During a Move Mailbox procedure from Exchange Server 5.5 to Exchange 2000 or to Exchange 2003, after the data is copied to the Exchange 2000 computer or the Exchange 2003 computer, the Move Mailbox Wizard updates the
homeMDB attribute on both the Exchange Server 5.5 computer and the Windows 2000 domain controller to which the Users and Computers snap-in is connected.
Using Replmon.exe to track the change on the Windows 2000 objects
You can use the Active Directory Replication Monitor tool (Replmon.exe) from the Windows 2000 Support Tools to help track replication. This tool can display the update sequence numbers (USNs) and version for all of the attributes of an object. To view the USNs (or metadata):
- Start Replmon.exe.
- On the Edit menu, click Add monitored server.
- Right-click the server.
- Click Show Attribute Meta-data for Active Directory Object.
- Click the USN column to sort by USN number.
Immediately after the move, the following attributes display the highest USN and latest change time:
- homeMTA
- homeMDB
- msExchHomeServerName
The other domain controllers and the Exchange Server 5.5 directories, including the Site Replication Service (SRS) directory, still have the older objects and old
homeMDB attribute values. If no other change occurs, the version
number of the older objects and old
homeMDB attribute values is still lower, and replication within a site updates the Exchange Server 5.5 computers and domain controller replication updates the Windows 2000 Server-based computers.
Important information about ADC and homeMDB attribute replication
The ADC only replicates
homeMDB attribute changes if the mailbox is moved between Exchange Server 5.5 computers, between Exchange 2000 computers, or between Exchange 2003 computers. If one of the target servers of the Connection Agreement shows the mailbox on Exchange 2000 or Exchange 2003, and the other has the
homeMDB attribute set to Exchange Server 5.5, the
homeMDB attribute does not replicate over this connection. The Move Mailbox Wizard is responsible for updating both the source server and the target server with the new
homeMDB attribute.
Modifying the Windows 2000 user object resets homeMDB attribute
As soon as any other change is made to the Windows 2000 user object, the Recipient Connection Agreement replicates the change. If the Exchange Server 5.5 target server of the Recipient Connection Agreement still shows the old
homeMDB attribute, ADC replication might cause issues. The object is updated and the version number is increased, but the
homeMDB attribute is not updated on the Exchange Server 5.5 computer. In the replication conflict in the Exchange Server 5.5 site, this object is replicated and resets the
homeMDB attribute on the other servers.
Two mailboxes are generated
If you send mail to or connect to the Exchange Server 5.5 mailbox with Microsoft Outlook, an instance of the mailbox is created in the store of the Exchange Server 5.5 computer. This mailbox will be visible in the mailbox resources for the server. From that point on, the user has two complete mailboxes: the Exchange 2000 or Exchange 2003 mailbox with the old content, and another mailbox getting new mail on Exchange Server 5.5. To resolve this issue:
- Save the contents of the new mailbox to a personal folder (.pst) file.
- Delete the Exchange Server 5.5 recipient object to remove the Exchange Server 5.5 mailbox.
- Replicate the deletion to Windows 2000.
- Reconnect the Windows 2000 user to the Exchange 2000 or Exchange 2003 mailbox.
- Copy the .pst file data to the Exchange 2000 or Exchange 2003 mailbox.