Understanding Prerequisites for an Exchange 2007 Hybrid Deployment
Applies to: Exchange Server 2010 SP2
Before you can really start to use the Deployment Assistant, your system and servers must meet requirements. If they don't meet these requirements, you won't be able to complete the steps within the tool and you won't be able to configure a hybrid deployment between your on-premises Exchange 2007 and cloud-based organizations. This topic provides information about the following:
Permissions needed to install and manage Exchange 2010
Requirements for directory servers, hardware, software, clients, and other elements, including:
- Windows Server 2008 Service Pack 2 (SP2) or later or Windows Server 2008 R2 operating system prerequisites that are required for all Exchange 2010 server roles
Language selection options in Setup and the specific languages that are supported for Exchange 2010
The Exchange Management Shell, the command-line interface for Exchange 2010, and the Exchange Management Console, the GUI management tool for Exchange 2010
Note
Before installing Exchange 2010, we recommend that you install any critical or recommended updates from Microsoft Update.
Exchange Pre-Deployment Analyzer
You can use the Exchange Pre-Deployment Analyzer (ExPDA) to perform an overall topology readiness scan of your environment. This scan focuses on overall topology readiness and not the ability to run Exchange 2010 on the local computer. ExPDA provides a detailed report that will alert you if there are any issues within your organization, which could prevent you from deploying Exchange 2010. For example, ExPDA will notify you if you haven't deployed the minimum required Exchange service pack on all your Exchange servers. If your organization passes the ExPDA readiness scan, you can go ahead and use the Exchange Deployment Assistant.
To get ExPDA from the Microsoft Download Center, see: Exchange Pre-Deployment Analyzer
Permissions to Install and Manage Exchange 2010
Exchange 2010 requires different permissions to install and to manage your server roles. When you're installing Exchange 2010 servers in your organization, the account you use might not be the same account that you use for administering and managing your server roles. To manage your server roles, Exchange 2010 uses the Role Based Access Control (RBAC) permissions model.
Exchange 2010 uses RBAC to manage permissions on the Exchange 2010 hybrid server. With RBAC, you can control what resources administrators can configure and what features users can access. The RBAC model in Exchange 2010 is flexible and provides you with several ways to customize the default permissions.
RBAC has two primary ways of assigning permissions to users in your organization, depending on whether the user is an administrator or specialist user, or an end-user: management role groups and management role assignment policies. Each method associates users with the permissions they need to perform their jobs. The following sections list the tasks found in the Deployment Assistant and the permissions required to complete the task.
Note
Some features may require that you have local administrator permissions on the server you want to manage. To manage these features, you must be a member of the Local Administrators group on that server.
Installation Permissions
By default, the account that's used to install Exchange 2010 in the organization is added as a member of the Organization Management role group.
When you install the hybrid server into your Exchange 2007 organization, Exchange Setup will prepare your Active Directory schema if you have the correct permissions. If you want to separate your Active Directory schema preparation from the hybrid server installation, see: Prepare Active Directory and Domains
For information about how to add permissions, see: Add Members to a Role Group
The following permissions are required to install the hybrid server in your organization:
Local Administrator on the server on which Exchange 2010 will be installed
Enterprise Administrator in the Active Directory forest where Exchange 2010 will be installed
Schema Administrator in the Active Directory forest where Exchange 2010 will be installed
Exchange Management Permissions
The table below lists the configuration permissions that you need to successfully use the Deployment Assistant. Some tasks need to be performed only in the on-premises organization while some tasks also need to be performed in the cloud-based organization. If a task needs to be performed in the cloud-based organization, you must ensure that you have the required permissions in that organization. Permissions in the on-premises organization aren't replicated to the cloud-based organization.
Note
The user account used to create the cloud-based organization has all the permissions required to perform the tasks in this checklist.
Learn more at: Understanding Hybrid Deployment Permissions
Some procedures require you to perform tasks on your Exchange 2007 servers. For information about how to manage permissions in an organization with Exchange 2007 and Exchange 2010 installed, see: Understanding Permissions Coexistence with Exchange 2007.
Task | Permissions required | On-premises or cloud-based organization |
---|---|---|
Import digital certificates |
Local Administrator |
On-premises organization |
Configure settings on virtual directories |
Server Management |
On-premises organization |
Configure virtual directories |
Organization Management Server Management |
On-premises organization |
Create accepted domains |
Organization Management |
On-premises and cloud-based organization |
Create and modify Send and Receive connectors |
Organization Management |
On-premises organization |
Create a federation trust |
Organization Management |
On-premises organization |
Create organization relationships |
Organization Management |
On-premises and cloud-based organization |
Configure Mailbox Replication Service (MRS) proxy |
Local Administrator |
On-premises organization |
Move mailboxes |
Organization Management Recipient Management |
On-premises and cloud-based organization |
Configure Exchange 2007 authentication |
Local Administrator |
On-premises organization |
Configure Exchange 2007 e-mail address policies |
Exchange Administrator |
On-premises organization |
Directory Servers
Here are the requirements for the directory servers in your organization:
Schema master The latest 32-bit or 64-bit edition of the Windows Server 2003 SP2 Standard or Enterprise operating system or the Windows Server 2008 Standard or Enterprise operating system.
Global catalog server In every Active Directory site where you plan to install Exchange 2010, you must have at least one global catalog server that is either the latest 32-bit or 64-bit edition of: Windows Server 2003 SP2 Standard or Enterprise; Windows Server 2008 Standard or Enterprise; or Windows Server 2008 R2 Standard or Enterprise.
Active Directory Forest The Active Directory forest must be Windows Server 2003 forest functional mode or higher.
Domain Controller You must have the latest 32-bit or 64-bit Windows Server 2003 Standard Edition or Enterprise Edition with Service Pack 2 (SP2) operating system or the latest 32-bit or 64-bit edition of the Windows Server 2008 Standard or Enterprise operating system or the Windows Server 2008 R2 Standard or Enterprise operating system.
Hardware
The recommended hardware requirements for Exchange 2010 servers vary depending on several factors including the server role(s) that are installed and the anticipated load that will be placed on the servers.
Processor x64 architecture-based computer with processor that supports 64-bit architecture
Memory Minimum 4GB with a recommended maximum of 2GB per core (8GB minimum). Learn more at: Understanding Memory Configurations and Exchange Performance
Disk space At least 1.2 GB on the drive on which you install Exchange and additional 200 MB of available space on the system drive.
Drive DVD-ROM drive, local or network accessible
File format Disk partitions formatted as NTFS file systems
Operating System
Here are the supported operating systems for Exchange 2010:
64-bit edition of Windows Server 2008 Standard Service Pack 2
64-bit edition of Windows Server 2008 Enterprise Service Pack 2
64-bit edition of Windows Server 2008 R2 Standard
64-bit edition of Windows Server 2008 R2 Enterprise
Exchange 2010 Management tools can use the operating systems listed above plus:
64-bit edition of Windows Vista
64-bit edition of Windows 7
Install the Exchange 2010 SP1 Hotfixes for Windows Server 2008 SP2
The following hotfixes are required for Windows Server 2008 SP2:
Install the update described in Microsoft Knowledge Base article 977624, AD RMS clients do not authenticate federated identity providers in Windows Server 2008 or in Windows Vista. Without this update, Active Directory Rights Management Services (AD RMS) features may stop working.
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 979744, A .NET Framework 2.0-based Multi-AppDomain application stops responding when you run the application.
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 979917, Two issues occur when you deploy an ASP.NET 2.0-based application on a server that is running IIS 7.0 or IIS 7.5 in Integrated mode. For more information, see these MSDN Code Gallery pages:
For additional background information, see KB979917 - QFE for Sharepoint issues - Perf Counter fix & User Impersonation.
For the available downloads, see KB979917 - QFE for Sharepoint issues - Perf Counter fix & User Impersonation.
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 973136, FIX: ArgumentNullException exception error message when a .NET Framework 2.0 SP2-based application tries to process a response with zero-length content to an asynchronous ASP.NET Web service request: "Value cannot be null".
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 977592, RPC over HTTP clients cannot connect to the Windows Server 2008 RPC over HTTP servers that have RPC load balancing enabled.
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 979099, An update is available to remove the application manifest expiry feature from AD RMS clients. Without this update, the AD RMS features may stop working.
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 983440, An ASP.NET 2.0 hotfix rollup package is available for Windows 7 and for Windows Server 2008 R2. For more information, see these MSDN Code Gallery pages:
For additional background information, see KB983440 - Win7 rollup package (PR for QFE 810219).
For the available downloads, see KB983440 - Win7 rollup package (PR for QFE 810219).
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 977020, FIX: An application that is based on the Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0 Service Pack 2 and that invokes a Web service call asynchronously throws an exception on a computer that is running Windows 7.
Install the Exchange 2010 SP1 Hotfixes for Windows Server 2008 R2
The following hotfixes are required for Windows Server 2008 R2:
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 979099, An update is available to remove the application manifest expiry feature from AD RMS clients. Without this update, the AD RMS features may stop working.
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 979744, A .NET Framework 2.0-based Multi-AppDomain application stops responding when you run the application.
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 983440, An ASP.NET 2.0 hotfix rollup package is available for Windows 7 and for Windows Server 2008 R2. For more information, see these MSDN Code Gallery pages:
For additional background information, see KB983440 - Win7 rollup package (PR for QFE 810219).
For the available downloads, see KB983440 - Win7 rollup package (PR for QFE 810219).
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 977020, FIX: An application that is based on the Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0 Service Pack 2 and that invokes a Web service call asynchronously throws an exception on a computer that is running Windows 7.
Install the Exchange 2010 SP1 Hotfixes for Windows 7 and Windows Vista
The following hotfixes are required for Windows 7 and Windows Vista computers where you install the Exchange Management Console
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 977020, FIX: An application that is based on the Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0 Service Pack 2 and that invokes a Web service call asynchronously throws an exception on a computer that is running Windows 7.
Install the update described in Knowledge Base article 983440, An ASP.NET 2.0 hotfix rollup package is available for Windows 7 and for Windows Server 2008 R2. For more information, see these MSDN Code Gallery pages:
For additional background information, see KB983440 - Win7 rollup package (PR for QFE 810219).
For the available downloads, see KB983440 - Win7 rollup package (PR for QFE 810219).
Install the Windows Server 2008 SP2 prerequisites
Install the Microsoft Filter Pack. For details, see: 2007 Office System Converter: Microsoft Filter Pack
Open an elevated command prompt, navigate to the Scripts folder on the Exchange 2010 installation media and use the following command to install the necessary operating system components:
sc config NetTcpPortSharing start= auto ServerManagerCmd -ip Exchange-Typical.xml -Restart
Install the Exchange 2010 SP1 Hotfixes for Windows Server 2008 SP2
The following hotfix is required for Windows Server 2008 SP2 and must be installed after the operating system prerequisites have been installed:
Install the hotfix described in Knowledge Base article 982867, WCF services that are hosted by computers together with a NLB fail in .NET Framework 3.5 SP1. For more information, see these MSDN Code Gallery pages:
For additional background information, see KB982867 - WCF: Enable WebHeader settings on the RST/SCT.
For the available downloads, see KB982867 - WCF: Enable WebHeader settings on the RST/SCT.
After installing the preceding prerequisites and hotfix, and before installing Exchange 2010, we recommend that you install any critical or recommended updates from Microsoft Update.
Install the Windows Server 2008 R2 prerequisites
Install the Microsoft Filter Pack. For details, see: 2007 Office System Converter: Microsoft Filter Pack
On the Start Menu, navigate to All Programs, then Accessories, then Windows PowerShell. Open an elevated Windows PowerShell console, and run the following command:
Import-Module ServerManager
Use the Add-WindowsFeature cmdlet to install the necessary operating system components using the following command:
Add-WindowsFeature NET-Framework,RSAT-ADDS,Web-Server,Web-Basic-Auth,Web-Windows-Auth,Web-Metabase,Web-Net-Ext,Web-Lgcy-Mgmt-Console,WAS-Process-Model,RSAT-Web-Server,Web-ISAPI-Ext,Web-Digest-Auth,Web-Dyn-Compression,NET-HTTP-Activation,RPC-Over-HTTP-Proxy -Restart
After the system has restarted, log on as an administrator, open an elevated Windows PowerShell console, and configure the Net.Tcp Port Sharing Service for Automatic startup by running the following command:
Set-Service NetTcpPortSharing -StartupType Automatic
Install the Exchange 2010 SP1 Hotfixes for Windows Server 2008 R2
The following hotfix is required for Windows Server 2008 R2 and must be installed after the operating system prerequisites have been installed:
Install the hotfix described in Knowledge Base article 982867, WCF services that are hosted by computers together with a NLB fail in .NET Framework 3.5 SP1. For more information, see these MSDN Code Gallery pages:
For additional background information, see KB982867 - WCF: Enable WebHeader settings on the RST/SCT.
For the available downloads, see KB982867 - WCF: Enable WebHeader settings on the RST/SCT.
After installing the preceding prerequisites and hotfix, and before installing Exchange 2010, we recommend that you install any critical or recommended updates from Microsoft Update.
Windows Management Framework
Windows PowerShell V2.0
Windows Remote Management V2.0
.NET Framework 3.5 SP1
Internet Information Services (IIS)
Language Support
An Exchange 2010 language pack contains the necessary resources for a supported Exchange language. Language packs can be installed during deployment of Exchange 2010 or after Exchange 2010 has been deployed. Client and server language packs come grouped into a single bundle containing both client and server resource and support files. You can automatically download the language packs when you are running Exchange Setup.
Learn more at: Exchange 2010 Language Support
Exchange Management Shell
The Exchange Management Shell, built on Windows PowerShell technology, provides a powerful command-line interface for Exchange 2010 that enables automation of administrative tasks.
With the Shell, you can manage every aspect of Exchange 2010; the Shell can perform every task that can be performed by the Exchange Management Console (EMC) and the Exchange Control Panel (ECP) in addition to tasks that can't be performed in those interfaces. In fact, when a task is performed in the EMC or the ECP, those interfaces use the Shell to perform the task.
Learn more at: Overview of Exchange Management Shell
Exchange Management Console
The Exchange Management Console (EMC) is a Microsoft Management Console (MMC) 3.0-based tool that provides you with a GUI to manage the configuration of your Exchange 2010 organization. You can also add the EMC snap-in to custom MMC-based tools.
Learn more at: Exchange Management Console
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