Exchange Restores

September 4th, 2008 No comments

Exchange is a massive enterprise tool and as such you’d expect it to provide a simple method for restoring mail folders. No such luck! Instead a restore on exchange is quite a long process.

First up you need to discover the storage group that your mailbox is in. This requires a quick search on an active directory server. Once you have that you can go on to create a ‘recovery storage group’ linking it to the correct storage group.

Then you start up your TSM restore and recover the storage group (we use TSM as our backup). On our setup that means that you are restoring approximately 20Gb of data. Once thats done (it can take a while), we can then mount the recovery group. At this point we are left with one of two options: copy all the mail and folders into your existing mail account effectively doubling your mail, or you can merge the contents back into your mail so only copying what is missing.

My issue is that neither of these options are really what a use wants. If we copy the mail back, then we effectively double the amount of mail that a user has. If we merge the data back, it can merge e-mails back into folders that maybe the user will not look at, thus leaving behind stray meant-to-be-deleted e-mails. Nine times out of ten all the user has lost is a single folder or a single mail.

The solution to this is to add another step into the process, extract the mailbox from the recovery group into a PST file, then merge the folder out of the PST file back into the mailbox in the main storage group. But even here there is a problem, if you don’t know the exact folder name you can’t find out what it is and therefore cannot restore it.

In reality what is needed here is a solution that allows the administrators the ability to extract individual folders within a mailbox. It is obvious that the exchange restores are built with the intent of only being used in a situation of disaster, total loss of a storage group or something similar. However almost all the restores undertaken will be for single users.

Looking back to the old method we used with exim makes this look even more silly. As there we could simply find the file representing the mail folder and restore it. Done!

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WordPress

September 3rd, 2008 No comments

How unexciting of me, yet another WordPress blog to poison the internet and warp the pure beauty of Google results, JOY!

Needless to say I hope mine will be different, reminding people of the wonders of the web or something like that. More than likely this is the first and last post I’ll ever make :) Such as shame to waste this wonderful site.

Commentary is welcome, spam is denied, donkeys can be parked out back, rabbits to the side and don’t forget to strap it on!

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