Article ID: 188628 - Last Review: October 28, 2006 - Revision: 3.3 XADM: Exporting and Importing Permissions on ObjectsThis article was previously published under Q188628 On This PageSUMMARY
Administrators may want to import and export information from the
Permissions page of Exchange mailboxes, distribution lists, and custom
recipients.
This can be accomplished by constructing an export/import .CSV header file that contains the Obj-Admins, Obj-Perm-Admins, and Obj-Users fields. NOTE: The information in this article also applies to manipulating permissions for Custom Recipients and Distribution Lists. MORE INFORMATION
Each Exchange mailbox has a "Primary Windows NT Account" entry that gives a
Windows NT user permission to access the mailbox. You can configure
additional Windows NT permissions on a mailbox and thus allow multiple
Windows NT accounts to have access to a single Exchange object.
NOTE: You can also allow multiple Windows NT account access by assigning a Windows NT group as the "Primary Windows NT Account". Additional Windows NT account permissions may be configured on the Permissions property page for an object. By default, the Permissions page is not displayed in Exchange Administrator for most objects. To display it for all objects, from the Tools menu, select Options. Click the Permissions tab, and then select "Show Permissions page for all objects". Obj-Admins, Obj-Perm-Admins and Obj-Users are "pseudo-attributes" created for the purpose of bulk import and export of additional Permissions. Obj-Admins corresponds to the Windows NT accounts that have Administrator access to the object. Obj-Perm-Admins corresponds to Permissions Admin, and Obj-User to User permissions. The following is an example of a default export CSV header with the Permissions pseudo-attribute fields added to it: Obj-Class,First Name,Last name,Display Name,Alias Name,Directory Name,Primary Windows NT Account,Home-Server,E-mail address,E-mail Addresses,Members,Obj-Container,Hide from AB,Obj-Admins,Obj-Perm- Admins,Obj-Users
Additional Notes
| Article Translations
|

Back to the top
