You cannot view the state of the automapping setting for the mailbox (even if it is in enabled/disabled state).If you need to disable it yourself, then you can do it by keeping:
DISABLE MAILBOX EXCHANGE 2010 FULL
DISABLE MAILBOX EXCHANGE 2010 MANUAL
Remove automapping using Exchange Management Shellįor the removal of automapping feature for Exchange mailbox, the manual method requires to remove full access permission to the mailbox and then reattach full access permission. If you remove the mailbox and restart the Outlook, then the mailbox will appear again due to Autodiscover. The trouble is that you cannot manually delete any mailbox from your Outlook if the automapping feature is in Enabled state. It makes Outlook very slow, and if the bandwidth of your connection is also low, then it will be a headache to work smoothly. The user account gets full permission to access the mailbox (including shared mailboxes).īut the problem arises when your account has permission over several large-sized mailboxes, and every time the Outlook starts, the Autodiscover feature enlists all these mailboxes.The Administrator grants full access to a user to access the mailbox of another user(s).Automapping came into existence since Exchange Server 2010 SP1 and works like: It is quite convenient to have automapping in the Outlook as it helps the user to directly access the mailbox rather than manually make changes in the settings or add a new mailbox. When Outlook starts, the auto mapping tries to enlist all the mailboxes. Automatic mapping for the mailbox is a feature which allows Outlook to find all the mailboxes for which full access permissions are given to the user account.