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Microsoft Exchange 2013 Cookbook

You're reading from   Microsoft Exchange 2013 Cookbook Get the most out of Microsoft Exchange with this comprehensive guide. Structured around a series of clear, step-by-step exercises it will help you deploy and configure both basic and advanced features for your enterprise.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2013
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782170624
Length 354 pages
Edition Edition
Concepts
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Authors (2):
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Michael Van Horenbeeck Michael Van Horenbeeck
Author Profile Icon Michael Van Horenbeeck
Michael Van Horenbeeck
Peter De Tender Peter De Tender
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Peter De Tender
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Microsoft Exchange 2013 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Planning an Exchange Server 2013 Infrastructure 2. Installing Exchange Server 2013 FREE CHAPTER 3. Configuring the Client Access Server Role 4. Configuring and Managing the Mailbox Server Role 5. Configuring External Access 6. Implementing and Managing High Availability 7. Transitioning to Exchange Server 2013 8. Configuring Security and Compliance Features 9. Performing Backup, Restore, and Disaster Recovery 10. Implementing Security Getting to Know Exchange Server 2013 Index

Creating a highly available Client Access Server infrastructure


In order to make your CAS infrastructure highly-available, you need to load balance traffic across the different servers in the CAS pool. That pool of Client Access Servers by itself doesn't necessarily create high availability. There are other components and mechanisms that play an equal important part in the process. For example, the load balancing solution should be able to determine whether or not a Client Access Server is still a viable endpoint. If not, you risk ending up sending traffic to a non-functional server, therefore impacting on an end user's experience.

Unlike Exchange 2010, Exchange 2013 offers you the ability to load balance traffic between two or more Client Access Servers over layer 4 (L4). This means that load balancing is now effectively performed at the transport layer (remember the OSI model?!), opening the door for solutions like DNS round robin.

Load balancers operating at layer 4 are content-agnostic...

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