Applies to: Exchange Server 2013
Topic Last Modified: 2012-10-09
With federated sharing in Exchange Server 2013, users can share information with recipients in external federated organizations. This includes sharing their free/busy (also known as calendar availability) information for scheduling purposes or, depending on the nature of the business relationship, sharing more detailed calendar information. Users can also share their contacts with these external recipients. To learn more about federation sharing, see Sharing.
What do you need to know before you begin?
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How do you do this?
Step 1: Create and configure a federation trust
A federation trust establishes a trust relationship between an Exchange 2013 organization and the Microsoft Federation Gateway and is a requirement for federated sharing.
For detailed instructions, see Configure a Federation Trust.
Step 2: Create an organization relationship
An organization relationship enables users in your Exchange organization to share calendar free/busy information as part of federated sharing with other federated Exchange organizations. Federated sharing can be configured between two federated Exchange 2013 organizations or between a federated Exchange 2013 organization and federated Exchange 2010 organizations.
For detailed instructions, see Create an Organization Relationship.
Step 3: Create a sharing policy
Sharing policies enable user-established, people-to-people sharing of both calendar and contact information with different types of external users. They support the sharing of calendar and contact information with external federated organizations, external non-federated organizations, and individuals with Internet access. If you don’t need to configure people-to-people or contact sharing (organization-level sharing only), you don’t need to configure a sharing policy.
For detailed instructions, see Create a Sharing Policy.
Step 4: Configure an Autodiscover public DNS record
You need to add an alias canonical name (CNAME) resource record to your public-facing DNS. The new CNAME record should point to an Internet-facing Exchange 2013 Client Access server that's running the Autodiscover service.
For detailed instructions about how to add CNAME records, see the host service for your public DNS records. Typically this is an Internet-based service that may also host your domain website.