Microsoft 2004 Manuel D’Utilisation

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ISA Server 2004 Configuration Guide 205 
Introduction 
One of the main reasons to deploy a ISA Server 2004 firewall is to protect Microsoft 
Exchange Servers. ISA Server 2004 includes a number of technologies focused on providing 
enhanced support to protect Microsoft Exchange Services published to the Internet.  This 
increased level of protection for remote access to Microsoft Exchange Server services puts 
the ISA Server 2004 firewall in a unique position to be the firewall for Microsoft Exchange 
Server
Providing secure remote access to Microsoft Exchange Server services is a complex process. 
Fortunately, ISA Server 2004 includes a number of wizards that walk the firewall administrator 
through the process of providing secure remote to Microsoft Exchange, simplifying the 
procedure.. . 
In this ISA Server 2004 Configuration Guide document, we discuss methods you can use to 
provide secure remote access to the Exchange Outlook Web Access (OWA) site, the 
Exchange SMTP service and the Exchange POP3 service. We will assume that you have 
issued a Web site certificate to the OWA site, exported the certificate to a file (including the 
private key), and imported the Web site certificate to the ISA Server 2004 firewall’s machine 
certificate store. In addition, we will assume that the external client that connects to the OWA 
Web site through the ISA Server 2004 firewall has the CA certificate of the CA that issued the 
OWA site’s Web site certificate imported into its Trusted Root Certification Authorities 
certificate store. 
•  Note:  
Certificate issuance and deployment is beyond the scope of this ISA Server 2004 
Configuration Guide
 document. For detailed information on deploying Web site and root 
CA certificates, please refer to the ISA Server 2004 Exchange Deployment Kit
The following walkthrough discusses basic methods used to provide remote access to the 
OWA, SMTP and POP3 services on the Internal network Exchange Server. . In a production 
environment, remote access to the SMTP service would be secured using SSL and requiring 
use authentication. Similarly, remote access to the POP3 service would also require a secure 
SSL connection. We limit our discussion to non-SSL connections in the following walkthrough, 
for demonstration purposes only. 
In addition, a number of procedures have been effected on the Exchange Server to optimize it 
for secure remote access OWA connections.  The first chapter of this ISA Server 2004 
Configuration Guide 
outlines these procedures. Also, the Exchange POP3 service is 
disabled by default and must be manually enabled. 
You will need to perform the following procedures to configure the ISA Server 2004 firewall to 
allow remote access connections to the Exchange Server service: 
•  Restore the system to its post-installation state 
•  Create the OWA Web Publishing Rule 
•  Create the SMTP Server Publishing Rule 
•  Create the POP3 Server Publishing Rule 
•  Test the connection