Applies to: Exchange Server 2010 SP1

Topic Last Modified: 2012-07-23

Estimated time to complete: 5 minutes

The Exchange 2010 hybrid server that you're introducing to your Exchange 2007 organization will handle mail transportation and routing of messages. Therefore, you'll need to modify the e-mail address policy for your users and mail-enabled objects. Adding a shared service-routing namespace as a custom secondary e-mail domain for your recipients enables them to receive e-mail messages that use the service routing namespace.

Learn more at: Understanding Shared and Split SMTP Namespaces for an Exchange 2007 Hybrid Deployment

Caution:
This topic is meant to be read as part of the Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 and Office 365 Hybrid Deployment checklist. Information or procedures in this topic may depend on prerequisites configured in topics earlier in the checklist. To view the checklist, see Checklist - Exchange 2007 and Office 365 Hybrid Deployment

How do I do this?

You need to be assigned permissions before you can perform this procedure. To configure e-mail address policies in Exchange 2007, you must be a member of the Exchange Organization Administrators group.

You can update your existing default recipient e-mail address policy using the Exchange Management Console (EMC) on either your Exchange 2007 server or Exchange 2010 hybrid server. We recommend updating the default recipient e-mail address policy using the EMC on your Exchange 2007 server.

  1. In the console tree, navigate to Organization Configuration > Hub Transport on your Exchange 2007 server.

  2. In the result pane, click the E-mail Address Policies tab, and then select the default recipient e-mail address policy.

  3. In the action pane, click Edit.

  4. On the Introduction page, click Next.

  5. On the Conditions page, click Next.

  6. On the E-Mail Addresses page, select Add to enter an e-mail address for your service-routing namespace.

  7. On the SMTP E-Mail Address dialog, select the E-mail address local part check box and select Use alias. Additionally, select Select the accepted domain for the e-mail address and then browse to select the FQDN of your service-routing namespace from a list of accepted domains. For example, service.contoso.com. Click OK after selecting the service-routing namespace in the Select Accepted Domain dialog and then click OK to continue.

  8. Click Next to continue.

  9. On the Schedule page, select Immediately in the Apply the e-mail address policy section.

  10. Click Next to continue.

  11. On the Edit E-Mail Address Policy page, review your configuration settings. Click Edit to apply your changes to the e-mail address policy. Click Back to make any configuration changes.

  12. On the Completion page, review the following, and then click Finish to close the wizard:

    • A status of Completed indicates that the wizard completed the task successfully.

    • A status of Failed indicates that the task wasn't completed. If the task fails, review the summary for an explanation, and then click Back to make any configuration changes.

  13. Click Finish to close the wizard.

How do I know this worked?

After you've added the new namespace to the e-mail address policy and waited for the policy to update, you should see the namespace in each recipient's e-mail address list. For example, kim@service.contoso.com.

Having problems? Ask for help in the Office 365 forums. To access the forums, you'll need to sign in using an account that's granted administrator access to your cloud-based service. Visit the forums at: Office 365 Forums