Book Image

Microsoft Exchange 2013 Cookbook

Book Image

Microsoft Exchange 2013 Cookbook

Overview of this book

Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Microsoft Exchange 2013 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Configuring Outlook Anywhere


In Exchange 2010, internal Outlook clients do not use Outlook Anywhere. They connect to the RPC Client Access service which is hosted by the Client Access Server. By default, the Client Access Server's own hostname would be used as the endpoint where clients connect to.

Unless you were configuring a CAS Array, there was nothing specific you had to do to make it work.

In Exchange 2013 the way clients connect to Exchange has changed. Both internal and external clients now connect using Outlook Anywhere (RPC-over-HTTP). To reflect this change in behavior, Outlook Anywhere can now be configured with an internal and an external hostname. Before, only an external hostname could be configured through Set-OutlookAnywhere or Enable-OutlookAnywhere.

To ensure that things just work, Outlook Anywhere is enabled by default and the Internal Hostname property for each Client Access Server is configured with its own FQDN, without requiring SSL encryption (HTTP).

By ensuring clients...