Managing Public folders in Exchange Server 2003.
Managing Public folders in Exchange Server 2003.
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Public folders in an Exchange Server 2003 organization enable a member to access the e-mails sent by any other user of the organization. They are used to permanently store information, such as e-mail messages, graphics, and sound bites. The information stored in public folders is available to all the users of the organization. On an Exchange 2003 server, public folders are stored in the public information store (ExchsrvrMdbdataPub.edb). In an Exchange organization with multiple servers, public folders can be replicated to other servers for the purpose of load balancing and easy manageability of messages in the folders. The replication can occur among servers that reside either within a site or across multiple sites. With public folders, users can manage their messages very easily. They can be created from either Outlook or Exchange System Manager. Exchange administrators can use Exchange System Manager to create public folders.
- Open Exchange System Manager, navigate to an administrative group, expand Folders, right-click Public Folders, and click New > Public Folder.
- In the Properties dialog box, provide the necessary entries in the text boxes, and click the OK button.

- In Exchange System Manager, navigate to an administrative group, right-click the Folders container, and select New > Public Folder Tree.
- In the Properties dialog box, provide a name of the tree in the Name section, and click the OK button.


Exchange Server 2003 also allows administrators to move public folders within a tree, thereby enabling them to modify the public folder structure as per the requirement of the organization. However, a public folder cannot be copied or moved between trees. In an organization containing multiple sites, it is generally inefficient, and sometimes proves to be costly for users at remote sites to access public folders in other sites, which are usually connected via a slow WAN link. Replication proves to be a remedy in such situations. Public folders in a public store can be replicated to other public stores on a server in another site. Administrators can also schedule the replication process as per their requirements. Since Exchange Server 2003 uses a multimaster replication model, all the replicas of a public folder are equal, and modifications performed to any replica are automatically reflected to other replicas exactly. However, administrators can restrict the replication process if they do not want it to be done as per schedule. They can manually adjust the replication process.
When a user connects to a public folder store and does not find the required information there, Exchange Server 2003 automatically redirects the user to the server that contains the requested information. This process occurs in the background and is referred to as referral.
| Client permissions | Controls the permissions of the users accessing the public folder. |
| Directory rights | Controls which user can manipulate a mail-enabled public folder object stored in Active Directory |
| Administrative rights | Controls the assignment of specific administrative permissions to specific administrators. |
Administrators frequently work with client permission that can be configured from Exchange System Manager by opening the Client Permissions for Public folder dialog box. This dialog box is opened by right-clicking a public folder, clicking Properties, clicking on the Permissions tab, and then clicking the Client Permissions button.
Administrative rights control the users and groups that can use Exchange System Manager, or any other administrative utility to configure the replication, storage limits, and other public folder-related settings. By default, only administrators in the Active Directory domain and enterprise have administrative rights to a public folder.
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