Thursday, 4 October 2018

Configure IP Whitelist for Network Devices to Send Mail to Exchange Server without SMTP Auth

This is very easy and is done using a new Recieve Connector. 

Login to the ECP and click Mail Flow, then Recieve Connectors. Create a new Recieve Connector.

Name the connector something descriptive. 

Select Frontend Transport and Custom.

In Network Adapter Bindings leave "All available IPv4" this is only the case if the Exchange Server has a single NIC. It's slightly different if your server has arms in two networks.

In Remote Network Settings, enter the IP's of the network appliances you want to be able to send mail without authentication.

Click Finish.

To test use the following Telnet commands (you run this from a server which is listed as allowed in the new Recieve Connector).


set localecho
OPEN mail.domain.com 25
EHLO domain.com
MAIL FROM:ise@domain.com
RCPT TO:ryan.betts@domain.com NOTIFY=success,failure
DATA
Subject: Test from Telnet

Testing
.
QUIT

If it's successful it should return a message similar to below.



If you want the server to be able to relay to external domains you must run another command as well.

Change it to reference your Exchange Server and Recieve Connector name, also remember and run it from Exchange Mgmt Shell or it will fail. 

Get-ReceiveConnector "EXSRV\REC CONN NAME" | Add-ADPermission -User 'NT AUTHORITY\Anonymous Logon' -ExtendedRights MS-Exch-SMTP-Accept-Any-Recipient

Wednesday, 3 October 2018

Show "Caution: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe." warning to users when mail originates from outside Exchange Organisation

To try and attempt to reduce phising attempts it is possible to attend a HTML warning to users when they receive emails from outside the organisation. This is overkill in many environments but some insist on it being in place. 

It's achieved using Transport Rules in Exchange Online, the code below implements a warning 

"Caution: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe."




//Create a Session to Exchange Online

Write-Host "Getting the Exchange Online cmdlets" -ForegroundColor Yellow
$Session = New-PSSession -ConnectionUri https://outlook.office365.com/powershell-liveid/ `
    -ConfigurationName Microsoft.Exchange -Credential $credentials `
    -Authentication Basic -AllowRedirection
Import-PSSession $Session -AllowClobber

//Create a new Transport Rule

New-TransportRule -Name "External Mail Warning - Outside Organisation" -Priority 0 -FromScope "NotInOrganization" -ApplyHtmlDisclaimerFallbackAction Ignore -ApplyHtmlDisclaimerLocation "Prepend" -ApplyHtmlDisclaimerText "<div style=""background-color:#FFEB9C; width:100%; border-style: solid; border-color:#9C6500; border-width:1pt; padding:2pt; font-size:10pt; line-height:12pt; font-family:'Calibri'; color:Black; text-align: left;""><span style=""color:#9C6500; font-weight:bold;"">CAUTION:</span> This email originated from outside of the organization.  Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe.</div><br>"

Tuesday, 2 October 2018

Disable Outlook Focused Inbox across the entire Office 365 tenant

Use the following command to disable the annoying "Focused Inbox" setting across your entire tenant. It is possible to disable it on a per user basis, but do the right thing and remove it for everyone!

$UserCredential = Get-Credential

Install-Module MSOnline -Force
Import-Module MSOnline

$Session = New-PSSession -ConfigurationName Microsoft.Exchange -ConnectionUri https://outlook.office365.com/powershell-liveid/ -Credential $UserCredential -Authentication Basic -AllowRedirection

Import-PSSession $Session 

Set-OrganizationConfig -FocusedInboxOn $false

Get-OrganizationConfig //Check to see FocusedInbox is set to “false”

Update all user "targetAddress" and "proxyAddress" attributes in AD using Powershell for Exchange Hybrid

AD attributes are important when you have a hybrid setup from your on premise Exchange to Office 365, the following script will help retrospectively publish the required objects to your domain users so that hybrid mail flow works correctly.

Review this article for details on AD attributes in Exchange with hybrid connectivity.

http://blog.ryanbetts.co.uk/2018/09/understanding-ad-attributes-in-exchange.html

The following command can be used to export a list of users to a CSV file, you should change the OU path to suit your own environment. Once you have a list of users copy and paste them into a blank text document.

Get-ADUser -SearchBase "OU=Standard Users,OU=User Accounts,OU=Grand Cayman,OU=Company X,DC=domain,DC=com" -prop * -Filter * | Select samaccountname | Export-CSV C:\Users\Administrator\Desktop\Users.csv

The following command will set the "targetAddress" attribute for every user listed in the text file.

The "targetAddress" is used when on premise mailboxes try to send mail to Office 365 mailboxes.

Remember to capatilise SMTP as this will ensure it's the primary email adress. 

Get-Content C:\Users\da.ryan.betts\Desktop\O365Users.txt | % { Set-AdUser $_ -add @{targetAddress="SMTP:$_@companyx.mail.onmicrosoft.com"}}

The following command will append the FQDN, your public domain should be set as the primary so ensure caps are used with SMTP.

Get-Content C:\Users\Administrator\Desktop\O365Users.txt | % { Set-AdUser $_ -add @{proxyAddresses="SMTP:$_@companyx.com"}}

A second pass of the same command will add the additional proxy address which should be tenantname.mail.onmicrosoft.com


Get-Content C:\Users\Administrator\Desktop\O365Users.txt | % { Set-AdUser $_ -add @{proxyAddresses="smtp:$_@companyx.mail.onmicrosoft.com"}}


When you sync the AD to AAD using AD Connect the x500 entry will also appear under proxyAddresses.