Best practices for configuring transport rules in Exchange 2013

Applies to: Exchange Server 2013

Follow these best practice recommendations for Exchange transport rules in order to avoid common configuration errors. Each recommendation links to a topic with an example and step-by-step instructions.

Test your rules

To make sure unexpected things don't happen to people's email, and to make sure you're really meeting the business, legal, or compliance intentions of your rule, be sure to test it thoroughly. There are many options, and rules can interact with each other, so it's important to test messages that you expect both will match the rule and won't match the rule in case you inadvertently made a rule too general. To learn all the options for testing rules, see Test a transport rule.

Scope your rule

Make sure your rule applies only to the messages you intend it to. For example:

For a complete list of all the conditions and exceptions that are available for transport rules, see Transport rule conditions and exceptions (predicates) in Exchange 2013.

Know when you need two rules

Sometimes it takes two rules to do what you want. Transport rules are processed in order, so multiple rules can apply to the same message. For example, if one of the actions is to block the message, and you also have another action you'd like to apply, such as copying the message to the sender's manager or changing the subject for the notification message, you would need two rules. The first rule could copy the message to the sender's manager and change the subject, and the second rule could block the message.

If you use two rules like this, be sure that the conditions are identical. To see examples, look at example 3 in Common message approval scenarios, example 3 in Common attachment blocking scenarios for transport rules, and Organization-wide disclaimers, signatures, footers, or headers in Exchange 2013.

Don't repeat an action on every email in a conversation

The chain of email in a conversation can include many individual messages, and repeating the action on each message in the thread might get annoying. For example, if you have an action such as adding a disclaimer, you might want it to apply only to the first message in the thread. If so, add an exception for messages that already include the disclaimer text. For an example, see Organization-wide disclaimers, signatures, footers, or headers in Exchange 2013.

Know when to stop rule processing

Sometimes it makes sense to stop rule processing once a rule is matched. For example, if you have one rule to block messages with attachments and one to insert a disclaimer in messages that match a pattern, you probably should stop rule processing once the message is blocked. There's no need for further action.

To stop rule processing after a rule is triggered, in the rule, select the Stop processing more rules check box.

If you have lots of keywords or patterns to match, load them from a file

For example, you might want to prevent emails from being sent if they contain a list of unacceptable or bad words. You can create a text file containing these words and phrases, and then use Windows PowerShell to set up a transport rule that blocks messages that use them.

The text file can contain regular expressions for patterns. These expressions are not case-sensitive. Common regular expressions include:

Expression Matches
. Any single character
* Any additional characters
\d Any decimal digit
[character_group] Any single character in character_group.

For an example that shows a text file with regular expressions and the Exchange module Windows PowerShell commands to use, see Use transport rules to route email based on a list of words, phrases, or patterns.

To learn how to specify patterns using regular expressions, see Regular Expression Reference.