

The same copy - on a client PC running Outlook using the old "IMAP to Exchange profile drag and drop" trick, is so much faster - leading me to believe our performance problems could be caused by PowerShell, which hardly strikes me as streamlined having worked with creating and calling PowerShell Engines and Pipelines in C#. Is anyone else having performance issues with Transporter? The Hub Transport (where it's installed) appears to eat a CPU core while migrating users (brand new Xeon Quad Core 1.8GHz, not the fastest but still not exactly sluggish) and takes an age (20mins) to do 4,000 small emails with no attachments using command line PowerShell with 'quiet' switches. I've never seen this format of imap login before and I can't find any reference to it - anyone any ideas? * CAPABILITY IMAP4 IMAP4rev1 ACL QUOTA LITERAL+ NAMESPACE UIDPLUS CHILDREN BINARY UNSELECT LANGUAGE XSENDER X-NETSCAPE XSERVERINFO AUTH=PLAINĪ0005 LOGIN "adminaccnt/testuser" "blahblah"Īdminaccnt is the admin user, testuser is the user I'm trying to migrate, blahblah is the password.

* OK .uk IMAP4 service (Sun Java(tm) System Messaging Server 6.2-9.02 (built Apr 20 2007)) It would just be better to be able to say "this tool will not drop any emails, regardless of how big they are or how blank certain properties may be in the source system".Īny thoughts or ideas from the community appreciated.Īfter sniffing the network traffic to work out what the hell the transporter suite is attempting to do with the admin account: That said, we have set all Exchange settings for maximum message size to unlimited.Īt the end of the day the workaround may be to have a good backup before we do this, and if the client screams, restore the email. Unfortunately our customer has no mail send limits as a research institution. So far the dropped mail includes mail missing properties like the subject line, and mail that's very large, like 50MB mails.
#Communigate pro release notes password
we haven't been able to get the admin password to work in this case) and the "story" is a lot better than a tool like Transend where you have to create a profile for each target user (thus you have to know the destination username and password too).īut we do see dropped mail. The tool does work (with individual username and password combinations. We're doing a migration to Exchange 2007 from SunOne (IMAP) 5.x. I've been working with Microsoft support on this but thought I would post anyway.
