Important This article contains information about modifying the registry.
Before you modify the registry, make sure to back it up and make sure that you
understand how to restore the registry if a problem occurs. For information
about how to back up, restore, and edit the registry, click the following
article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
256986 Description of the Microsoft Windows Registry
MORE INFORMATION
Typically, when you delete an item from a folder in a
mailbox, that item is first transferred to the Deleted Items folder of that
mailbox. You can then remove the item from the Deleted Items folder. This
provides a measure of protection in case you accidentally delete an item. After
the items are removed from the Deleted Items folder, you can still recover them
if Microsoft Exchange Server 5.5 or Microsoft Exchange 2000 Server has been
configured to retain deleted items.
For
additional information about how to configure Exchange Server to retain deleted
items, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft
Knowledge Base:
246283
Set deleted mail message retention time in Exchange Server 5.5
You can also permanently remove items without first
moving them to the Deleted Items folder. This procedure is known as a "hard
delete." The following are three examples of a hard delete:
- A Microsoft Outlook user presses SHIFT+DELETE to remove a
message.
- You use an Internet Message Access Protocol 4 (IMAP4), Post
Office Protocol 3 (POP3), or another type of messaging client that does not
first move the message to the Deleted Items folder.
- An Outlook user who works offline with an offline folder
file (.ost) removes the message from the Inbox or from another folder and then
empties the Deleted Items folder before the offline folder file is synchronized
with the server. This produces a hard delete of the item from the folder on the
server.
By default, the ability to recover deleted items is only
enabled on the Deleted Items folder in a user's private folders. Therefore,
items that are removed by using a hard delete cannot be recovered.
To enable
Deleted Item Recovery on mail folders such as the Sent Items folder, the Drafts folder,
the Outbox folder, and the Inbox folder, follow these
steps.
Warning If you use Registry Editor incorrectly, you may cause serious
problems that may require you to reinstall your operating system. Microsoft
cannot guarantee that you can solve problems that result from using Registry
Editor incorrectly. Use Registry Editor at your own risk.
- Configure Exchange Server to retain deleted items.
For additional information about how to
configure Exchange Server to retain deleted items, click the following article
number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
246283
Set deleted mail message retention time in Exchange Server 5.5
- Click Start, click Run,
type regedit, and then click
OK.
- Locate and then click the following registry subkey:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Exchange\Client\Options
- Right-click the Options subkey, point to
New, and then click DWORD Value.
- Type DumpsterAlwaysOn for the DWORD
name, and then press ENTER.
- Double-click
DumpsterAlwaysOn.
- In the Value data box, type
1, and then click OK.
- Quit Registry Editor.
You can do this either at the administrator's computer or at
the user's computer. After you add this value, the
Recover Deleted
Items option becomes available for the Sent Items folder, the Drafts
folder, the Outbox folder, and the Inbox folder. You can recover deleted items
from these folders. Because you may not want to configure this registry setting
on each computer, you may want to make this registry modification on an
administrator's computer only, and then have that administrator open the
affected user's mailbox as an additional mailbox. The administrator can then
recover deleted items from the user's mailbox mail folders.
Note For an administrator to open another user's mailbox and to
recover items in the user's private folders, the administrator's Windows
account must be granted the permission of
User for that user's
mailbox object. Next, the administrator must create a profile for that user's
mailbox or add that user's mailbox to the administrator's profile. To do so,
follow these steps:
Note Because there are several versions of Microsoft Windows, the
following steps may be different on your computer. If they are, see your
product documentation to complete these steps.
- In Control Panel, double-click
Mail.
- Click the Services tab, and then
double-click Microsoft Exchange Server.
- Click the Advanced tab, and then click
Add to add the mailbox to your profile.
Differences for Microsoft Outlook 98 and Microsoft Outlook 2000
In Outlook 98, this option is available only for mail folders
(Deleted Items, Drafts, Inbox, Outbox, and Sent Items). Therefore, items that
are removed from non-mail folders like the Contacts folder, the Notes folder,
and other folders by using a hard delete cannot be recovered. However, in
Outlook 2000 this option is available for all folders. Therefore, recovery from
non-mail folders is also possible as long as the
DumpsterAlwaysOn=1 DWORD
registry value has been added to the registry.
For additional information, click the following article
numbers to view the articles in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
228934
Understanding Deleted Item Recovery
175263 Clients cannot recover items after Item Recovery is enabled
188637 How to determine the size of recoverable items in the information store