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Migrating to Exchange 2013 : Moving Mailboxes - Preparing for Inter-Org Mailbox Moves

12/20/2013 12:35:19 AM
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Moving mailboxes and data is probably the most critical part of any migration. Any mistakes made here will almost certainly result in a meeting where you are asked to explain your actions, which everyone would prefer to avoid.

We have witnessed some painfully difficult scenarios over the years where mailbox data migrations went wrong. For example, take the scenario where a Lotus Domino migration to Exchange 2007 mixed up the source and the target mailbox data. The result was that some users logged on the morning after the migration only to be presented with someone else's mailbox and calendar data.

Another scenario occurred when a migration team decided to migrate only the last 30 days' worth of email and no calendar data but hadn't informed the business of this. While the IT team viewed this as a successful migration since it met all of their requirements, the business units held a somewhat different viewpoint. The bottom line is that end users are rightfully very protective of their data, and there will be quite an uproar if any of it goes missing, whether intentionally or not.

Mailbox Replication Service

For Exchange-to-Exchange migrations, moving mailbox data is handled by the Mailbox Replication Service (MRS). The MRS was introduced in Exchange Server 2010, and it brought with it some extremely useful benefits over the legacy approach for moving mailboxes:

  • Mailbox moves are now asynchronous, and they are performed by the MRS.
  • Mailboxes can be kept online during the move process.
  • The items in a mailbox's Recoverable Items folder are moved with the mailbox if the source mailbox is on Exchange Server 2010.
  • As soon as the mailbox move begins, content indexing starts to scan the mailbox so that fast searching is available on completion of the move.
  • You can configure throttling for each MRS instance, each mailbox database, or each mailbox server.
  • Remote mailbox moves work over the Internet by way of the Microsoft Exchange Mailbox Replication Proxy (MRSProxy) service.
  • MRSProxy helps to simplify migration over firewalls because of fewer ports being required.
  • Mailbox moves can be managed from any Exchange 2013 Server within the organization.
  • Mailbox content doesn't move through an administrative computer.
  • The mailbox's move history is maintained in the mailbox.

Exchange Server 2013 incorporates MRS from Exchange Server 2010 and adds the following improvements:

  • The ability to move multiple mailboxes in large batches.
  • Email notification during a move with reporting.
  • Automatic retry and automatic prioritization of moves.
  • Primary and personal archive mailboxes can be moved together or separately.
  • An option for manual move request finalization that allows you to review your move before you complete it.
  • Periodic incremental syncs to update migration changes.
  • Migration endpoints for cross-forest or remote moves.

At its heart, the MRS is a mailbox move-queuing service. It takes requests to move a mailbox from a source to its destination and then processes each request on the administrator's behalf.

One of the most important things to remember is that the mailbox data is not routed via the administrator's management console, as it was in Exchange 2007 and prior. The actual mailbox data movement is controlled via an instance of the Exchange 2013 Mailbox role in the target AD site. This means that you can generate a move request for a mailbox between two databases in Hong Kong from a PowerShell session in London, and the migration data will remain within Hong Kong.

Here is a link to a great post on the Exchange Team Blog that talks in some detail about how MRS in Exchange Server 2010 works:

images

Although Exchange Server 2013 has made improvements, the fundamental mechanics of moving a mailbox via MRS remain the same. This article is highly recommended in order to obtain a working understanding of MRS prior to beginning your migration planning.

Preparing for Inter-Org Mailbox Moves

We have already discussed inter-org migration considerations. This section is intended to take a look at what you need to do to prepare your target user objects to get them ready for migration. Before MRS can move a mailbox into another forest, there must be a mail-enabled target object in the target forest with matching attributes. A list of mandatory attributes is provided in Table 1.

TABLE 1: Mandatory attributes for a cross-forest move

MAIL USER'S ACTIVE DIRECTORY ATTRIBUTES ACTION
displayName Copy the corresponding attribute of the source mailbox or generate a new value.
Mail Directly copy the corresponding attribute of the source mailbox.
mailNickname Copy the corresponding attribute of the source mailbox or generate a new value.
msExchArchiveGUID and msExchArchiveName Directly copy the corresponding attribute of the source mailbox. Attributes are available only if the source mailbox is Exchange 2010.
msExchMailboxGUID Directly copy the corresponding attribute of the source mailbox.
msExchRecipientDisplayType -2147483642 (decimal) //equivalent to imagesx8imagesimagesimagesimagesimagesimages6 (hex).
msExchRecipientTypeDetails 128 (decimal)/images×8images (hex).
msExchUserVersion Directly copy the corresponding attribute of the source mailbox.
msExchVersion 4422images983382images16 (decimal).
cn Copy the corresponding attribute of the source mailbox or generate a new value.
proxyAddresses Copy the source mailbox's proxyAddresses attribute. Additionally, copy the source mailbox's legacyExchangeDN as an X500 address in the proxyAddresses attribute of the target mail user.
sAMAccountName Copy the corresponding attribute of the source mailbox or generate a new value.

Ensure that the value is unique within the target forest domain to which the target mail user belongs.

targetAddress Set this to an SMTP address in the proxyAddresses attribute of the source mailbox. This SMTP address must belong to the authoritative domain of the source forest.
userAccountControl Constant: 514 //equivalent to imagesx2images2, ACCOUNTDISABLE | NORMAL_ACCOUNT.
userPrincipalName Copy the corresponding attribute of the source mailbox or generate a new value. Because the mail user is logon disabled, this userPrincipalName isn't used.

Note: The proxy addresses of the source mailbox user must contain an SMTP address that matches the authoritative domain of the target forest. This allows the New-MoveRequest cmdlet to select the target address of the source mail-enabled user correctly (converted from the source mailbox user after the mailbox move request is complete) to ensure that mail routing is still functional.

These mandatory attributes can be managed in two ways. The first is via the Forefront Identity Manager 2010 (FIM 2010), which can be configured to synchronize between the source and the target environments in such a way as to support MRS mailbox moves. The necessary code and configuration information for this approach can be found here:

http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee861124.aspx

If you do not have FIM 2010 available, then there is an alternative method that works just as well. The Exchange team provides a PowerShell script called prepare-moveequest.ps1. This script is installed as part of every Exchange Server 2013 installation in the C:\Program Files\Microsoft\Exchange Server\V15\Scripts folder. This script has been the cornerstone of many migration projects since it was introduced in Exchange Server 2010. The script is capable of creating and updating user objects in the target forest, and it ensures that they are ready for a cross-forest mailbox move with all of the mandatory attributes in place.

Use of this script is detailed here:

images

Storage Capacity

Storage capacity within the target Exchange infrastructure is a predictable, though frequently overlooked, consideration during a migration. There are two areas to consider.

MAILBOX DATABASE VOLUME SIZE

Mailbox database Volume size is simply how large your mailbox databases will become when you migrate your mailboxes into them. Rather than attempting to plan for this specifically during the migration, it is better to plan your target environment adequately to accommodate all of your mailboxes at their maximum quota size during the design phase. It's easiest to use the Exchange Mailbox Server Role Requirements Calculator to help you with this since it provides the best approximation of the size required to store each mailbox in your environment. Your completed design should specify a limit on the number of mailboxes at the maximum quota size that can safely fit into each mailbox database. As you are planning your migration, you must ensure that no target mailbox database exceeds the design target. Additionally, it is recommended that you validate the predictions at around 25 percent migration complete in order to ensure that the database sizes agree with those predicted during the design phase. Do not be tempted to do this validation check too early since Exchange mailbox databases contain an amount of whitespace that may make things look worse than they are.

TRANSACTION LOG VOLUME SIZE

Transaction log Volume size has been a problem for Exchange migrations since the very beginning of Exchange. The main problem is that transaction logs record all changes made to the mailbox database, including the data that was added or modified. This is done so that, in the event of a mailbox database problem, the transaction logs can be used to replay changes from the last full backup and bring the database back to a consistently healthy state. This has always been a great feature of Exchange, and it has saved many an administrator's bacon when things have gone awry. It also means that if you move a 1 GB mailbox from the source environment to the target environment, you need to account for the space to hold both the mailbox data in the mailbox database and the transaction logs. So while transaction logs are indeed great, they are also something you need to watch carefully during a migration.

As a general rule of thumb, the size of transaction log data generated on the target database will be roughly equal to the size of the mailbox data being moved. We generally advise adding 10–20 percent headroom when calculating this to account for variations. You should also try to leave the log drives with a minimum of 25 percent free space after each daily migration batch. This may seem like an overly conservative approach. If you do run out of transaction log space, however, then the mailbox database will dismount, and you know what happens next. Thus, all things considered, it's better to migrate conservatively and work upward rather than begin with a tidal wave of mailbox migrations, only to begin day two of your migration in the IT director's office explaining why the new super-highly available Exchange solution was offline after only half a day in production. (Yes, this really happened to one of our more zealous customers.)

Having said all of this about storage capacity during a migration, make no mistake that failing to account for it adequately is a very easy trap we have all fallen into at some point in our careers. All it takes is a failed backup or someone accidentally scheduling in a few too many or too large mailboxes, and you too can run into this scenario. Our best guidance here is to define a plan of action to bring service back online quickly after a transaction log volume has filled up, and make sure that your support teams know what to do if it does occur. Monitoring and alerting can sometimes help here, but typically the rate of change during the migration is very fast, and so, by the time someone has been contacted because of a log volume running low on space, it is generally too late.

Content Indexing

Content indexing (CI) in Exchange has evolved greatly over the years. CI is the process by which the content of a mailbox is stored to improve its searchability. As mailbox sizes have grown over the years, so too has the difficulty in finding what you are looking for. Maintaining a content index allows you to search against mailbox contents based on keywords. Initially, it was very resource-intensive and it provided a fairly poor experience, so most customers chose not to enable it. Exchange 2007 brought with it a much better CI implementation, which was retained in Exchange Server 2010. This new implementation of CI was enabled by default since it was more efficient. However, the downside of having CI enabled permanently was a fairly dramatic increase in CPU utilization during mailbox migrations. With Exchange 2007 and Exchange 2010, a newly migrated mailbox is scheduled for indexing once it has been successfully migrated. This means that during a typical migration window, the migration processes are fighting with the CI processes for system resources. This can dramatically reduce migration throughput.

Exchange Server 2013 introduced a totally new CI mechanism based on the Microsoft FAST Search technology. Furthermore, mailbox migration data is now indexed as it is added rather than post-mailbox migration. The idea here is to ensure that the CI is as up to date as possible if the user logs on directly after a mailbox migration. Initial lab testing suggests that Exchange Server 2013 is throttling index generation during migrations, and disabling CI during your migration window may no longer have any significant benefit.

 
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