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Microsoft /
Exchange Server /
Course 5054 |
5054 Designing a High Availability Messaging Solution using Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 |
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To view the course outline click here.
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This 2-day course teaches messaging engineers to design a high availability messaging solution using Microsoft Exchange Server 2007. Students will create a high availability design to meet service level agreement requirements and learn strategies for gaining approval for the design. They will learn how to identify risks and create mitigation plans to maintain the business continuity of the messaging system. Students will also learn how to design a backup strategy, disaster recovery procedures, and test plans for those procedures.
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| What you will learn |
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After completing this course, students will be able to:
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Describe foundational high availability concepts for messaging. |
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Evaluate high availability messaging technologies for Exchange Server
2007 |
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Create a high availability messaging strategy. |
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Design the messaging portion of a business continuity plan. |
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Design backup for a high availability messaging environment. |
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Ensure recovery readiness of a high availability messaging environment. |
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| Prerequisites |
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Before attending this course, students must have:
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Must have a basic understanding of high availability concepts. For example,
how clustering works at the operating system level (Windows clustering) and how
network load balancing works. |
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Must have a basic familiarity with deriving business requirements. For
example, gathering business requirements and understanding that business needs
come from a variety of sources (direct personnel needs, regulatory, business
operations requirements). |
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Must have a basic understanding of backup systems. For example, types of
backups (disk to tape, disk to disk, Storage Area Networks (SAN) snapshot,
imaging, etc.), backup rotation schemes, and offsite backup
procedures. |
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Must already know how to use: |
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Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 Management tools |
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Exchange Best Practice Analyzer (ExBPA) |
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WinNT backup (ntbackup.exe) |
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Microsoft Visio or Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2003 (to create infrastructure
diagrams) |
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Must understand hardware concepts. For example, what redundant array of
independent disks (RAID) is, what a storage area network (SAN) is, processor
options, memory requirements, how disk I/O functions and the limitations of disk
I/O, and storage options for Exchange server. The differences in addressable
memory spaces between 32 and 64 bit architectures. |
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Must have extensive detailed knowledge of Active Directory concepts and
design principles. For example, site replication, integrated authentication,
schema extension, Domain Name Systems (DNS), group and organization unit
structure and inheritance, etc. |
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Must have working experience with designing and implementing Active Directory
directory services in Microsoft Windows Server™ 2003. |
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Must understand Exchange architecture. For example, the purpose of server
roles, functions of specific server roles, how message routing and queuing works
in Exchange, standard messaging protocols (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol [SMTP],
Internet Message Access Protocol version 4rev1 [IMAP4], Post Office Protocol
version 3 [POP3]), how Exchange replicates data stores, client access methods,
etc. |
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Must have working experience with Exchange 2000 Server or Exchange Server
2003 and Exchange Server 2007. For example, must have installed, maintained, and
supported a production Exchange environment. |
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Must already know how to use: |
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Exchange Server 2007 management tools |
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Exchange Best Practice Analyzer (ExBPA) |
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Microsoft Visio (to create infrastructure diagrams) |
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Must have familiarity and experience with a Windows scripting or command line
scripting | >
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| Audience |
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This course is intended for people with 3 or more years experience working with previous versions of Exchange Server and experience implementing Exchange Server 2007. Most students will have managed enterprise-level Exchange Server organizations. Students are expected to be new to participating in designing high availability solutions for Exchange Server 2007 or be planning to design high availability solutions for Exchange Server 2007 in the near future. Students may have done some design for Exchange 2000 Server or Exchange Server 2003 deployments but want to learn how to design Exchange Server 2007 environments. Students may have experience in designing and managing high availability solutions for other network services.
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| Duration |
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Two days, Instructor-led or eLearning
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