One question we often get asked when talking to customers contemplating an Exchange upgrade or a switch from a competitor’s mail system is, "how many users per server can Exchange handle?" Nowadays, that’s an open question - it very much depends on what kind of users you have, what kind of storage you’re using and how powerful your servers are. When Exchange 4.0 was released in 1996, a decent server might have had 256Mb of RAM and a 90MHz Pentium processor, with maybe a handful of GBs of SCSI disk in the box and possibly a DAT tape drive. Users’ mailboxes might have been in the 10-20Mb size range, and the average user sent or received only a small amount of email per day.
At that time, server sizing was pretty much a function of how much computing horsepower you could afford - the CPU power, disk size & speed and memory capacity available (along with the all-important user profile) would determine the number of users per server, and arbitrary decisions would be made about maximum message sizes, mailbox size etc. Now, it’s possible to buy even mid-range servers that will cope with many thousands of users, and the bottleneck has moved down to the storage level in many instances as user mailboxes have grown in size and we send and receive far more mail, and many larger messages too.
We’d be interested in hearing anecdotes about particularly unusual messaging environments you might have - how large do your servers grow? What’s the biggest mailbox you’ve ever seen (assuming you’re not restricting with quotas)? How much data does your total Exchange system manage? What’s the biggest single database - etc, etc... you get the picture.
Some factoids to get you started... if you have anything along these lines, please post a comment:
- One customer (who is part of the Exchange Technology Adoption Program) sets no limit on message sizes internally - and one time saw a single message with attachments totaling 2.4Gb in size! (which Exchange delivered! - the recipient’s mailbox quota was instantly blown apart though...)
- The largest single Exchange 5.5 Public Folder Information Store I’ve come across was 800Gb in size
- There’s a limit of 1,000 Exchange 2000/2003 servers in an org - has anyone come close, or hit that limit?
- One customer deploys around 250,000 Exchange users per server and has over 9,000,000 users in total (you guessed it, they’re an ISP)
- The most heavy user of public folders in the world (that we know about) has about 1,500,000 public folders containing around 8Tb of data
So come on: let’s hear your war stories - post a comment with your amazing data :)
- Ewan Dalton
Blog Post
Exchange Team Blog
2 MIN READ
How does your Exchange garden grow?
The_Exchange_Team
Jun 02, 2005Platinum Contributor
20 Comments
- AnnijonnCopper Contributor
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- Deleted(This is a follow on to the previous post on measuring business impact , and the first post on the business
- Deleted
I often get to hear some “interesting” stories about sizes of peoples mailboxes but nothing... - DeletedIf you're interested in hardware/software scalability take a look at the numbers that the MS Exchange...
- DeletedLargest mailbox I have ever seen was during a GroupWise to Exchange 2003 migration for a large law firm in NYC. I believe this person was a managing partner. It took me more than a week to migrate this mailbox, which topped over 35GB when done.
- Deleteddid you tell me about hardware working on this configurations?????????/??
and may be you can give me an advice.... =))
i have 200-300 mailboxes aprox 500 MB each..
and 2-3 mailboxes more than 2-3GB..
in advance thank you very much - Deletedwell...
not proud of those limits but Ewan, I can confirm we have the following:
- a few pub.edb over 1.4TB and still growing
- average mailbox size around 2GB
- no end-user mailbox limits
- priv.edb got close to 1TB, now broken down over many servers
- we gave an award to a user who got his mailbox moving successfully from e5.5 to e2k3 with just under 30GB...
and of course we got to replicate all this to DR sites with no data loss and 15min RTO!
- Deletedone of our postmaster mailboxes (we have one for each of our 9 sites) was 23 gigs when I started here a year ago, no one had logged onto it in several years and it had over 6 million items in it. It took me 3 days to use exmerge to shrink it down. Our biggest user mailbox is about 3 gigs, with quite a few other mailboxes over 1 gig. Other than that we're pretty average (we have 8,000 users and 15,000 mailboxes). Our backups have improved dramatically at sites that upgraded their tape drives to SDLT320. At our largest site we backup 625 gigs a night (exchange mailstores only), it took 16 hours before we upgraded to SDLT320's and re-arranged our backup jobs, now it takes less than 5 hours. We're planning on buying exchange dedicated SAN's soon so we'll be moving to online snap backups of exchange, then streaming it off to tape, which will help a lot.
- DeletedWe're much smaller than many others here... but just thought i'd include ours since we seem a little odd - given what we use.
SBS 2000 with approx 40 users.
priv info store is 13.8gb
largest mailboxes: about 5 with >1gb, maybe one or two with >2gb
retention: 15 or 30 day
GPO: outlook ask to delete items in recycle bin
obviously we have no quotas... and additionally we have a digital scanning device sending through email (approx 100 docs @ 80kbps/ea daily) which i've got set to auto delete after some time...
with our anti-spam throwing emails into recycle automatically, the GPO really helps people stay on top of deleting junk.
our backup is currently veritas to a tape drive, though i'm trying to look at using our point-to-point T1 to do some sort of sync (to a NAS) or VSS type solution. (somehow i'd like to combine VSS's history with block level sync'ing to the NAS... the backup would be off site, up to date, and have historic versioning :))
I realize we should upgrade to 2003, but our SIS ratio has historically been way to high to consider... the second we'd do that (aside from in-place upgrade or the unsupported forklift method) our info store would break the 16gb limit... hopefully w/ SP2 we can upgrade though! :)
my $.02
-Scott - DeletedWith such large storage requirements, I'd like to know how everyone's backup strategy looks like. When do you have time to do online defrags or how much of it is needed? What is your typical recovery strategy if one of you large databases get corrupt. How long does it take to recover the database etc.
Thanks.