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Transport high availability

Applies to: Exchange Server 2013

In Microsoft Exchange Server 2013, transport high availability is responsible for keeping redundant copies of messages before and after the messages are successfully delivered. Exchange 2013 improves upon the transport high availability features introduced in Exchange Server 2010, for example, shadow redundancy and the transport dumpster, to help ensure messages aren't lost in transit.

Here's a summary of the major transport high availability improvements in Exchange 2013:

  • Shadow redundancy creates a redundant copy of the message on another server before the message is accepted or acknowledged. The sending server's support or lack of support for shadow redundancy is irrelevant.

  • Shadow redundancy recognizes both database availability groups (DAGs) and Active Directory sites as transport high availability boundaries. This reduces the number of servers that can hold redundant copies of messages, and eliminates unnecessary redundant message maintenance traffic across DAGs or Active Directory sites.

    For more information, see Shadow redundancy.

  • The transport dumpster is improved and is now named Safety Net. Safety Net stores messages that the Transport service successfully processed on Mailbox servers. Safety Net works best for Mailbox servers in a DAG, but Safety Net also works for multiple Mailbox servers in the same Active Directory site that don't belong to a DAG.

  • Safety Net itself is now made redundant on another server. This is important to avoid a single point of failure in Exchange 2013, because the Transport service and the mailbox databases are both located on the Mailbox server.

    For more information, see Safety Net.

The following diagram provides a high-level overview of how transport high availability works in Exchange 2013.

Transport high availability overview.

  1. An Exchange 2013 Mailbox server named Mailbox01 receives a message from an SMTP server that's outside the transport high availability boundary. The transport high availability boundary is a DAG or an Active Directory site in non-DAG environments. The message could come from a third-party SMTP server, from an Internet SMTP server proxied through a Client Access server, or from another Exchange 2013 server.

  2. Before acknowledging receipt of the message, Mailbox01 initiates a new SMTP session to another Exchange 2013 Mailbox server named Mailbox03. Mailbox03, which is within the Transport high availability boundary, then makes a shadow copy of the message. In DAG environments, a shadow server in a remote Active Directory site is preferred. Mailbox01 is the primary server holding the primary message, and Mailbox03 is the shadow server holding the shadow message.

  3. The Transport service on Mailbox01 processes the primary message.

    1. In this example, the recipient's mailbox is located on Mailbox01, so the Transport service transmits the message to the local Mailbox Transport service.

    2. The Mailbox Transport service delivers the message to the local mailbox database.

    3. Mailbox01 queues a discard status for Mailbox03 that indicates the primary message was successfully processed, and Mailbox01 moves a copy of the primary message into the local Primary Safety Net. The message moves between queues within the same queue database.

  4. Mailbox03 periodically polls Mailbox01 for the discard status of the primary message.

  5. When Mailbox03 determines Mailbox01 successfully processed the primary message, Mailbox03 moves the shadow message into the local Shadow Safety Net. The message moves between queues within the same queue database.

The message is retained in Primary Safety Net and Shadow Safety Net until the message expires based on a configurable timeout value. If a mailbox database failover occurs before the message expires, the Primary Safety Net on Mailbox01 resubmits the message. If the Mailbox01 isn't available, the Shadow Safety Net on Mailbox03 takes over and resubmits the message.

Message redundancy in the Front End Transport service on Client Access servers

A Client Access server has no message queues. It's a stateless proxy server that uses the Front End Transport service to accept incoming SMTP connections and proxy them to the Transport service on a Mailbox server. The Front End Transport service keeps the SMTP session with the sending server open while the primary message is transmitted to the Transport service on a Mailbox server, and a shadow copy of the message is made by the Transport service on a different Mailbox server within the transport high availability boundary. Only after both the primary message and shadow message are successfully created, the end of data SMTP command is sent back to the sending SMTP server through the Client Access server.