Last reviewed: April 2026 — checked against current Microsoft product lifecycle and Exchange Online enforcement timelines.
Tag Archive for: Migration
Learn how to migrate public folders to Office 365 with our free comprehensive guide. Gain insights from two decades of expertise in Microsoft Exchange Public Folder Migration.
Unlock Your Microsoft 365 Migration Success: FastTrack and Priasoft – The Winning Duo 🚀
Embarking on a Microsoft 365 migration journey? Discover how Microsoft FastTrack provides a solid start and why combining it with Priasoft’s expertise can maximize your efficiency, security, and ROI. Say goodbye to migration headaches and hello to a seamless transition! Learn more in our latest article.
Migrating large Exchange archive mailboxes to the cloud poses a significant challenge due to throttling issues that can hinder the smooth transfer of data. Throttling, a mechanism designed to maintain system performance and prevent overload, often occurs during migrations of large volumes of data, such as Exchange archive mailboxes. Microsoft’s article on auto-expanding archiving highlights the importance of being aware of throttling limitations when transferring large amounts of data to the cloud. Throttling can significantly impact migration efficiency, leading to extended time-frames, failed migrations, and frustration among end users.
In this blog post, we will address the throttling problem organizations face during such migrations and present a solution that simplifies the migration process by mitigating throttling concerns. Our approach combines industry best practices with innovative strategies to ensure a seamless transition of large archive mailboxes to the cloud.
To overcome throttling challenges, we recommend leveraging specialized migration tools designed to handle large data volumes efficiently. One such solution is Priasoft Super ExMerge. This powerful tool incorporates features specifically tailored to address the throttling issues encountered during the migration of large Exchange archive mailboxes. Let’s explore how Super ExMerge can help simplify your migration process and mitigate throttling concerns:
- Dynamic Multi-Threading: Super ExMerge intelligently manages threads during the migration, ensuring the maximum utilization without overwhelming the system. This feature optimizes performance, minimizing the impact of throttling and expediting the migration process.
- Multi-Process Capability: Leveraging the power of multi-process architecture, Super ExMerge can handle multiple migration tasks concurrently. By utilizing available CPU and RAM resources efficiently, it significantly improves throughput and mitigates throttling-related slowdowns.
- Efficient Data Transfer: Super ExMerge only copies new and changed data, thanks to its full fidelity synchronization tracking. This smart approach eliminates unnecessary data transfer, reducing the overall volume of data to be migrated. As a result, throttling concerns are alleviated, and the migration process becomes more streamlined.
- Granular Control and Folder Exclusion: Administrators have granular control over the migration process, enabling them to select specific folders or subtrees for synchronization. Additionally, the ability to exclude certain folders minimizes the migration load, addressing potential throttling issues effectively.
- Authentication Flexibility: Super ExMerge allows each migration task to authenticate with different accounts, distributing the migration load across multiple credentials. This capability prevents throttling limits imposed by Microsoft Exchange, ensuring a smooth and uninterrupted migration.
- Comprehensive Reporting and Logging: Super ExMerge provides detailed reports and logs, offering valuable insights into the migration progress. Administrators can closely monitor the process, identify potential bottlenecks, and take necessary actions to mitigate throttling challenges promptly.
By adopting our alternative solution and utilizing specialized migration tools like Priasoft Super ExMerge, organizations can streamline the migration process and mitigate throttling concerns. This approach ensures a seamless transition to the cloud, minimizing downtime, maximizing data integrity, and enabling your organization to fully embrace the advantages of a cloud-based infrastructure.
Contact our Exchange Engineers today to learn more about our solution and how we can assist you in simplifying the migration of large Exchange archive mailboxes while overcoming throttling challenges. Say goodbye to the frustrations of throttling and embrace a smoother migration journey with Super ExMerge.
It’s hard to believe that it has been almost 2 years since we first architected the Public Folder sync as an ancillary offering to our Priasoft Migration Suite. Back then, it was an urgent issue that a customer encountered, which we quickly committed to resolve. As an ever-present, 20 year veteran in the world of how complex migrating Microsoft Exchange can be – we never imagined that our new solution would redefine a facet the migration world. More importantly, this feature would take the laborious process of migrating public folders to migration simplicity. Since then, we’ve continued to refine the solution based on customer experience and feedback and by taking a forward-looking approach to how the challenges can be solved. This evolutionary process was recently experienced when we decided to support one of the more complex preparatory aspects of Public Folder synchronization during the migration.
When Microsoft first changed the storage architecture of Public Folders, it seemed to be a well-timed and necessary change to a system that had been virtually the same for almost 15 years. They first introduced an immediate change in architecture which was the use of mailbox objects for the storage of Public Folder data instead of a single database, which allowed IT administrators to plan for resiliency and recovery in the same manner they would plan for normal mailboxes. And while this change may seem inconsequential to the IT novice, seemingly overnight, this shift enabled backups of Public Folder data to be efficiently segmented, making the days of the “2 terabyte data file” a thing of the past. For earlier on-premises deployments of Microsoft Exchange this change in architecture had an immediately positive impact, but for those customers migrating to later versions of Microsoft Exchange or Office 365 this presented a whole new set of migration considerations and factors that needed addressing before their expedient shift to the Microsoft Cloud. Now, let’s review why.
The new architecture found in Microsoft Exchange 2013 or later, including Office 365, requires the creation of one or more special mailbox objects – Public Folder Mailboxes – to contain the Public Folder information. In an on-premises deployment, this is a fairly easy task since an administrator or Microsoft Exchange architect could choose to set very high size limits on these special mailboxes, or none at all. If you had a Public Folder Database in your source environment that was 400 gigabytes in size, you could have a single Public Folder Mailbox of that size, or two 200 gigabyte mailboxes, or four 100 gigabyte mailboxes and so on. Again, a fairly easy issue to solve and as the administrator you would just do what felt natural or necessary.
However, with Office 365 (Cloud computing anyone?) and the many limits and restrictions it imposes, a scenario like the previous on-premises setup becomes much more arduous. In its early roll-out, Microsoft Office 365 was based on Exchange 2010 which used the Public Folder database architecture. Then, when the service transitioned to Exchange 2013 and 2016 as a base platform, different limits were required, some of which were simply the inherited structural limits of a mailbox.
One of the biggest headaches with the use of Public Folder Mailboxes in relation to a migration, was how to plan and distribute a large monolithic database of Public Folders data across several smaller mailbox objects. We would often be the first to introduce this headache to our customers and would provide the recipe as to how a customer *should* tackle the issue, but it was not until very recently that we actually addressed the issue with technology. Resolving the dilemma seemed simple and we defined three steps for customers to consider at kick start:
1. Analyze the source folders and gather statistics
2. Find the larger folders and assign them to a specific mailbox
3. Add more mailboxes as necessary
These recommendations were well received, as the feedback was always positive and grateful for exposing something that, on their own, the customer would not have known. Yet, we knew this was going be just part of a recurring issue that would continue to come up with customers choosing to move to the Microsoft Cloud. The First Sync In time and after many customer support calls that were not product specific in nature, but were set-up and preparation related, we came to the realization that not only had our support burden skyrocketed, but most of the calls were education of deep technical topics. Most customers didn’t even know of the challenge in front of them and the complexity behind it. As such our support conversations became more about the broader task of migrating to Office 365 and educating customers about issues that they would likely run into and how they, the customer, could tackle those challenges.
Realizing that this could be a substantial burden on customers, what would any good Expert in Microsoft Migrations do…? I know, I know, there’s a ton of “so called” experts, but after 20 years in the game, we tackle such issues by writing code and creating tools and solutions. However, before you can throw code at it, you must take yourself down the rabbit hole, flush out the anomalies and define a recipe for success that will work for all, if not most.
As the primary architect of this new build, I was immediately faced with taking myself through the process that our many partners and customers were facing. Specifically, how to choose which folders go to which mailbox, and what percentage of a mailbox should be filled up before moving on to another one. What seemed like a simple discussion point, at least conceptually, turned out to be very complicated when it came time to actually figure it out.
Initially, the idea was to treat this like a card dealer, where an even amount of data would be distributed across one or more Public Folder mailboxes. The distribution of the folders was actually easy, but was horribly inefficient. When assigning a folders to a mailbox, you don’t have to assign every folder individually, and really shouldn’t. You only need to assign the parent folder to the mailbox. Any action to create child folders under that parent would automatically assign those children to the same mailbox as the parent folder. While the card analogy works, it doesn’t quite represent the issue completely. A better analogy to the issue is with farming and watering of crops.
Here in the southwest, much of the crop irrigation is done by flooding, not sprinklers. Farmers dig small canals and channels to direct water to plots of land that have been planted. In this method, one does not have to water every plant individually – as the card analogy would be – but one only needs to define where the water should begin its flow. Once the canals are dug, the water will then flood and fill up each field.
This is where the first level of complication came in…how to collapse as many child assignments to as few “primer” folder assignments as possible. It was figured out, but took a few tries to get right. The next set of complication came from doing several “limit checks” to make sure that no rules were broken with regards to max size, or max item/folder count, etc. and to also not exceed any support limits imposed by Microsoft.
Needless to say and an update later, we figured it out and can rest assured that we can continue to follow our Priasoft moniker with the Experts in Microsoft Migrations more than metaphorically. Today, not only do we provide the simplest way to migrate and synchronize Public Folders, but we can stake the claim that we are the only ones doing it properly and most importantly, intuitively to Microsoft Office 365 or Microsoft Exchange.Ready to get started?
Register now for a free evaluation of Priasoft’s Public Folder Migration and Synchronization Manager for Exchange. (Part of the Priasoft Migration Suite for Exchange)
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Priasoft is pleased to announce that the United States Navy has formally approved Priasoft Migration Suite for Exchange v6.5 software technology for use within the Department of Navy (DON) networks through the U.S. Navy CIO DADMS certification. Read more
I want my business to use Exchange 2013, but how do I get there?
Migrating to Exchange 2013 can be seamless and uneventful with the right partner and solution. However, there are many options available to get to this destination. The goal of this document is to provide a simply overview of the different options available.
Current Version?
An important first question to ask is what the current version(s) of Exchange are in the environment from which you intend to migrate.
Exchange 2013 CANNOT be installed in the same AD Domain or Forest in which Exchange 2003 or earlier is also installed. The Exchange 2013 installer will perform many health and status checks to determine if it is safe to install. An existing installation of Exchange 2003 or earlier will be caught and prevent the installer from proceeding. Furthermore, any remnant of Exchange 2003/2000 will also block the installer.
Often, setting up a separate Active Directory forest that is dedicated to running Exchange is a better solution than integrating the Exchange application into your production Active Directory security forest.
The Exchange forest (also known as the resource forest) is dedicated to running Exchange and hosting mailboxes. User accounts are contained in one or more forests, referred to as the account forests, which are separate from the resource forest. Using this model, updates and changes to Exchange can be made without affecting the production user account forests.
How it works:
The user from the account forest (where logons occur) is associated with a mailbox attached to a disabled placeholder user in the resource forest. This allows users to access mailboxes that reside in the Exchange resource forest.
The resource forest model is nearly identical to what is provided by Office 365’s Exchange Online, only with more control and easier configuration and setup. There are 3 ways a user would access the mailbox in the resource forest:
- Without a Windows Trust: Users would be prompted for credentials by Outlook and other clients. There is not a built-in Single-Sign-On feature without a Trust.
- With a Windows Trust Using ‘Linked Mailboxes’: Users are not prompted for credentials and the mailbox account in the resource forest is marked with the SID of the logon user in the account forest.
- With a Windows Trust Using ‘SID Future’: Users are not prompted for credentials and the SID of the resource forest account is copied to the user in the account forest as an additional SID.
Note that setting up a Resource Forest does NOT mean that the same level of complexity must be created with regards to Active Directory Domain Controllers and AD Sites. In this scenario, AD plays a supporting role to Exchange and its primary purpose is to provide the address book (by way of the Global Catalog). As such, one (or more likely two, for redundancy) Domain Controller is all that is required, even if there is a need for many Exchange servers. This means that the setup and deployment of a resource forest is quick and not as costly as may have initially been imagined. The DCs in this Resource Forest are not processing logons, logon scripts, and the myriad of other actions and services that a DC normally provides.
A few key Benefits:
- A dedicated security boundary between Active Directory and Exchange administration.
- Features of new platform are realized immediately compared to a ‘mixed-mode’ setup where some key features are always disabled during the while 2 versions run concurrently.
- You can move to new versions of Exchange, like Exchange 2010, 2013, 2016, without polluting, corrupting, or disrupting your existing production Exchange implementation
- Eliminates risk to your existing Exchange implementation
- There are important risks to consider by adding a newer version of exchange to an existing one such as:
- …the newer version will try to take control of many actions, like inbound mail flow, transport rules, and other system level operational tasks.
- …the newer version may enforce attributes on users that are incompatible, but which the current deployment does not
- …the newer version cannot be fully tested and made “production-ready” without interfering with the current environment
- …once the AD Schema is extended to support the new version, there is no ability to reverse the changes
- …Public Folder databases/mailboxes may not sync to newer versions. For example, there is NO REPLICATION between Exchange 2013 PFs and older versions of exchange. If the PF deployment is very large, users may be without PF data for days or weeks after the mailbox migration.
- If a need arises during setup or testing of the Resource Forest to re-architect the environment, such can be done with no impact to the current environment.
- If you merge with another entity it’s simply a matter of creating a trust with the new accounts forest and not having to disrupt the exchange organization
- If you divest part of your business entity’s its much simpler to break off the Exchange resources without giving away sensitive security objects that would be part of the User Domains.
- Schema modifications needed for Exchange are isolated to just the Exchange forest and do not need to be implement in the Accounts forest
- Less stress on Global Catalogs and directory replication in the user accounts forest as all this traffic can remain in the Exchange resource forest
- Patches and updates that are not Exchange related, do not have to be installed in the Exchange forest. This adds a level of stability that is unavailable in a mixed AD/Exchange forest.
- AD container and OU structure can be designed with Exchange Administration in mind and does not have to follow complex architecture of a user forest You can manage users and groups in a way the makes sense for Exchange and not be dependent on how users in the account forest are managed – imagine having a container structure where Executive and Large mailboxes were separated from contractors and simple “mail-consumers”.
- Distribution lists are not co-mingled with security groups because of separate forests. DLs in the Exchange forest can be guaranteed to only provide access to exchange resources.
A few “reported” detractors to the Resource Forest (but not really)
- More admin work
- This is one of the first proposed “negatives” of a Resource Forest. However, it’s a bit of a fallacy. While it is true, at a technical level, that 2 object have to be created and configured when a new user is hired, there is plenty of ability to script such actions into a single atomic event. Powershell, available since Exchange 2007 makes such work trivial now.
- Compared to the many advantages and the infrequency (in most organizations…but not all) of new hires/terminations, the Resource Forest should still be considered.
- Password Sync
- This is reported from time to time, but really only by those that don’t truly understand the model. There are 2 options listed above to provide single-sign-on, which inherently means that passwords do not need to sync.
Prerequisites
- Two Active Directory forests:
- One forest contains the user accounts for your organization. In this procedure, this forest is called the accounts forest.
- One forest does not contain user accounts and does not yet have Exchange installed. In this procedure, this forest is called the Exchange Forest or Resource Forest. You will use the procedure to install Exchange in this forest.
- You have correctly configured Domain Name System (DNS) for name resolution across forests in your organization. To check that you have DNS configured correctly, ping each forest from the other forest or forests in your organization.
For more detailed information on deploying an Exchange resource forest see the following:
The Exchange Experts – Who Are We?
Priasoft, a Microsoft Partner, offers enterprise-class solutions for Exchange migration, management, and eDiscovery. Supporting Exchange 2010, 2013, 2016, 2019, and Office 365/Exchange Online, our platform enables secure migration, management, and organization of email data, with advanced tools for compliance, public folder analysis, and AI-driven insights.
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