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Microsoft Exchange Server Powershell Cookbook (Update)

You're reading from   Microsoft Exchange Server Powershell Cookbook (Update) Over 120 recipes to help you manage and administrate Exchange Server 2013 Service Pack 1 with PowerShell 5

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785288074
Length 464 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. PowerShell Key Concepts FREE CHAPTER 2. Exchange Management Shell Common Tasks 3. Managing Recipients 4. Managing Mailboxes 5. Distribution Groups and Address Lists 6. Mailbox Database Management 7. Managing Client Access 8. Managing Transport Servers 9. High Availability 10. Exchange Security 11. Compliance and Audit Logging 12. Scripting with the Exchange Web Services Managed API A. Common Shell Information B. Query Syntaxes Index

Introduction

Microsoft introduced some radical architectural changes in Exchange 2007, including a brand new set of management tools. PowerShell v1, along with an additional set of Exchange-Server-specific cmdlets, finally gave administrators an interface that could be used to manage the entire product from a command-line shell. This was an interesting move, and at that time, the entire graphical management console was built on top of this technology.

The same architecture still existed with Exchange 2010, and PowerShell was even more tightly integrated with this product. Exchange 2010 used PowerShell v2, which relied heavily on its new remoting infrastructure. This provides seamless administrative capabilities from a single seat with the Exchange Management Tools, whether your servers are on-premises or in the cloud.

Initially, with Exchange 2013, PowerShell Version 3 was used, but now when using PowerShell Version 5 together with cumulative updates, there are a lot of new cmdlets, core...

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