MailNonUniversalGroup – Distribution List

Happy New year 2020. I wish you more progress this year from where you left off last year. Now let’s dive right to our topic on MailNonUniversalGroup distribution list. So i had a case where users where complaining of not receiving emails sent to a distribution list. After several minutes tracing the messages, it came to a halt with the following interesting details from the trace log:-

——–

Source : ROUTING
EventId : DROP

RecipientStatus : {[{LED=250 2.1.5 RESOLVER.GRP.Expanded; distribution list expanded};{MSG=};{FQDN=};{IP=};{LRT=}]}

——–

Some further digging and here is what i found for the distribution group that was not receiving emails:-

Get-DistributionGroup "nameofmydistributionlist" | fl recipienttypedetails

RecipientTypeDetails : MailNonUniversalGroup

Result shows my distribution group was of type: MailNonUniversalGroup

Further checking on when this group was first created in AD, shows far back as of 2012, and this must have been when it was migrated from previous legacy exchange 2003 to exchange 2010 but was not upgraded to a universal group at that time.

Microsoft recommends to convert all legacy exchange distribution groups to “universal” groups for use on Exchange 2010/2013/2016/2019 especially if you want to have all the features of distribution groups included.

In my case the distribution group members where on office365 and they needed to receive external email sent to the email address of the distribution list.

To solve, change the distribution group from MailNonUniversalGroup to Universal, I did this via exchange powershell:-

Get-DistributionGroup "nameofmydistributionlist" | Set-Group -Universal

wait a few minutes for replication and check again using:-

Get-DistributionGroup "nameofmydistributionlist" | fl recipienttypedetails

RecipientTypeDetails : MailUniversalDistributionGroup

It has now been converted to MailUniversalDistributionGroup

Now we can receive emails sent to the distribution list without any issues.

Tip: To do this in bulk for all your distribution groups that was just migrated over from legacy exchange versions 2003/2007, you can use the following command which will change all mailnonuniversalgroups to universal:-

Get-DistributionGroup -ResultSize unlimited -RecipientTypeDetails mailnonuniversalgroup | Set-Group universal

and then to apply the upgrade :

Get-DistributionGroup -ResultSize unlimited | Set-DistributionGroup -ForceUpgrade

Mail.Que database too large

In this troubleshooting you will learn how to safely delete and recreate the Exchange server transport queue database file “mail.que” and get tips to determine the root cause of your growing mail.que. On deletion of the mail.que file, Exchange will auto create a new mail.que file once you restart the Microsoft Exchange transport service. This applies to Exchange 2010,2013,2016,2019

Below solution will help you avoid messaging downtime, if your mail.que file is getting too large or consuming a lot of space on your disk drive at a critical stage which can cause major impact to mail flow or even Exchange auto shutting down its services, however, be sure to later properly investigate the root cause of the mail.que file growth as it can reoccur. Some known causes of mail.que file growth can be due to organization wide Exchange transport configurations such as the maxdumpstertime(exchange 2010), safetynetholdtime, pipeline tracing value, etc – For me, the safetynetholdtime value on Exchange 2016 was set to 7 days, which resulted in the growth of mail.que as it holds copies of successfully submitted messages for 7 days, another thing was that my day to day mail flow to my Exchange infra had increase from what it used to be several months ago , so i decided to schedule maintenance and expand the disk space where my mail.que resides from 250GB to 500GB , and ever since i no longer have mail.queue space issues. It might also be good to go back to your Exchange Server Role Requirements Calculator to help you determine where you are lacking in terms of disk space requirements, number of inbound messages to your infra etc. and from there you can make adjustments.

By default  your mail.que file location should be at :-  %ExchangeInstallPath%TransportRoles\data\Queue

screenshot-20190116165503-667x215

First, using Exchange powershell we can check the existing size in GB of mail.que, so open up your EMS on the affected Exchange server and run the following:-

Get-ChildItem "D:\Exchange Server\TransportRoles\data\Queue\mail.que" |select name,@{Label="size";Expression={"{0:N0}" -F ($_.Length/1GB)}}

screenshot-20190116161259-906x110

To Solve:-

  1. Put your Exchange server in maintenance mode, if you have SCOM etc, or schedule out-of- office hour maintenance before you proceed to perform these actions.
  2. Suspend Microsoft Exchange Transport service, (NOT STOP). This will drain and allow the current messages in the queue to be processed before it stops accepting new messages to the queue. To do this, on EMS run:- Suspend-service -name "Microsoft Exchange Transport"
  3. Run :- Get-queue  – to check and ensure messages in queues are empty (0).
  4.  Do not worry about shadow redundancy queues, these are fine if it has queues.
  5. Next, stop the MS Exchange transport service, :- Stop-service -name "Microsoft Exchange Transport". Once it has stopped give an extra 5 minutes for everything to settle in.
  6. Open the mail.que location ( %ExchangeInstallPath%TransportRoles\data\Queue) , select all files inside the folder and delete it, optionally you can move it to an external drive with enough space, you can rename it to something like mail.que.old as a backup.
  7. Now, After you have completed above steps. on Exchange management shell enter:- Start-service -name "Microsoft Exchange Transport"
  8. You will see a new mail.que file is auto created by Exchange, and your drive space released and back to normal.
  9. Run on EMS, Get-queue  – to check and monitor and ensure mail flow is back to normal. Above actions will save you from exchange running out of space and shutting down services automatically, and also gives you more time to investigate further on the root-cause of the growth, check event logs, google, technet articles, for more troubleshooting. Good luck.

Tip: use a tool such as Treesize free to get a detailed view of files and the size in your drive. It can come in handy when you want to check the size of files in your exchange server data path.

P.S: Watch out for my next article where I will show you how to change the default directory for your mail.que database, for me I prefer to put it on D:\ or another drive, which is separate from Exchange installation path on C:\ and OS. This is a very good recommendation because you can focus on troubleshooting and increasing the disk space for the mail.que on D:\ without touching your System/Exchange on C:\ drive, also allowing it to be stored on a separate drive from C:\ allows it to make use of the resources on that drive alone.

Mount Point Icon shown as Folder instead of default Mount drive Icon – Windows server 2012r2

 

Mount point Icon shown as a yellow file folder :-

partitionicon4

Normal mount drive Icon should look like this :-

partitionicon

Solution:-

Make sure when you are creating a mount point, you need to create the mount point folder from the ‘New Simple Volume Wizard’ in disk management of your windows server, once created, do another quick format again after the first quick format during the wizard creation.

partitionicon7

Create a new mount point folder and follow the prompts to complete

partitionicon9

Once it is finished. Perform another quick format manually:-

Screenshot-20181113155003-445x225

Once it is done, your new mount point will appear with the correct mount drive icon :-

partitionicon

I hope this helps anyone who have encountered this issue :D.