![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
We have Exchange 2003, and running the Outlook 2003 client. Our users have
archive PST files on a File Server we have. Now, if they keep the archive folders open on there PC (in the Outlook file hierarchy, does Outlook continuously talk to the File Server to keep the archive file/view updated, thus making our file server slow due to network traffic from 200+ users? As always, thanks in advance for any help |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ivan T. Williams wrote:
We have Exchange 2003, and running the Outlook 2003 client. Our users have archive PST files on a File Server we have. Note that PSTs stored on a network share are unsupported and definitely not recommended. There's a sugnificant chance of PST corruption. Are you users willing to lose the data in those archives? Now, if they keep the archive folders open on there PC (in the Outlook file hierarchy, does Outlook continuously talk to the File Server to keep the archive file/view updated, thus making our file server slow due to network traffic from 200+ users? If the archive files are actually open, there is a connection (and that connection precludes making reliable backups of those PSTs) but I don't think Outlook will spend its time updating anything on those PSTs, so I think the taffic would be minimal. -- Brian Tillman |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
....thanks for the info Brian. A few reasons why we have the PST's on a File
Server. Mainly our users connect through Terminal Servers, thus using "remote desktop", which forces us to have the PST's on a File Server. We have had a few PST corrupted, and tried various recoveries, with not much luck. But, you've answered my main question - would it slow down the File Server... "Brian Tillman" wrote in message ... Ivan T. Williams wrote: We have Exchange 2003, and running the Outlook 2003 client. Our users have archive PST files on a File Server we have. Note that PSTs stored on a network share are unsupported and definitely not recommended. There's a sugnificant chance of PST corruption. Are you users willing to lose the data in those archives? Now, if they keep the archive folders open on there PC (in the Outlook file hierarchy, does Outlook continuously talk to the File Server to keep the archive file/view updated, thus making our file server slow due to network traffic from 200+ users? If the archive files are actually open, there is a connection (and that connection precludes making reliable backups of those PSTs) but I don't think Outlook will spend its time updating anything on those PSTs, so I think the taffic would be minimal. -- Brian Tillman |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Outlook Security Template dosen't ask for username & password on sbs 2003 | davey | Outlook - General Queries | 1 | February 24th 06 05:33 PM |
Reminders & Outlook 2003 | Andre Monostori | Outlook - General Queries | 1 | January 26th 06 12:11 AM |
Combine multiple pst files | krasher | Outlook - General Queries | 2 | January 14th 06 08:20 PM |
Outlook 2003 and .jpeg files | Howie | Outlook - General Queries | 2 | January 12th 06 01:37 AM |
How to merge PST files? | ju | Outlook - General Queries | 3 | January 11th 06 02:57 PM |