You need to ensure that all messages sent between offices are routed through the Hub Transport servers in the main office

You have a main office and five branch offices. The offices connect to each other by using a WAN
link. An Active Directory site exists for each office. Each site has a separate IP site link to all other
sites. The main office site is configured as a hub site. You have an Exchange Server 2010
organization. You discover that messages sent between offices are not routed through the Hub
Transport servers in the main office. You need to ensure that all messages sent between offices are
routed through the Hub Transport servers in the main office. What should you do?

You have a main office and five branch offices. The offices connect to each other by using a WAN
link. An Active Directory site exists for each office. Each site has a separate IP site link to all other
sites. The main office site is configured as a hub site. You have an Exchange Server 2010
organization. You discover that messages sent between offices are not routed through the Hub
Transport servers in the main office. You need to ensure that all messages sent between offices are
routed through the Hub Transport servers in the main office. What should you do?

A.
Change all IP site links to SMTP site links.

B.
Modify the Exchange-specific cost for each site link.

C.
From the Hub Transport servers in each site, create a journal rule.

D.
From the Hub Transport servers in each site, create a transport rule.

Explanation:
You can set an Exchange cost on an Active Directory IP site link in Microsoft Exchange Server 2010.
By default, Exchange uses the cost assigned to an IP site link for Active Directory replication purposes
to compute a routing topology.
Looking for other management tasks related to managing message routing? Check out Managing
MessageRouting.
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb266946.aspx



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