How to Get Throttling Policy Settings on Microsoft Exchange Server 2013

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This article describes How to Get Throttling Policy Settings on Microsoft Exchange Server 2013

Microsoft is a leading global vendor of computer software; hardware for computer, mobile and gaming systems; and cloud services. Microsoft's corporate headquarters is located in Redmond, Wash., and it has offices in more than 60 countries.

Windows Server refers to any type of server instance that is installed, operated and managed by any of the Windows Server family of operating systems.

Windows Server exhibits and provides the same capability, features and operating mechanism of a standard server operating system and is based on the Windows NT architecture.

Windows Server is generally capable of providing server-oriented services, such as the ability to host a website, user management, resource management across users and applications, messaging, security and authorization and many other server-focused services.

Microsoft Windows Server OS (operating system) is a series of enterprise-class server operating systems designed to share services with multiple users and provide extensive administrative control of data storage, applications and corporate networks.

Microsoft Exchange Server is a mail server and calendaring server developed by Microsoft. It runs exclusively on Windows Server operating systems.

The first version was called Exchange Server 4.0, to position it as the successor to the related Microsoft Mail 3.5. Exchange initially used the X.400 directory service but switched to Active Directory later. Until version 5.0 it came bundled with an email client called Microsoft Exchange Client. This was discontinued in favor of Microsoft Outlook.

Exchange Server primarily uses a proprietary protocol called MAPI to talk to email clients, but subsequently added support for POP3, IMAP, and EAS. The standard SMTP protocol is used to communicate to other Internet mail servers.

Exchange Server is licensed both as on-premises software and software as a service (SaaS). In the on-premises form, customers purchase client access licenses (CALs); as SaaS, Microsoft charges a monthly service fee instead.

Microsoft designed Exchange Server to give users access to the messaging platform on smartphones, tablets, desktops and web-based systems. Telephony capabilities in Exchange Server support voice messages. Exchange users collaborate through calendar and document sharing. Storage and security features in the platform let organizations archive content, perform searches and execute compliance tasks.

Windows PowerShell is a shell initially developed by Microsoft for the purposes of task automation and configuration management. PowerShell is now an open source project, and it can be installed on Windows, macOS, and Linux platforms. This shell is based on the .NET framework, and it includes a command-line shell and a scripting language.

The Exchange Management Console (EMC) is a graphical user interface (GUI) that allows administrators to manage their Exchange organizations. Formerly known as the Exchange System Manager, the Exchange Management Console was announced as part of Exchange Server 2007.

The Exchange admin center (EAC) is the web-based management console in Exchange Server that's optimized for on-premises, online, and hybrid Exchange deployments. The EAC was introduced in Exchange Server 2013, and replaces the Exchange Management Console (EMC) and the Exchange Control Panel (ECP), which were the two management interfaces in Exchange Server 2010.

In Exchange 2010, Microsoft introduced the throttling policy feature that is also present in Exchange 2013 and Online. With this feature, Exchange tracks the resources that each user consumes and enforces connection bandwidth limits, as necessary.

The throttling restrictions however negatively impacts the performance of the Coveo crawler that inevitably increases the load on the Microsoft Exchange Server. The default throttling policy assigned to Exchange users is too restrictive for crawling operations, causing numerous errors and problems that drastically decrease performance and possibly prevent access to some content.

The Get-ThrottlingPolicy cmdlet returns the client throttling settings for one or more throttling policies. If you use the Identity parameter, the cmdlet returns the settings for the identified throttling policy. If you don't use the Identity parameter, the cmdlet returns the settings for all throttling policies.

Now you can find some examples in this video.

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