Journaling is an older feature from Exchange that moves data outside Microsoft 365, so you must take extra precautions to secure it and also resolve any duplication that might result from this solution. It is your responsibility to monitor and follow up on any non-delivery receipts to the journaling mailbox that can occur because of external and dependent services. You don't have these more ...
Journaling is an older compliance feature of Exchange that allows you to meet your organization's archiving requirements when you must store emails outside Exchange Online. You can create journal rules and have messages matching the rule's conditions delivered to the journaling address specified in the rule. For more information about journaling, including the limitations and considerations ...
Journaling as a feature is supported by Exchange Online, with the caveat that the journal target must be external to M365. You cannot journal to a mailbox within your own, or any other Microsoft 365 tenant.
You need to have a journaling mailbox and an alternate journaling mailbox configured. For more information, see Configure Journaling in Exchange Online. In Exchange Online, there's a limit to the number of journal rules that you can create. For details, see Journal, Transport, and Inbox rule limits.
Journaling agent The Journaling agent is the built-in Exchange transport agent that processes messages as they flow through the Transport service on Mailbox servers. The journaling configuration settings are stored in Active Directory, and are read by the Journaling agent.
Hi guys, Is there an Envelope Journaling feature in Exchange Online? Thanks in advance.
Journaling in Exchange Server records inbound and outbound email messages. For more information, see Journaling in Exchange Server. This topic shows you how to configure standard journaling (journal messages for all mailboxes on a mailbox database) and premium journaling (use journal rules to specify the recipients that are journaled).