Folks, we're looking for beta testers for our full-state Exchange to Office 365 (and vice-versa!) calendar migration.
We've got it all there: live guest lists, re-created responses, meetings being actual functional meetings when it's all done. But we always find the real world is a lot better place to test things out than our labs (however good we've gotten at anticipating problems).
Interested? Want to discuss for informed consent? Contact us.
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Monday, November 17, 2014
#Oracle Calendar Server to #MSExchange migration option comparison matrix
Because you asked for it -- a comparison matrix of Oracle Calendar Server to Exchange calendar options.
FREE
|
Flat
|
Partial
|
Full
| |
Description
|
Inserts
ICS export as-is
FREE |
Generates
Recurring meetings. Add guests to agendas
FLAT |
Generates
Recurring meetings. Add guests to meetings & sends out proposals
PARTIAL |
Full state for all accounts
FULL-STATE |
Migrate
Selected Accounts
in phases or batches
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
Big
bang
|
Re-Map
legacy accounts to Exchange Addresses
|
û
|
û
|
ü
|
ü
|
Adds Appointments,
All Day Events
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
Merge individual
occurrences into recurring
item
|
û
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
Guests
added to Current Meetings
|
û
|
ü
(added to agenda)
|
ü
(added to item)
|
ü
(added to item)
|
Proposes Current Meetings
|
û
|
û
|
ü
(optional, tagged)
|
ü
|
Adds
meetings you attend
|
ü(as appointment)
|
ü(as
appointment)
|
ü (as tentative item)
|
ü
|
Responds to Meeting Requests
|
û
|
û
|
û
|
ü
|
Archives Historic (Completed) Meetings
|
û
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
Re-Books Resources
for Meetings
|
û
|
û
|
ü
|
ü
|
No Server-Side Install
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
Migrate to Exchange 2013/Office
365
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
Email – use imapsync
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
Uses which
OCS Export?
Via UNIICAL
|
ICS
|
ICS
|
ICS
|
ICS
|
UNDO (back out
strategy!)
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
ü
|
Wednesday, November 05, 2014
Exchange On-premises to Office 365 calendar Migrations
One of our long time friends of Sumatra is considering an on-premises Exchange to Office 365 migration and has determined that the lack of a full-state calendar migration is a problem. All meetings come over as appointments without guest lists or they come in through the long, tedious PST method and there is no way to easily re-map the addresses.
Not that we predicted this coming issue a few years ago or anything.
So the short answer is: yes, we can handle this, keeping the meetings and guest responses live.
Anyone else out there looking to be an early informed consent test subject?
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Free #Oracle Calendar to #MSExchange / #Office365 Migration Software for Download
We've made our Oracle Calendar Server (OCS) to Exchange 2013 / Office 365 migration software available for free at this link.
See our previous post for documentation.
This will let you insert ICS exports from OCS from today one month forward.
If that works for your needs, go hog wild in your production systems, we will not mind.
If you want to preserve recurrence patterns and guest lists, you will need a license key from Sumatra.
We wish you successful migrations!
See our previous post for documentation.
This will let you insert ICS exports from OCS from today one month forward.
If that works for your needs, go hog wild in your production systems, we will not mind.
If you want to preserve recurrence patterns and guest lists, you will need a license key from Sumatra.
We wish you successful migrations!
Oracle Calendar Server to Exchange Migration Documentation
The software is coming really soon (like this week or next week depending on final Quality Assurance regressions).
But in the meantime you can view the documentation here.
But in the meantime you can view the documentation here.
Friday, October 24, 2014
Recurring appointments in Oracle Calendar Server to Office 365 migrations
We've greatly simplified the migration process for retaining recurrences in migrating from Oracle Calendar Server to Office 365. This video shows it in action and goes over some of the gory details of matching recurring patterns.
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
New #Oracle Calendar Server to #MSExchange #Office365 migration tools
Lately we have been getting lots of folks (mainly medium businesses and small universities) contacting us looking to migrate their Oracle Calendar Server data into Exchange better than the current crop of low-end solutions can accomplish. This means three things:
Please see our blog
postings MDaemon
Mail to Exchange via imapsync and imapsync vs
PST: Tonnage and Speed (spoiler alert: PSTs are incredibly slow and inefficient) as well as any other recent email migration
postings on our blog to give you an idea how easy and fast it is to use imapsync.
- Give us recurring meetings and appointments
- Please please please make the meetings live post-migration
- We want to choose solutions that reflect our budgets and business goals (i.e., we do not have a lot of money or time)
OK -- we've heard you and we can do all of that. You could try to write this at home, but we have years of experience that keep us safe.
So we've created three new options, the first of which we'll let you download and run if you contact us with your work email and size of the migration.
The application allows you to try out what we refer to as our FREE insertion, we think of it as a trial, but if all you need is the next 30 days worth of calendar data from your OCS, hey -- go ahead and use it in production.
The Free version does not re-create recurrence patterns. You need to license that in what we call the Flat option, which will also include the attendees in the meeting agenda, like this:
The Partial version will actually RE-PROPOSE all current meetings (i.e., not meetings in the past) so that the meetings are real MEETINGS, not static entries in your calendar. Post-migration your users will need to respond to these meeting invitations (this is part of the deal for lower cost). But they're live, functioning meetings. Like this:
Note that now "Attendees" is active because Jimi Hendrix has invited Janis.Joplin to the meeting and that it is remapped to their new domain.
Clicking Attendees shows us that Janis is Required but we have no response from her yet.
Got questions, feel free to contact us.
This also comes with our selective UNDO which will remove ONLY the data we've inserted.
You can see the current version in action in this video:
Want a convenient summary? Here you go:
Want a convenient summary? Here you go:
If you want your OCS
calendar migration…
|
Choose this Sumatra OCS
Migration option
|
Free, fast, no frills
no live meetings, no
recurrence patterns. No history and only 30 days into the future.
|
FREE -- Inserts ICS export as-is
|
Inexpensive, fast
recurrence patterns and
guests in agendas but no live meetings
|
Flat-- Generates Recurring meetings. Add guests to
agendas
|
Reasonably priced, fast
recurrence patterns and
current meetings re-proposed (but not responded to automatically)
|
Partial -- Generates Recurring meetings. Add guests to
meetings & sends out proposals
|
White glove full
state-recreation for an enterprise
|
Full – Recreates Full calendar state recreation for all
accounts
|
Looking to migrate your email as well?
We have found imapsync is an excellent product
for email migrations.
Monday, October 13, 2014
Russian Time Zone Changes and Exchange
The title says it all: Be aware: October 26, 2014 Russian Time Zone Changes and Exchange
Daylight savings time changes -- the gift that kept on giving. We only tell stories of the great 2007 US DST shift with fermented beverages in our hands.
Buona fortuna aux nos amis les russes !
Daylight savings time changes -- the gift that kept on giving. We only tell stories of the great 2007 US DST shift with fermented beverages in our hands.
Buona fortuna aux nos amis les russes !
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
Metrics for an #Oracle #Beehive Migration to #Office365
Our latest Oracle Beehive to Microsoft Exchange migration tool brings back the "Use Report" capability that allows you to generate an HTML summary of how much data your Beehive server contains.
Clicking the highlighted button....
Will generate a report called beehivemetrics.htm that looks like this:
Yes, we had some fun with how we referred to the top volume users.
This is great information for determining how to do a segmented migration across multiple CPU instances (not that we had to enable exactly this over the last weekend or anything....).
Saturday, September 20, 2014
#MeetingMaker User Password Recovery
Meeting Maker 7x / 8x
User Password Recovery
First get comfortable with reading binary data.
Second, open up a Meeting Maker Server Export in said binary
file viewer.
Third, figure out how to turn all this gobbledygook into
something semi-useful (as we have done below), but barring that, search for
your USER NAME or USER LOGIN, in the example below we use “Adam Ant” with User
Login “adam”
Adam’s password is encrypted in the line beginning with
“OVNI 0103” (which will ALWAYS immediately follow his USER LOGIN)
The first digit “1” tells me the password is 1-byte
long. In this example I know his
password is “b” but it is encrypted in the export file as “c”
You should start to suspect a pattern.
If the clear password is “aa” (61 61h) the hex string is “63
8C”
The pattern holds.
The first encrypted character = character + LENGTH of password
Now we proceed to the next digits in turn and build a table (a, aa, aaa, aaaa, b, bb, bbb...) you get the idea) which we will leave as an exercise for the reader.
Going down the column is less clear than going across the
rows. Going from “a” to “b” everything
augments by one (and this has held across a range of experimentation), meaning
we can in a pinch use each “a” length cipher as a base to figure out anything
of that length.
So the algorithm:
1.
Find a user
2.
Read the password length
3.
Subtract length from the first digit to get the
hex of the first character
4.
Use the “a” column in your table as an
offset for all the other letters in the password sequence.
5.
Do not ask for any more information you script
kiddies in India – this is more than adequate.
So the 7 digit string “7B 96 BA E9 04 38 26” deciphers as
“theman5”
7 letter “50 A4 B6 EA 04 FD 24” deciphers as “Ivana33”
5 letter “70 8F D0 E1 14” is “kayak”
Go wild.
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Hacking Canon Firmware -- Use This on Meeting Maker
With Meeting Maker in the final throes of its extended swan song, I'd like to point folks who still want to roll their own server-side migration to Hacking Canon Pixma Printers. Aside from being an excellent tutorial on reverse engineering, it's pretty much the same method we used (all those years ago) in breaking the Meeting Maker export format.
Keep in mind, the issue there is not getting at the encryption key (since except for the user passwords there isn't one and you can break those in a few minutes), but establishing the encoding scheme for individual data records. After you run this for the first few you'll have the wash-rinse-repeat cycle for the entire data set.
You'll then have to assemble object-oriented database elements into something like a coherent whole, but if you get this far into the process that should not be a barrier to success.
Only other hint I need to give you: work on the server export file not the live server data. The live server data is a hot mess horror show.
Keep in mind, the issue there is not getting at the encryption key (since except for the user passwords there isn't one and you can break those in a few minutes), but establishing the encoding scheme for individual data records. After you run this for the first few you'll have the wash-rinse-repeat cycle for the entire data set.
You'll then have to assemble object-oriented database elements into something like a coherent whole, but if you get this far into the process that should not be a barrier to success.
Only other hint I need to give you: work on the server export file not the live server data. The live server data is a hot mess horror show.
Monday, September 15, 2014
Friday, September 12, 2014
Messages stuck in OWA's DRAFTS folder (Post Exchange 2013 CU6 update)
I updated our Exchange servers to CU6 over the US Labor Day weekend and hit a few head-banging errors.
First, CU6 failed on the mailbox role. The solution: remove the Discovery mailbox. Then setup successfully completed. (Remember to recreate the discovery mailbox!)
After I restarted the Exchange servers, mail was stuck in the drafts folder. I tested mailflow using the "test-mailflow" cmdlet, and saw it failed (not that stuck messages in OWA weren't enough):
A quick search pointed to DNS or Security policy problems. Not in our case. Next check, were all services running...."Test-ServiceHealth"
No...Two services were disabled: MS Exchange Transport Delivery (MSExchangeDelivery) and MS Exchange Transport Submission (MSExchangeSubmission.) Restarting those services made the mail flow once more!
First, CU6 failed on the mailbox role. The solution: remove the Discovery mailbox. Then setup successfully completed. (Remember to recreate the discovery mailbox!)
After I restarted the Exchange servers, mail was stuck in the drafts folder. I tested mailflow using the "test-mailflow" cmdlet, and saw it failed (not that stuck messages in OWA weren't enough):
A quick search pointed to DNS or Security policy problems. Not in our case. Next check, were all services running...."Test-ServiceHealth"
No...Two services were disabled: MS Exchange Transport Delivery (MSExchangeDelivery) and MS Exchange Transport Submission (MSExchangeSubmission.) Restarting those services made the mail flow once more!
Tuesday, September 09, 2014
Sumatra Holiday cmdlet for Microsoft Exchange - Download
Holidays.
Our server-side holiday cmdlet for Microsoft Exchange simply works and has more functionality than the client-side holiday capability Microsoft built into Outlook. And of course an admin runs this server-side rather than hoping users run use Outlook to add holidays client-side.
When we offered it up as a "pay what you want" we got thousands of downloads, and a number of people who actually paid of the "use your fingers" magnitude.
But people keep asking for it, so we're going to let you download it under our advertising model meaning every item inserted will be stamped "Courtesy of Sumatra" in the agenda.
So you may download it here.
If you want to suggest additions or modifications, contact us.
And check this blog or Follow @sumatra_dev to see what we'll support in the future.
If you want to suggest additions or modifications, contact us.
And check this blog or Follow @sumatra_dev to see what we'll support in the future.
Labels:
cmdlet,
Exchange 2013,
holidays,
Office 365,
SuHoliday
Friday, September 05, 2014
Disappearing Contact/Calendar item body fixed in Exchange 2013 CU6
We blogged about clients reporting problems with notes after inserting contacts and calendar items from Beehive and MDaemon migrations April, '14.)
KB 2975003 confirmed this was a problem! The KB says: "...compose or edit a Calendar item by using Outlook Web App...and then save the item. When you open the item in Microsoft Outlook 2013 or Outlook 2010 in online mode, the body of the item disappears." We scrambled and updated our code to set MAPI codes to fix the problem in our code. But they reported their end users were still having the same problem on NEW items.
Now there is a fix: install Cumulative Update 6 for Exchange Server 2013: 2961810
KB 2975003 confirmed this was a problem! The KB says: "...compose or edit a Calendar item by using Outlook Web App...and then save the item. When you open the item in Microsoft Outlook 2013 or Outlook 2010 in online mode, the body of the item disappears." We scrambled and updated our code to set MAPI codes to fix the problem in our code. But they reported their end users were still having the same problem on NEW items.
Now there is a fix: install Cumulative Update 6 for Exchange Server 2013: 2961810
BTW, for customers with legacy tools, CU6 fixes the problem MAPI/CDO clients cannot connect to Exchange Server 2013.
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
Western Australia Holidays with the cmdlet
We've had some requests from Western Australia lately, so here's the cmdlet working with holidays in OZ.
September 16, 2014 update. Read this post to download the cmdlet.
February 23, 2015: Folks, please leave us some feedback about what you like in the cmdlet and what you'd like changed. We see how many of you are downloading it. We'd love some feedback.
September 16, 2014 update. Read this post to download the cmdlet.
February 23, 2015: Folks, please leave us some feedback about what you like in the cmdlet and what you'd like changed. We see how many of you are downloading it. We'd love some feedback.
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
KB28810011 will mess with your Outlook 2013
From Tony Redmond: Update causes Outlook 2013 to fail to open archive mailboxes.
Arm yourselves with knowledge.
Arm yourselves with knowledge.
Tuesday, August 12, 2014
Server-side cmdlet for Holiday Insertion into Microsoft Exchange
Preliminary video of our server-side holiday insertion cmdlet.
It doesn't look good in full screen mode but you get the idea how it works.
Sunday, July 20, 2014
What the heck are all you guys in Turkey doing reading this blog?
Dear Turkish Readers,
I get why the USA and Western Europe read this blog.
I get why India, China, and Russia read this blog.
I get why South America and Africa do not read this blog.
What I do not get is why we have so many hits lately from Turkey.
Can any of you guys please enlighten me?
I get why the USA and Western Europe read this blog.
I get why India, China, and Russia read this blog.
I get why South America and Africa do not read this blog.
What I do not get is why we have so many hits lately from Turkey.
Can any of you guys please enlighten me?
Thursday, July 17, 2014
Human Resource Conference Room Bookings as Indicators of Impending Doom
If you follow this blog you probably also know as the New York Times puts it, A Large Round of Layoffs Is Expected at Microsoft.
This is the key sentence "Human resources managers have begun reserving conference rooms for most of Thursday, most likely a sign that they will be used to meet with laid-off employees..."
Now HR and Conference Rooms is almost never a good combination. I flash back to my days at Lotus (pre-IBM), when the only thing worse than a group meeting with HR was a group meeting with HR with a few dozen donuts -- translation: "re-organization time!".
What I find interesting is that the conference room bookings are the most direct and compelling evidence.
Microsoft folk, if you wanted to get really subtle in your analysis of your future chances, just use Outlook to look for free time in the conference room YOUR corporate mouthpiece.... er.... Human Resources Manager... uses.
This is the key sentence "Human resources managers have begun reserving conference rooms for most of Thursday, most likely a sign that they will be used to meet with laid-off employees..."
Now HR and Conference Rooms is almost never a good combination. I flash back to my days at Lotus (pre-IBM), when the only thing worse than a group meeting with HR was a group meeting with HR with a few dozen donuts -- translation: "re-organization time!".
What I find interesting is that the conference room bookings are the most direct and compelling evidence.
Microsoft folk, if you wanted to get really subtle in your analysis of your future chances, just use Outlook to look for free time in the conference room YOUR corporate mouthpiece.... er.... Human Resources Manager... uses.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)