Exchange Server replication is vitally important to the integrity and availability of your Exchange Server data. Learn how the Exchange Server replication process works, best practices for configuring a healthy Exchange Server replication architecture, and tools that will mend your worst Exchange Server replication maladies.
Registry-related Exchange replication failure Exchange 5.5 and Exchange 2000 use a certain registry key to govern how replication behaves. If this key is damaged or has an invalid value written to it, replication may fail.
Understanding Exchange Server routing groups Exchange Server routing groups have one job: to keep your network bandwidth links from being overrun by replication traffic. Learn how they work, issues to watch out for when using them, and what routing group topology options are available to you.
Dealing with routing group master failure Learn about the essential role of the routing group master in an Exchange Server routing group architecture and how to handle a failure.
REPLMON: Microsoft Active Directory replication monitoring tool Since Active Directory is at the heart of Exchange Server's functionality, problems with it can affect Exchange as well. To help diagnose AD replication issues, Microsoft created REPLMON, a tool included in the Windows Server 2003 Support Tools collection.
The Inter-Organization Replication Tool
Want to replicate Exchange 2000 or Exchange 2003 public folders across organizations or forests? Use the Inter-Organization Replication Tool.
Site Replication Service hangs during Setup Learn about the possible causes of the error message: "Setup failed while installing subcomponent Site Replication Service with error code 0xC007041D."
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