Applies to: Exchange Server 2013, Exchange Online

Topic Last Modified: 2012-07-12

Use the Get-OrganizationRelationship cmdlet to retrieve settings for an organization relationship that has been created for federated sharing with other federated Exchange organizations or for hybrid deployments with Exchange Online.

For information about the parameter sets in the Syntax section below, see Syntax.

Syntax

Get-OrganizationRelationship [-Identity <OrganizationRelationshipIdParameter>] [-DomainController <Fqdn>] [-Organization <OrganizationIdParameter>]

Examples

EXAMPLE 1

This example retrieves the organization relationship settings for Contoso using the Identity parameter.

Copy Code
Get-OrganizationRelationship -Identity Contoso

EXAMPLE 2

This example retrieves the organization relationship settings by using the FQDN of the domain controller.

Copy Code
Get-OrganizationRelationship -DomainController 'mail.contoso.com'

Detailed Description

You need to be assigned permissions before you can run this cmdlet. Although all parameters for this cmdlet are listed in this topic, you may not have access to some parameters if they're not included in the permissions assigned to you. To see what permissions you need, see the "Organization relationships" entry in the Recipients Permissions topic.

Parameters

Parameter Required Type Description

DomainController

Optional

Microsoft.Exchange.Data.Fqdn

The DomainController parameter specifies the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the domain controller that retrieves data from Active Directory.

Identity

Optional

Microsoft.Exchange.Configuration.Tasks.OrganizationRelationshipIdParameter

The Identity parameter specifies the identity of the organizational relationship. You can use the following values:

  • Canonical name

  • GUID

  • Name

Organization

Optional

Microsoft.Exchange.Configuration.Tasks.OrganizationIdParameter

The Organization parameter is reserved for internal Microsoft use.

Input Types

To see the input types that this cmdlet accepts, see Cmdlet Input and Output Types. If the Input Type field for a cmdlet is blank, the cmdlet doesn’t accept input data.

Return Types

To see the return types, which are also known as output types, that this cmdlet accepts, see Cmdlet Input and Output Types. If the Output Type field is blank, the cmdlet doesn’t return data.