What's New in Exchange 2010 SP2

 

Applies to: Exchange Server 2010 SP2

This topic provides you with an overview of important new features and functionality in Service Pack 2 (SP2) for Microsoft Exchange Server 2010, which can be useful when you’re planning, deploying, and administering your organization. The following sections include information about changes to features and functionality that has occurred since Service Pack 1 (SP1) for Exchange 2010:

  • Hybrid Configuration Wizard

  • Federated Delegation

  • Address Book Policies

  • Cross-Site Silent Redirection for Outlook Web App

  • Mini Version of Outlook Web App

  • Mailbox Replication Service

  • Mailbox Auto-Mapping

  • Multi-Valued Custom Attributes

  • Litigation Hold

  • Multi-Tenant Support

In addition to the changes described in this topic, Exchange 2010 SP2 also includes fixes that address issues identified since the release of Exchange 2010 SP1. For a complete list of issues fixed in Exchange 2010 SP2, see Issues That Are Fixed in Exchange 2010 SP2. If you're also interested in the release notes for Exchange 2010 SP2, see Release Notes for Exchange Server 2010 SP2.

For more information about the features introduced in previous versions of Exchange 2010, see the following topics:

Hybrid Configuration Wizard

Exchange 2010 SP2 introduces the Hybrid Configuration Wizard which provides you with a streamlined process to configure a hybrid deployment between on-premises and Office 365 Exchange organizations. Hybrid deployments provide the seamless look and feel of a single Exchange organization and offer administrators the ability to extend the feature-rich experience and administrative control of an on-premises organization to the cloud. For more information, see Understanding the Hybrid Configuration Wizard.

Federated Delegation

In Exchange 2010 SP1, we recommended that organizations create a sub-domain of “exchangedelegation” for the account namespace in their federation trust with the Microsoft Federation Gateway. Now, in Exchange 2010 SP2, we have updated our recommendation and also automated the configuration process. If you use the Manage Federation or Manage Hybrid Configuration wizards when configuring a new federation trust, a pre-defined string is now automatically combined with an accepted domain for your organization and assigned as the account namespace for the federation trust. The account namespace for an existing federation trust is not modified by these wizards. For more information, see Understanding Federation.

Address Book Policies

Exchange 2010 SP2 introduces the address book policy object which can be assigned to a mailbox user. The ABP determines the global address list (GAL), offline address book (OAB), room list, and address lists that are visible to the mailbox user that is assigned the policy. Address book policies provide a simpler mechanism to accomplish GAL separation for the on-premises organization that needs to run disparate GALs. For more information, see Understanding Address Book Policies.

Cross-Site Silent Redirection for Outlook Web App

With Exchange 2010 SP2, you can enable a silent redirection when a Client Access server receives a client request that is better serviced by a Client Access server located in another Active Directory site. This silent redirection can also provide a single sign-on experience when forms-based authentication is enabled on each Client Access server. For more information, see Understanding Proxying and Redirection.

Mini Version of Outlook Web App

The mini version of Outlook Web App is a lightweight browser-based client, similar to the Outlook Mobile Access client in Exchange 2003. It’s designed to be used on a mobile operating system. The mini version of Outlook Web App provides users with the following basic functionality:

  • Access to e-mail, calendar, contacts, tasks and the global address list.

  • Access to e-mail subfolders.

  • Compose, reply to, and forward e-mail messages.

  • Create and edit calendar, contact, and task items.

  • Handle meeting requests.

  • Set the time zone and automatic reply messages.

For more information, see Understanding the Mini Version of Outlook Web App.

Mailbox Replication Service

In Exchange 2010 SP1, if you wanted to move mailboxes from on-premises to Outlook.com or to another forest, you had to enable MRSProxy on the remote Client Access server. To do this, you had to manually configure the web.config file on every Client Access server. In Exchange 2010 SP2, two parameters have been added to the New-WebServicesVirtualDirectory and Set-WebServicesVirtualDirectory cmdlets so that you don't have to perform the manual configuration: MRSProxyEnabled and MaxMRSProxyConnections. For more information, see Start the MRSProxy Service on a Remote Client Access Server.

Mailbox Auto-Mapping

In Exchange 2010 SP1, Office Outlook 2007 and Outlook 2010 clients can automatically map to any mailbox to which a user has Full Access permissions. If a user is granted Full Access permissions to another user's mailbox or to a shared mailbox, Outlook, through Autodiscover, automatically loads all mailboxes to which the user has full access. However, if the user has full access to a large number of mailboxes, performance issues may occur when starting Outlook. Therefore, in Exchange 2010 SP2, administrators can turn off the auto-mapping feature by setting the value of the new Automapping parameter to $false on the Add-MailboxPermission cmdlets. For more information, see Disable Outlook Auto-Mapping with Full Access Mailboxes.

Multi-Valued Custom Attributes

Exchange 2010 SP2 introduces five new multi-value custom attributes that you can use to store additional information for mail recipient objects. The ExtensionCustomAttribute1 to ExtensionCustomAttribute5 parameters can each hold up to 1,300 values. You can specify multiple values as a comma-delimited list.The following cmdlets support these new parameters:

  • Set-DistributionGroup

  • Set-DynamicDistributionGroup

  • Set-Mailbox

  • Set-MailContact

  • Set-MailPublicFolder

  • Set-RemoteMailbox

Litigation Hold

In Exchange 2010 SP2, you can’t disable or remove a mailbox that has been placed on litigation hold. To bypass this restriction, you must either remove litigation hold from the mailbox, or use the new IgnoreLegalHold switch parameter when removing or disabling the mailbox. The IgnoreLegalHold parameter has been added to the following cmdlets:

  • Disable-Mailbox

  • Remove-Mailbox

  • Disable-RemoteMailbox

  • Remove-RemoteMailbox

  • Disable-MailUser

  • Remove-MailUser

Multi-Tenant Support

Exchange 2010 SP1 introduced the ability to install in a hosting mode by using the /hosting switch when running the installation script. However, in Exchange 2010 SP2, we no longer recommend installing Exchange using the /hosting switch. To learn more, see Multi-Tenant Support.

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