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Your company named Contoso, Ltd., has an Exchange Server 2013 organization named contoso.com.
The network contains an Active Directory domain. The domain contains an organizational unit (OU) named SalesOU. SalesOU contains two users named User1 and User2.
Contoso purchases a domain name adatum.com.
You need to change the primary SMTP address of all the users in SalesOU to use the SMTP suffix of adatum.com. The solution must not remove the contoso.com email address.
Which two actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two.)
A. Create a new email address policy and apply the policy to the users in SalesOU.
B. Change the default email address policy to include adatum.com.
C. Create a new remote domain for adatum.com.
D. Create a new accepted domain for adatum.com and set the domain type to Authoritative Domain.
E. Create a new accepted domain for adatum.com and set the domain type to External RelayDomain.
Correct Answer: AD
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
Email Address Policies
Applies to: Exchange Server 2013
Recipients (which include users, resources, contacts, and groups) are any mail-enabled object in Active Directory to which Microsoft Exchange can deliver or route messages. For a recipient to send or receive email messages, the recipient must have an email address. Email address policies generate the primary and secondary email addresses for your recipients so they can receive and send email.
By default, Exchange contains an email address policy for every mail-enabled user. This default policy specifies the recipient’s alias as the local part of the email address and uses the default accepted domain. The local part of an email address is the name that appears before the at sign (@). However, you can change how your recipients’ email addresses will display. For example, you can specify that the addresses display as [email protected].
Furthermore, if you want to specify additional email addresses for all recipients or just a subset, you can modify the default policy or create additional policies. For example, the user mailbox for David Hamilton can receive email messages addressed to [email protected] and [email protected].
Looking for management tasks related to email address policies? See Email Address Policy Procedures.
NOT B
No need to change the default email policy.
Create a new email address policy
NOT C
No need for a remote domain
You can create remote domain entries to define the settings for message transfer between the Microsoft Exchange Server 2013 organization and domains outside your Exchange organization.
When you create a remote domain entry, you control the types of messages that are sent to that domain. You can also apply message format policies and acceptable character sets for messages that are sent from users in your organization to the remote domain. The settings for remote domains are global configuration settings for the Exchange organization.
The remote domain settings are applied to messages during categorization in the Transport service on Mailbox servers. When recipient resolution occurs, the recipient domain is matched against the configured remote domains. If a remote domain configuration blocks a specific message type from being sent to recipients in that domain, the message is deleted. If you specify a particular message format for the remote domain, the message headers and content are modified. The settings apply to all messages that are processed by the Exchange organization.
NOT E
Do not want to use a relay server. When you configure an external relay domain, messages are relayed to an email server that’s outside your Exchange organization and outside the organization’s network perimeter.
Typically, most Internet-facing messaging servers are configured to not allow for other domains to be relayed through them.
However, there are scenarios where you may want to let partners or subsidiaries relay email through your Exchange servers. In Exchange 2013, you can configure accepted domains as relay domains. Your organization receives the email messages and then relays the messages to another email server.
You can configure a relay domain as an internal relay domain or as an external relay domain. These two relay domain types are described in the following sections.
A
Need to create a new email address policy
D
There are three types of accepted domains: authoritative, internal relay, and external relay.
Configure an Accepted Domain within Your Exchange Organization as Authoritative
Applies to: Exchange Server 2013 If a domain belonging to your organization hosts mailboxes for all the recipients within an SMTP namespace, that domain is considered to be authoritative.
By default, one accepted domain is configured as authoritative for the Exchange organization.
If your organization has more than one SMTP namespace, you can configure more than one accepted domain as authoritative.
Configure an Accepted Domain within Your Exchange Organization as Authoritative: Exchange 2013 Help
Email Address Policies: Exchange 2013 Help