Unfortunatly I have a localized version of outlook, where "Outlook Anywhere"
is never mentioned.
In the system control panel, i have the email settings icon, i open the
correct profile, then, in the email tab i have "Microsoft Exchange", i click
on "Change" button (the third one), then in Advanced (bottom right),
Connection tab i see a section on the bottom of the dialog, wich is called
"Outlook via Internet".
The flag "Connect to Exchange through Internet" is checked. Clicking on the
button "Exchange proxy settings" i see the public dns name of my exchange
server:
https://mail.mycompany.com
The authentication is set to 'base authentication'.
So i guess the following thought, correct me if i'm wrong.
Configuring outlook in order to access an exchange server is a matter of
proxying rather than accessing directly.
The client is first connecting to a proxy, and from that to the inner server
using the server's netbios name (well proxy and server are actually the same
machine). That's why you keep indicating the server with it's internal
netbios-name. The public dns name is actually the name of the proxy for the
rpc over https encapsulation.
thanks
agostino
"Roady [MVP]" t ha
scritto nel messaggio ...
Netstat revealed that you are connecting to the public address. You have
not verified which exact name you are connecting to. My guess is that you
have configured Outlook to connect via Outlook Anywhere and set that as
the default. This is why I already asked in my first reply if you have
done that. I repeated that question in my second reply to you and you
still haven't answered that.
Looking up this setting will most likely confirm my assumption that you
are connecting via Outlook Anywhere which also explains why you are
connecting to the external address and not to the internal one. Don't
configure Outlook to connect via Outlook Anywhere and you'll see that
you'll now also connect via the internal address and not the external
address.
--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003
http://www.howto-outlook.com/
Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more
http://www.msoutlook.info/
Real World Questions, Real World Answers
-----
"agostino" wrote in message
...
You are turning things around now
???
From my first message:
But netstat detects that the connection is done on the public address
So, netstat has been done.
my-server.mycompany.LOCAL gives the private address, as it should.
thanks anyway
"Roady [MVP]" t ha
scritto nel messaggio ...
Have you or have you not configured Outlook with the Outlook Anywhere
settings?
Look in your account settings.
You are turning things around now and are assuming that
my-server.mycompany.LOCAL resolves to the public interface as well. You
have not verified that via netstat or a ping. All you've verified is
that the connection that is being made via Outlook is done to your
public interface. This is a perfectly normal situation when you've set
Outlook to always connect via Outlook Anywhere.
--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003
http://www.howto-outlook.com/
Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more
http://www.msoutlook.info/
Real World Questions, Real World Answers
-----
"agostino" wrote in message
...
The infrastructure is the simplest possible, so i've omitted the
details.
The sbs has just one interface, connected to my private lan
(ip=192.168.0.xxx).
The enterprise firewall nats the incoming http, https and smtp
connection to my exchange server.
So, in 'non microsoft' mail world a name is resolved in just one way:
trought dns name.
Here, the impression is that there is a more sophisticated mechanism
doing something.
It is also less clear to understand.
Does it exist a documentation of this mechanism?
tnx for your reply
agostino
"Roady [MVP]" t ha
scritto nel messaggio ...
It all depends what kind of connection you are making. Probably you
are making a connection via Outlook Anywhere now.
The internal name reported in Outlook does not have to be the same as
the name linked to the external IP address.
It could also be a simply network/firewall configuration error.
Without knowing any details about the infrastructure, it is impossible
to tell what's going on for sure.
--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003
http://www.howto-outlook.com/
Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more
http://www.msoutlook.info/
Real World Questions, Real World Answers
-----
"agostino" wrote in message
...
I use O2007 and sbs2003 exchange.
The server address field is: "my-server.mycompany.LOCAL"
But netstat detects that the connection is done on the public address
(81.174.62.xxx)
I expect that it resolves the address as a local ip address. Where
does it get the external address?
tnx in advance
Agostino
cedapsrl