Which cmdlets should you use?

DRAG DROP
You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization that contains five servers. Several employees plan to
use Microsoft Outlook to collaborate on some projects. You need to configure access to Outlook to
meet the following requirements:
• Several employees must be able to open only the Inbox of a user named Userl.
• Several employees must be able to copy email messages from any folder in the mailbox of a
user named User2.
• Several employees must be able to create only contacts in the mailbox of a user named User3.
Which cmdlets should you use?
To answer, drag the appropriate cmdlet to the correct requirement in the answer area. Each cmdlet
may be used once, more than once, or not at all. Additionally, you may need to drag the split bar
between panes or scroll to view content.

DRAG DROP
You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization that contains five servers. Several employees plan to
use Microsoft Outlook to collaborate on some projects. You need to configure access to Outlook to
meet the following requirements:
• Several employees must be able to open only the Inbox of a user named Userl.
• Several employees must be able to copy email messages from any folder in the mailbox of a
user named User2.
• Several employees must be able to create only contacts in the mailbox of a user named User3.
Which cmdlets should you use?
To answer, drag the appropriate cmdlet to the correct requirement in the answer area. Each cmdlet
may be used once, more than once, or not at all. Additionally, you may need to drag the split bar
between panes or scroll to view content.

Answer:

Explanation:

Add-MailboxFolderPermission
Use the Add-MailboxFolderPermission cmdlet to manage folder-level permissions for all folders
within a user’s mailbox.

EXAMPLE 1
This example assigns permissions for Ed to access Ayla’s Marketing mailbox folder and applies the
Owner role to his access of that folder.
Add-MailboxFolderPermission -Identity [email protected]:\Marketing -User [email protected]
AccessRights Owner
Add-MailboxPermission
Use the Add-MailboxPermission cmdlet to add permissions to a mailbox.
EXAMPLE 1
This example grants Kevin Kelly full access to Terry Adams’s mailbox.
Note:
The Identity parameter requires the full name of the user to be enclosed in quotation marks (“).
Add-MailboxPermission -Identity “Terry Adams” -User KevinKelly -AccessRights FullAccess –
InheritanceType
All
Set-Mailbox
Use the Set-Mailbox cmdlet to modify the settings of an existing mailbox. You can use this cmdlet for
one mailbox at a time. To perform bulk management, you can pipeline the output of various Getcmdlets (for example, the Get-Mailbox or Get-User cmdlets) and configure several mailboxes in a
single-line command.
You can also use the Set-Mailbox cmdlet in scripts.
EXAMPLE 1
This example delivers John Woods’s email messages to John’s mailbox and also forwards them to
Manuel Oliveira’s ([email protected]) mailbox.
Set-Mailbox -Identity John -DeliverToMailboxAndForward $true -ForwardingSMTPAddress
[email protected]
STEPS
1. Use the Add-MailboxFolderPermission cmdlet to manage folder-level permissions for all folders
within a user’s mailbox.
2. Use the Add-MailboxPermission cmdlet to add permissions to a mailbox.
3. Use the Add-MailboxFolderPermission cmdlet to manage folder-level permissions for all folders
within a user’s mailbox.



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