Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
WHITE PAPER MICROSOFT CORPORATIO N PUBLISHED: SEPTEMBER , 2011 This document is provided as-is. Information and views expressed in this document, including URL and other Internet Web site references, may change without notice. Some examples depicted herein are provided for illustration only and are fictitious. No real association or connection is intended or should be inferred. This document does not provide you with any legal rights to any intellectual property in any Microsoft product. You may copy and use this document for your internal, reference purposes. 2011 Microsoft. All rights reserved.
Contents
Overview ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 3 Public Folders Scenarios and Recommendations ....................................................................................................................................................... 3 Basic Sharing of Calendar, Contacts, and Tasks ...................................................................................................................................................... 3 Archiving Email Messages or Discussion Lists ......................................................................................................................................................... 5 Document Sharing............................................................................................................................................................................................................... 7 Manual Workflow................................................................................................................................................................................................................. 8 Automated Workflow and Customer Applications ................................................................................................................................................ 8 Free/Busy Lookups, OAB Distribution, and Outlook Security Settings ......................................................................................................... 9 Email Delegates, Send As, and Shared Mailbox ...................................................................................................................................................... 9 Public Folder Content Migration ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 10 Migration from Public Folders to SharePoint Online.......................................................................................................................................100 Migration from Public Folders to Shared Mailbox.............................................................................................................................................. 11 Additional References .......................................................................................................................................................................................................... 11
OVERVIEW
Exchange public folders are widely used in on-premises Exchange environments. However, Microsoft Exchange Online does not support customer usage scenarios of public folders. If you or your customers are using Exchange public folders, there are special considerations for migrating to Microsoft Office 365. This document outlines these considerations, discusses the most common public folder scenarios and how they are represented in Office 365 services. It also provides the information you need to decide whether Office 365 is a good match for you based on your current public folder usage.
Scenario Description
Exchange public folders are frequently used to set up calendars, task lists, and contact lists for team or group collaboration and events. People with appropriate permissions are able to view and edit the lists.
Recommendations
You can use either Microsoft SharePoint Online or the Shared Mailbox feature of Exchange Online to accomplish this scenario.
2. 3.
Benefits and Drawbacks Benefits SharePoint lists provide more contexts for data, and more flexible ways of working with that data, including combining data from multiple lists and rolling up summaries for reporting. Moderation workflows are built into SharePoint lists, so items can be optionally made visible after they are approved. Item-level version history can be optionally enabled to track changes to individual items in these lists. Users can subscribe to alerts and feeds to have change notifications automatically sent to them.
Drawbacks Notifications and acceptance cannot be tracked. Distribution lists will not transfer to SharePoint Online. DLs can be added as a contact, but group membership will not be available.
If, in addition to this functionality, your organization has to put a shared mailbox on litigation hold, you have to assign it an Exchange Online (Plan 2) user subscription license. Benefits and Drawbacks Benefits Users get the same UI experience as that of public folders. For example, users get full calendaring workflows. A large 5 GB quota for the shared mailbox. Legal hold capabilities are available (with specific Exchange Online plans) as well as retention policies to comply with organizational compliance requirements. *For hybrid deployments only
Drawbacks For versions earlier than Outlook 2007, separate Outlook profiles need to be created. Cannot open shared mailboxes in Office 365 if the on-premises mailbox is on Exchange 2003 or 2007.*
Scenario Description
Exchange public folders are often used to share project-related email messages or archive discussion contents on specified distribution lists. This is typically done in one of the two ways: 1. Email messages that need to be shared are periodically moved, copied, or dropped into a public folder by a project member. This method is typically used when only some email messages are relevant for saving or sharing. This is similar to how individuals manage email messages in PST files. 2. A distribution list is created and a mail-enabled public folder is added to the distribution list. This method is typically used when all discussions pertaining to a project must be captured. Mail enabled public folders have an SMTP address associated with them and receive emails just like a regular mailbox. Note: Mail-enabled lists are not available in SharePoint Online. While SharePoint Online does not allow for mail-enabled document libraries, third-party cloud services (such as vorApps) can be used. Alternatively, Microsoft SharePoint (for onpremises deployments) does allow configuration of mail-enabled document libraries. Mail-enabled lists in on-premises SharePoint convert message files to .eml format. There are a few things to be aware of related to forwarding emails to mail-enabled lists: Attachments are lost or must be sent to a different list. You may require an Outlook 2007 hotfix to open .eml extension.
Recommendations
There are several ways to configure SharePoint Online or Exchange Online to serve this purpose. Please consider each option, as there are benefits and drawbacks for both.
Drawbacks While SharePoint Online does not allow for mailenabled document libraries, client-side operations can be used. The drag-and-drop operations from Outlook to SharePoint are more complicated. * While SharePoint Online does not allow for mailenabled document libraries, third-party cloud services (such as vorApps) can be used, adding extra cost and complexity. Some email messages have invalid URL characters in their names, and these messages cannot be copied directly to SharePoint without renaming. Difficult to create views in SharePoint with email metadata because metadata is not automatically populated. * The behavior when copying email messages and documents from Outlook to SharePoint is different depending on the users operating system and configuration, and in some cases it requires a two-step process of copying locally first before copying to SharePoint
Drawbacks Must run a synchronization client add-in. Extra cost and end-user complexity.
If, in addition to this functionality, your organization has to put a shared mailbox on litigation hold, you have to assign it an Exchange Online (Plan 2) user subscription license. Benefits and Drawbacks Benefits Users get the same UI experience as that of public folders. For example, standard email functionality including reply and forward is built-in and does not require additional setup or configuration. Message and attachment formats are preserved. A large 5 GB quota for the shared mailbox Legal hold capabilities are available (with specific Exchange Online plans) as well as retention policies to comply with organizational compliance requirements. *For hybrid deployments only
Drawbacks For versions earlier than Outlook 2007, separate Outlook profiles need to be created. Per-user read/unread properties of a message are not preserved Shared mailboxes in Office 365 cannot be opened if the on-premises mailbox is on Exchange 2003 or 2007.* While there is no hard limit on connections to a mailbox, consider alternatives if concurrent user connections exceeds 2000.
DOCUMENT SHARING
Scenario Description
Exchange public folders are sometimes used to share documents, especially when these documents need to be taken offline. For example, it is convenient to be able to share datasheets and FAQs in a way that can be pushed to a salespersons laptop for use on the road.
Recommendations
SharePoint Online is excellent for document sharing and offline reading purposes, and can be connected to Outlook with very similar functionality.
How to Do This
1. 2. Create a document library on a SharePoint Online site collection to house the documents. You can use all the collaboration functionality of SharePoint in this document library. To distribute the documents for offline use, you can connect the library to Outlook or Microsoft SharePoint Workspaces. When you synchronize with Outlook or SharePoint Workspaces, you will automatically receive the most recent version of the document. Note: For more information about how to edit SharePoint documents offline with Outlook 2007, see the blog http://blogs.msdn.com/outlook/archive/2007/09/28/sharepoint-outlook-the-perfect-link.aspx. Note: If bidirectional synchronization is required, a synchronization client such as SharePoint Workspaces, Colligo Contributor or MacroView Wisdom can be used.
MANUAL WORKFLOW
Scenario Description
Some public folders are used like a shared mailbox to initiate a manual workflow. An example of this would be an email box like info@contoso.com that customers can use to send mail to request product information. Email messages that come into this folder are reviewed by subject matter experts (SMEs), who either respond directly or store the email messages elsewhere for further processing.
Recommendations
You can use the shared mailbox feature of Exchange Online to provide a single email address for multiple people to use and initiate a manual workflow. Instructions for configuring shared mailboxes are described earlier in this document. Alternatively, SharePoint Online workflows can be used to provide enhanced workflow functionality over public folders. The next section on automated workflows provides instructions for doing this.
Scenario Description
Exchange public folders can also be used to initiate automated processes. For example, an alias can be set up to parse scanned forms in email attachments and automatically file them appropriately. Public folders can also be used to develop custom applications using Exchange Web Services APIs. In some cases, Organizational Forms are used as the input to these workflows.
Recommendations
SharePoint Online can be used to create automated workflows based on input from forms. Some more sophisticated functionality can be replicated using Web services APIs in Office 365. Instead of using Organizational Forms with Exchange and Outlook, creating workflows with SharePoint Designer or input forms with Microsoft InfoPath may be better options. Note: For more information about SharePoint Online extensibility, download and review Microsoft SharePoint Online Standard Developer Guide.
Benefits and Drawbacks Benefits Forms can support data validation and help ensure workflow integrity. A workflow can be applied to multiple SharePoint lists and integrated with other SharePoint-based processes.
Benefits and Drawbacks Benefits Because a form is used, input can be validated and the workflow will be more robust. Workflow can span multiple SharePoint lists and can be integrated with other SharePoint-based processes. InfoPath can be used to create rich form experiences that can be used online offline or online.
Recommendations
All these scenarios can be accommodated in Exchange Online by using Outlook 2007 or Outlook 2010 to add delegates and give permissions. Note: Delegate relationships cannot span on-premises and cloud environments. In other words, Send As (shared mailbox scenario) and Send on behalf of (admin/exec scenario) will only work if both users are on-premises or both users are in the cloud.
How to Do This
By using Outlook, users can share their mailbox with other users for example, by sharing a calendar with a delegate. Delegates can also manage the calendar on behalf of another user. Granular permission can be configured, such as Review or Full Editing permissions. Sharing of the inbox, tasks, and other mailbox items are supported as well.
General Considerations
There are several things you need to consider before you migrate. SharePoint Online currently imposes a 300-site limit for site collections. Subsites can be created within a site collection based on an organizations information architecture needs. Subsites in SharePoint Online can have different permissions from parent sites, and sites that cannot be accessed by a user will be trimmed from the navigation UI. The resulting experience would be one with a top-level site that all authenticated users could access, including tabs for each project that user is allowed to see. Permissions would have to be managed on a per subsite basis. You should consider whether you want to keep the same public folder hierarchy, structure, and permissions or whether you want to take this opportunity to re-organize your public folder information. Many customers have grown their information architecture organically and this provides a good opportunity to restructure. Permissions migration cannot be fully automated for all cases. Manual steps may be required. Mapping onpremises to online ID may also have to be a manual step, in which a mapping file must be provided. Tools from partners, such as STEALTHbits Technologies and Quest Software, can help provide organizations information on how their existing Exchange public folders are being used.
Manual Migration
You can migrate the public folder content manually through copy and paste operations. 1. 2. Depending on the type of the content you want to move, create a list or document library on a SharePoint Online site collection. Manually copy and paste the public folder content into the list or document library. 3. For non-document data, you can connect the list to Outlook, create a view in Outlook that contains all items, and then copy the content. For document libraries, you need to copy the content from Outlook to a Windows Explorer view, which may involve a local copy first as described earlier depending on your operating system and configuration. Re-create the permissions as appropriate.
Double-Hop Migration
You can use public folder migration tools and Web services-enabled migration tools separately to migrate the content in two phases. On-premises SharePoint is required to support such migration. 1. 2. Use one of the public folder migration tools provided by Microsoft partners to move the content from public folders to on-premises SharePoint. Use Web services-enabled migration tool to move content from on-premises SharePoint to SharePoint Online.
3.
Manual steps may be required for permissions migration. Mapping on-premises to online ID may also have to be a manual step, in which a mapping file must be provided.
Note: Some Microsoft partners offer both tools for the double-hop migration so that you do not have to use tools from different partners.
Direct Migration
There are direct public folder migration tools provided by Microsoft partners (i.e., Casahl, Metalogix, Quest Software, Tzunami Information Works and AvePoint). Therefore, you can also move content directly from Exchange public folders to SharePoint Online by using a direct public folder migration tool through Web services APIs.
Permissions
The permissions can be either set manually or migrated automatically with the migration tools. If you migrate content manually, you must re-create permissions manually too. If you migrate content in an automated way, permissions migration cannot be fully automated for all cases and manual steps may be required. Mapping on-premises to online ID may also have to be a manual step, in which a mapping file must be provided. Some Microsoft partners are working on better permissions migrations.
ADDITIONAL REFERENCES
The following links are additional sources of information pertaining to Exchange Online and SharePoint Online: Microsoft Office 365 Service Descriptions (including Exchange and SharePoint): http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=13602 Microsoft Exchange Online licensing: http://www.microsoft.com/exchange/en-us/licensing-exchange-onlineemail.aspx Exchange Licensing FAQ: http://www.microsoft.com/exchange/en-us/licensing-faq.aspx
2011 MICROSOFT CORPORATION. All rights reserved. Active Directory, ActiveSync, Microsoft, Outlook, and Windows Mobile are trademarks of the Microsoft Corporation.