lot of a messages for most corporate implementations and could easily translate into several days worth of mail at those numbers. 

 

Wouldn't you want your mail system to stop sending at some point like that? So that you go find the issue and resolve it? 

 

Honestly, I think the better questions to ask are going to be along the lines of what is the typical formula for figuring out drive performance and sizing of Exchange server drives for the various i/o types? That will give you the better idea of what you can and should not get away with on those disks if you need to make changes.  If you don't make changes, at least you'll know the areas to be aware of. 

 

My thoughts anyway. 

 

al


 

On 8/22/06, Akomolafe, Deji <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

>>>minimum amount of HD space needed for the smtp to work?

It depends mostly on how busy is the server.

 

>>>Also, if the hard drive gets full will that stop the queue from delivering the emails?

Of course.


Sincerely, 

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Do you now realize that Today is the Tomorrow you were worried about Yesterday? -anon 

 


From: Ramon Linan

Sent: Tue 8/22/2006 11:51 AM

To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org

Subject: [ActiveDir] Exchange question


 

Hi,

 

I have 2 emails server in 2 different locations.

All the sudden emails are not coming from one server to the other, I found out that smtp queue folder was in  a hard drive that was running out of space. 

 

Do you guys know what is the minimum amount of HD space needed for the smtp to work?

 

Also, if the hard drive gets full will that stop the queue from delivering the emails?

 

 

Thanks

 

Rezuma

 

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