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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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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

Defining backup objectives


Although backup operations have always been something that come naturally in many environments, it's not uncommon to get asked if taking Exchange backups is still necessary. After all, Exchange Server 2013 has built-in features that allow for multiple database copies replicated over different locations, which might give you the impression: taking backups is not really needed anymore. Although that idea certainly makes sense, database copies are not able to provide an historical point-in-time backup.

How to do it…

In short, your backup strategy should be based on your Service Level Agreements (SLAs). So the first step should be to find out or determine what the service levels are.

Traditionally, SLAs for backups are determined by the following objectives:

  • RTO (Recovery Time Objective): This refers to the amount of time within which a service must be restored. This doesn't only contain the time it takes to restore the backup from its media, but also the time required...

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