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Migrating to Windows Small Business Server 2011 Standard : Preparing Your Server (part 3) - Best Practices Analyzer & Optimize Exchange Mailboxes

8/15/2011 5:51:37 PM

7. Best Practices Analyzer

The Best Practices Analyzer (BPA) is a useful tool to run against your SBS server regardless of whether you’re planning on migrating to SBS 2011 immediately or later on. The BPA can identify all kinds of problems in an SBS environment with over 200 errors, warnings, and informational messages about the health of your SBS network.

You can download the BPA from http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=113752 and then install it on your SBS 2003 server. The Knowledge Base article for the BPA is 940439. After you’ve downloaded the BPA, execute the SBS2003SP1-KB940439-x86-enu.exe file to install it. (The actual file name varies depending on the language.)

You can then run the BPA using the following steps:

  1. Click Start, click All Programs, and select SBS Best Practices Analyzer Tool.

  2. The first time you run the BPA, you’ll be asked if you want to check for new versions every time you start it, and you’ll be offered an opportunity to check now. Click Yes to receive automatic updates, and choose to check now—even with a fresh download, we still got a newer version after the check.

  3. From the Welcome screen shown in Figure 19, you can select the options to use for a scan or view a previous scan.

    Figure 19. The Welcome screen of the SBS Best Practices Analyzer

  4. Click Select Options For A New Scan to open the Start A Scan page shown in Figure 20.

    Figure 20. The Start A Scan page of the SBS BPA

  5. Type in a label for the scan, and click Start Scanning. When the scan completes, you’ll see a summary of the results as shown in Figure 21.

    Figure 21. The Scanning Completed summary page of the SBS BPA

  6. To view the results of the scan, click View A Report Of This Best Practices Scan. A typical report is shown in Figure 22.

    Figure 22. A typical report from an SBS BPA scan

  7. Click any listed issue to see more details on the issue, including links to Knowledge Base articles on how to correct the issue. The detail screen for the Receive Side Scaling issue shown in Figure 22 is shown in Figure 23.

    Figure 23. The Receive Side Scaling issue details from the SBS BPA

  8. After you’ve corrected the issues that could prevent a successful migration, run the BPA again by repeating steps 4 through 7 to verify that all the problems are corrected. At a minimum, you should correct all critical issues, and you should carefully evaluate the issues listed on the All Issues tab and correct any that are possible problems for your migration.


Warning:

IMPORTANT Do not proceed with your migration until all critical issues identified by the BPA have been resolved. Seriously. The migration will fail if you do. You should also carefully evaluate any additional issues shown on the All Issues tab and resolve as many as possible.


8. Optimize Exchange Mailboxes

You should have your users optimize their Microsoft Exchange mailboxes to reduce the time it takes to migrate them to Exchange 2010. If you’ve been enforcing strict mailbox limits, this likely isn’t a major issue. However, if you’ve got a couple of users who are special and have seriously large mailboxes, now is a good time to try to get this under control. Anything that removes excess mail from the mailboxes is a good thing, but the most obvious steps are.

  • Ask all users to empty their Deleted Items folders.

  • Ask all users to empty their Junk E-mail folders.

  • Ask all users to archive all mail items older than some reasonable date.

  • Carefully inspect Public Folders, and remove or archive any out-of-date or unused contents to reduce the overall size of the Public Folder database.

  • Make a separate archive (PST) of all active Public Folders as a backup.

When users have had a reasonable amount of time to clean up their mailboxes, it’s usually useful to examine the mailbox store in Exchange to see whether any outstandingly large mailboxes remain. This allows you to have a more direct discussion with the owner of the mailbox to help reduce its size. You can check the size of mailboxes by opening the Exchange System Manager and navigating to Servers, then servername, then First Storage Group, then Mailbox Store, and then Mailboxes, as shown in Figure 24.

Figure 24. A very empty Microsoft Exchange Mailbox store



Note:

The mailboxes listed in Figure 24 are not typical of a working system but reflect what you would see on a brand-new system.


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