Outlook Delivery Notifications/ Read Reciepts
Hello We are running Exchange 2007 SP1 and Outlook 2007 SP2. When I compose a new message in Outlook, I have the option to request a Delivery Reciept and also a Read Reciept. But I don't understand how these can work in the case of two seperate Exchange organisations. Let's say I (kam@domain.com) send a message to another user at a different company (jane@company.com). I tick the options in Outlook to request a delivery recipt and read recpt. 1. Does anyone know how these actually work? I've searched the internet but can't find much. 2. At what point is the Delivery Recpt? When the message is accepted by the recipient's SMTP gateway or when the message is delivered to the recipient's mailbox? 3. Likewise for Read Recpt? 4. Will these two functions work if the recipient is on a non-Exch system? 5. Is the Delivery Rcpt guaranteed to work?
January 26th, 2010 10:55pm

On Tue, 26-Jan-10 19:55:20 GMT, Sheen1990 wrote:>>>Hello >>We are running Exchange 2007 SP1 and Outlook 2007 SP2. >>When I compose a new message in Outlook, I have the option to request a Delivery Reciept and also a Read Reciept. >>But I don't understand how these can work in the case of two seperate Exchange organisations. >>Let's say I (kam@domain.com) send a message to another user at a different company (jane@company.com). I tick the options in Outlook to request a delivery recipt and read recpt. >>1. Does anyone know how these actually work? I've searched the internet but can't find much. >>2. At what point is the Delivery Recpt? When the message is accepted by the recipient's SMTP gateway or when the message is delivered to the recipient's mailbox? A Delivery Receipt is a specialized form of Delivery ServiceNotification. When the e-mail is sent to the next hop the RCPT TOcommand includes the "NOTIFY=" keyword. See RFC1891 for details.Not all SMTP servers offer the DSN keyword, so you may not get thedelivery receipt even if you ask for it.A delivery receipt only affirms that the message was accepted,rejected, or delayed. A NDR (another specialized form of DSN) may, ormay not, be sent if the message couldn't be delivered (many spamfilters just drop messages -- it makes little sense to send them tospammers).>3. Likewise for Read Recpt? Read Receipts are typically generated by the MUA (i.e. the e-mailclient). Again, whether or not you get one depends on whether theemail system removes the request from the e-mail headers, and whetherot not the e-mail client is configured to send them, or whether theuser decides to allow the MUA to send them.>4. Will these two functions work if the recipient is on a non-Exch system? Yes. But the answer is really "it depends".>5. Is the Delivery Rcpt guaranteed to work? If you ask for one you should get one. But understand that it may comefrom ANY MTA that handles the message if the next hop doesn't offer tosend a DSN. In that case the DSN you get will say the message wasdelivered to a system the won't send a DSN.---Rich MatheisenMCSE+I, Exchange MVP --- Rich Matheisen MCSE+I, Exchange MVP
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January 27th, 2010 1:05am

Thanks!"A Delivery Receipt is a specialized form of Delivery ServiceNotification. When the e-mail is sent to the next hop the RCPT TOcommand includes the "NOTIFY=" keyword. See RFC1891 for details."So- really- the Delivery Reciept just shows that the message has been relayed on by the next hop...not that it has reached its destination?For instance, we use MessageLabs to scan our outgoing mail; Outlook > Exchange > MessageLabs > InternetIf I ask for a Delivery recipit, the notification is just that MessageLabs have relayed the message on?
January 29th, 2010 2:59am

On Thu, 28-Jan-10 23:59:13 GMT, Sheen1990 wrote:>Thanks!"A Delivery Receipt is a specialized form of Delivery ServiceNotification. When the e-mail is sent to the next hop the RCPT TOcommand includes the "NOTIFY=" keyword. See RFC1891 for details."So- really- the Delivery Reciept just shows that the message has been relayed on by the next hop...not that it has reached its destination?If every machine between the sending and target MTAs agrees that itwill send a DSN then you'll get just one -- from the target MTA. If one of the MTAs doesn't offer DSNs then the last machine that'saccepted responsibility for delivering the message will send a DSNsaying it delivered the message to the next hop but that the next hopdoesn't support DSNs. That the last DSN you'll get for that message.>For instance, we use MessageLabs to scan our outgoing mail; Outlook > Exchange > MessageLabs > InternetIf I ask for a Delivery recipit, the notification is just that MessageLabs have relayed the message on?If I were to send an e-mail to someone in the domain messagelabes.comI wouldn't expect to receive a Delivery Notice from them. Theirservers don't adverise that they'll send a DSN. They offer TLS,PIPeLINING, and 8BITMIME features -- but no DSN.220 server-11.tower-36.messagelabs.com ESMTPehlo XXXXX.com250-server-11.tower-36.messagelabs.com250-STARTTLS250-PIPELINING250 8BITMIMEquit221 Closing connection. Good bye.---Rich MatheisenMCSE+I, Exchange MVP --- Rich Matheisen MCSE+I, Exchange MVP
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January 29th, 2010 6:31am

Thanks Rich, appreciate the answer.Ok, so let's say that a message is sent in this manner:Source Exchange > SMTP Relay > SMTP Relay 2 > Target Exchange*All* of these MTA's advertise that they send a DSN (for argument's sake). In which case, wouldn't the user expect to see multiple DSN's from each hop? Why do they only recv one that is from the last MTA that provides the DSN functionality?
February 7th, 2010 4:22pm

On Sun, 7-Feb-10 13:22:21 GMT, Sheen1990 wrote:>>>Thanks Rich, appreciate the answer.Ok, so let's say that a message is sent in this manner:Source Exchange > SMTP Relay > SMTP Relay 2 > Target Exchange*All* of these MTA's advertise that they send a DSN (for argument's sake). >>In which case, wouldn't the user expect to see multiple DSN's from each hop?No, just one DSN from "Target Exchange".>Why do they only recv one that is from the last MTA that provides the DSN functionality? Because none of the others are responsible for actually delivering themessage to its final destination. They've accepted the responsibilityto either relay the message to the next hop or tell you they couldn'tdo that. They'll only report back to the sender if there's a problem. One of the problems (not in the situation you just described) may bethat you asked for a DSN but the next hop doesn't advertise thatcapability -- so that responsibility falls to the last relay thataccepted the message and agreed to pass along your request for a DSN.Have a look at this for answers to other questions about the use ofDSN and its oprional keywords:http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1891.txt---Rich MatheisenMCSE+I, Exchange MVP --- Rich Matheisen MCSE+I, Exchange MVP
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February 7th, 2010 8:15pm

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