Can anyone clarify a best practice for this as I'm a bit confused.
Before we switched to Windows 2008 R2 we had a hub/spoke system. This worked reasonably well but it took a long time for replication to get through and quite often the connectivity on the hub goes down preventing AD sync.
Now with Exchange 2010 it seems that it relies on ADs IP Inter-Site Transport link to efficiently route emails. I assume that means that emails going from spoke 1 to spoke 3 all have to pass through the hub?
We've also recently deployed DFS and I've seen a few users looking at the wrong DFS target again this seems to be costing issues on the site links?
We have 10 sites and I was just wondering how people had configured theirs?
Thanks
Before we switched to Windows 2008 R2 we had a hub/spoke system. This worked reasonably well but it took a long time for replication to get through and quite often the connectivity on the hub goes down preventing AD sync.
Now with Exchange 2010 it seems that it relies on ADs IP Inter-Site Transport link to efficiently route emails. I assume that means that emails going from spoke 1 to spoke 3 all have to pass through the hub?
We've also recently deployed DFS and I've seen a few users looking at the wrong DFS target again this seems to be costing issues on the site links?
We have 10 sites and I was just wondering how people had configured theirs?
Thanks