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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

Sending e-mail messages as another user or group

In some environments, it may be required to allow users to send e-mail messages from a mailbox as if the owner of that mailbox had actually sent this message. This can be accomplished by granting the Send-As permissions to a user on a particular mailbox. In addition, you can also allow a user to send e-mail messages that are sent using the identity of a distribution group. This recipe explains how you can manage these permissions from the Exchange Management Shell.

How to do it...

To assign the Send-As permissions to a mailbox, we use the Add-ADPermission cmdlet:

Add-ADPermission -Identity "Frank Howe" '
-User "Eric Cook" '
-ExtendedRights Send-As

After running the previous command, Eric Cook can send messages from the mailbox of Frank Howe.

How it works...

The Add-ADPermission cmdlet uses the -Identity parameter to classify the object to which you will assign the permissions. Unlike many of the Exchange cmdlets...

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