The edge logical architecture adds security for remote access to the two-tiered logical architecture. An edge deployment grants access to a remote, mobile workforce over the public Internet by using only name/password authentication (SMTPAuth). As messages travel to and from the corporate network over the public Internet, they are encrypted through the use of SSL. No virtual private network is involved. The internal side of the communications transmission is “in the clear” for maximum performance. Access is contained on the “edge” of the deployment, protecting the data stores from unauthorized intrusion.
Business reasons for an edge deployment include:
Your workforce consists of mobile, remote workers.
You do not want to install and maintain Communications Suite servers at every remote site.
Figure 5–5 represents the edge logical architecture.
In the preceding figure, the data stores are located in Tier 2, which is a secure, private network, connected only to the “edge” and “internal” front-end servers. Remote clients connect to front-end servers by using SSL. Internal clients do not need to use SSL to connect, as the assumption is made that internal access is inherently secure.
Capacity planning for the Edge tier is difficult to generalize. You should work with the hardware and software vendors who are supplying equipment for your deployment to develop a capacity plan. Nevertheless, you should implement the Realtime Blackhole List (RBL) at your site at the Edge tier. The RBL is a list of IP addresses whose owners refuse to stop the proliferation of spam.
Design the Edge tier for minimal latency (less that one millisecond through the entire Edge tier).
Use load balancing algorithms that are load-aware by CPU utilization or by the number of active connections. Round-robin is not an acceptable load-balancing model. With the exception of MTAs (stateless), use sticky-bit load balancing.
Webmail clients need load balancers that can manage sticky bits, because Webmail interfaces do not share state across Webmail servers.