Topic Last Modified: 2005-11-18
The Microsoft® Exchange Server Analyzer Tool queries the Win32_Directory Microsoft Windows® Management Instrumentation (WMI) class to determine the value of the FSName key for the Exchange SMTP queue directory. If the Exchange Server Analyzer determines that the value for the FSName key does not equal NTFS File System, an error is displayed.
Microsoft does not support the storage of Exchange data files on non-NTFS volumes. The Exchange data files include all the following files:
- .edb files
- .stm files
- .log files
- .dat files
- .eml files
If you experience this error, you must move the SMTP queue directory to a folder on an NTFS drive. Alternatively, if the drive on which the queue directory is stored is formatted as a FAT drive, you can use the convert.exe command-line tool to convert the drive to NTFS.
To move the SMTP queue to another folder
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Open Exchange System Manager.
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Click Administrative Groups, expand your administrative group, expand Servers, expand your server, expand Protocols, and then expand SMTP.
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Right-click your SMTP virtual server, and then click Stop.
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Right-click your SMTP virtual server, and then click Properties.
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On the Messages tab, next to the BadMail directory box, click Browse, and then type the path of the new location of the Queue folder.
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Click OK.
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Right-click your SMTP virtual server, and then click Start.
For more information about moving the Mailroot folder, see the Microsoft Knowledge Base article 822933, "How to change the Exchange 2003 SMTP Mailroot folder location" (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=3052&kbid=822933).
As an alternative to the procedure that is described in this article, if the drive on which the files are stored is formatted as a FAT drive, you can use the convert.exe command-line tool to convert the drive to NTFS. For information about using the convert.exe command line tool to convert a FAT partition to an NTFS partition, see the Microsoft Knowledge Base article 214579, "How to Use Convert.exe to Convert a Partition to the NTFS File System" (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?linkid=3052&kbid=214579).