You are the Exchange administrator for Blue Yonder Airlines. The Exchange organization contains two Microsoft windows Server 2003 computers that run Exchange Server 2003.
Inbound SMTP mail from the Internet is delivered to both Exchange servers.
Customers report that messages they send to your company over the Internet are not delivered and they receive non-delivery reports (NDRs).
You discover that the customers are sending messages to e-mail aliases that do not exist.
You need to ensure that all customer e-mail messages sent to an incorrect address are delivered to a mailbox.
What should you do?
A.
Configure the SMTP connector to have an address space of *blueyonderairlines.com.
B.
Configure the info user’s e-mail addresses to have the additional SMTP address of *. *�blueyonderairlines.com.
C.
Configure each server’s SMTP virtual server to forward all messages that have unresolved recipients to the other Exchange server.
D.
Configure each server’s SMTP virtual server to send a copy of all NDRs to an existing mailbox whose e-mail address is [email protected].
E.
Create a mailbox-enabled user account whose e-mail address is [email protected].
Explanation:
In Exchange 2003, you can send a copy of all Non-Delivery Reports (NDRs) to a specific mailbox or SMTP e-mail address.
Incorrect answers:
A: *blueyonderairlines.com is not a valid email address, so this will not work.
B: Configuring user’s email address to have additional SMTP address would qualify for outbound mail, but would have no effect on the administrator seeing any NDR’s.
C: Configuring all unresolved addresses to be forwarded to the other Exchange Server is could lead to a lot of unnecessary traffic as messages ping-pong back and forth. In addition,
since each Exchange Server contains the same AD information, the external email address would not get resolved anyway.
E: Creating a mailbox enabled account called [email protected] would not work as there is no link between actual undeliverable messages and this mailbox.