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Microsoft Exchange Server 2016 PowerShell Cookbook

Microsoft Exchange Server 2016 PowerShell Cookbook

By : Mota, Nuno Filipe M Mota, Mike Pfeiffer, Andersson
5 (1)
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Microsoft Exchange Server 2016 PowerShell Cookbook

Microsoft Exchange Server 2016 PowerShell Cookbook

5 (1)
By: Mota, Nuno Filipe M Mota, Mike Pfeiffer, Andersson

Overview of this book

We start with a set of recipes on core PowerShell concepts. This will provide you with a foundation for the examples in the book. Next, you'll see how to implement some of the common exchange management shell tasks, so you can effectively write scripts with this latest release. You will then learn to manage Exchange recipients, automate recipient-related tasks in your environment, manage mailboxes, and understand distribution group management within the Exchange Management Shell. Moving on, we'll work through several scenarios where PowerShell scripting can be used to increase your efficiency when managing databases, which are the most critical resources in your Exchange environment. Towards the end, you'll discover how to achieve Exchange High Availability and how to secure your environment, monitor the health of Exchange, and integrate Exchange with Office Online Server, Skype for Business Server, and Exchange Online (Office 365). By the end of the book, you will be able to perform administrative tasks efficiently.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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Creating calendar items

Imagine that you have a monitoring script written in PowerShell that checks memory, CPU, or disk utilization on all of your Exchange servers. In addition to alerting your team of any critical problems via email, it might also be nice to schedule a reminder in the future for non-critical issues by creating a calendar item in one or more mailboxes. The EWS Managed API makes it easy to create a calendar item through PowerShell with just a few commands.

How to do it...

  1. First, load the assembly, create the ExchangeService object, and connect to EWS:
    Add-Type -Path C:\EWS\Microsoft.Exchange.WebServices.dll 
    $svc = New-Object 
Microsoft.Exchange.WebServices.Data.ExchangeService $svc.AutoDiscoverUrl...
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