Exchange 2010: CAS arrary does not rediret automatically
hi Friends i have setup a CAS array but now im facing a problem which is as follow: when i configure a new outlook client it does pick the new cas array and NLB Name "clients.test.com" but my already configured outlook clients did not pick this name CAS array name those users are still pointing to my old CAS server how am i force them as well because otherwise it will be a huge headache for me to reconfigure those outlook users one by one. thanks greenman
July 19th, 2012 12:05am

Hi This is normal behaviour unfortunately. You will either have to run a profile repair on each client or deploy a prf file using group policy. Cheers, Steve
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July 19th, 2012 1:45am

Have a look at: Deploy Outlook mail profile settings via GPO or script
July 19th, 2012 3:20am

hi how deploy PRF can you show me the steps? thanks greenman
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July 19th, 2012 3:23am

Have a look at: Deploy Outlook mail profile settings via GPO or script
July 19th, 2012 3:27am

As mentioned by Steve that behavior is by design. Any user with a pre-existing Outlook profile configured to point to a CAS name and not the CAS array object will continue to connect to the CAS name and it will not update itself to utilize the CAS array object FQDN. The profile will not update itself because the client will not receive an ecWrongServer response from CAS. It will not receive this response because any CAS is a valid connection point for any mailbox database via RPC (over TCP) so clients can survive datacenter switchover/failover events without being reconfigured and all an admin has to do is flip the CAS array object DNS record to point to a surviving pool of CAS. Currently the only way to fix mailbox profiles would be a manual profile repair within Outlook, by publishing an Office PRF file via GPO (not going to work for non-domain joined machines), or by decommissioning the CAS server named in the users profiles so the endpoint is no longer available. This last option should (test test test!!) trigger a full profile repair by Autodiscover in Outlook 2007 or Outlook 2010. Outlook 2003 is only repairable with a profile repair or a PRF file. Autodiscover will not as of this articles writing update a profile to a new server name as part of the normal Autodiscover process which updates the Outlook Anywhere configuration and discovers EWS URLs for other features such as OOF Management, Free/Busy, and Inbox Rules management. http://blogs.technet.com/b/exchange/archive/2012/03/28/demystifying-the-cas-array-object-part-2.aspxJames Chong MCITP | EA | EMA; MCSE | M+, S+ Security+, Project+, ITIL msexchangetips.blogspot.com
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July 19th, 2012 10:03am

As mentioned by Steve that behavior is by design. Any user with a pre-existing Outlook profile configured to point to a CAS name and not the CAS array object will continue to connect to the CAS name and it will not update itself to utilize the CAS array object FQDN. The profile will not update itself because the client will not receive an ecWrongServer response from CAS. It will not receive this response because any CAS is a valid connection point for any mailbox database via RPC (over TCP) so clients can survive datacenter switchover/failover events without being reconfigured and all an admin has to do is flip the CAS array object DNS record to point to a surviving pool of CAS. Currently the only way to fix mailbox profiles would be a manual profile repair within Outlook, by publishing an Office PRF file via GPO (not going to work for non-domain joined machines), or by decommissioning the CAS server named in the users profiles so the endpoint is no longer available. This last option should (test test test!!) trigger a full profile repair by Autodiscover in Outlook 2007 or Outlook 2010. Outlook 2003 is only repairable with a profile repair or a PRF file. Autodiscover will not as of this articles writing update a profile to a new server name as part of the normal Autodiscover process which updates the Outlook Anywhere configuration and discovers EWS URLs for other features such as OOF Management, Free/Busy, and Inbox Rules management. http://blogs.technet.com/b/exchange/archive/2012/03/28/demystifying-the-cas-array-object-part-2.aspxJames Chong MCITP | EA | EMA; MCSE | M+, S+ Security+, Project+, ITIL msexchangetips.blogspot.com
July 19th, 2012 10:10am

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