RE: OWA Design Question

2003-11-25 Thread Bailey, Matthew
If you publish OWA through ISA, all you need to open outbound to the internet is 80 and/or 443 for OWA to function. If you place a FE server in the DMZ you still have to open 80 and/or 443 outbound to the Internet and open 389, 3268, 88, 53, 135, 1024+ back to your BE Exchange servers. At least

RE: OWA Design Question

2003-11-25 Thread Clemens, Rick
PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Bailey, Matthew Posted At: Tuesday, November 25, 2003 8:28 AM Posted To: Exchange Discussion Conversation: OWA Design Question Subject: RE: OWA Design Question If you publish OWA through ISA, all you need to open outbound to the internet is 80

RE: OWA Design Question

2003-11-25 Thread Schwartz, Jim
for instance) to proxy the connection from the DMZ. -Original Message- From: Bailey, Matthew [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, November 25, 2003 9:28 AM To: Exchange Discussions Subject: RE: OWA Design Question If you publish OWA through ISA, all you need to open outbound to the internet

RE: OWA Design Question

2003-11-25 Thread Bailey, Matthew
: RE: OWA Design Question It is my understanding that even if I publish OWA through ISA I still have to open 389, 88, and 53(if we don't use host files) to our network for authentication. So it seems that I will just save my self from opening ports for GC Queries and RPC Traffic. -Original

RE: OWA Design Question

2003-11-25 Thread Fyodorov, Andrey
- From: Clemens, Rick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, November 25, 2003 9:34 AM To: Exchange Discussions Subject: RE: OWA Design Question It is my understanding that even if I publish OWA through ISA I still have to open 389, 88, and 53(if we don't use host files) to our network

RE: OWA Design Question

2003-11-25 Thread Fyodorov, Andrey
Do the users eventually get a case of keyphobia? :) -Original Message- From: Schwartz, Jim [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, November 25, 2003 9:36 AM To: Exchange Discussions Subject: RE: OWA Design Question You can use ISA. It's not that hard to set up and works well