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I have recently been getting these weird entries in my OWA log file (Exchange 2003 loaded on a Windows 2003 server). Everything OWA wise is working fine. My question: Is someone going to my OWA log on page and trying to access and hack into someones email? The user that is getting these Propfind messages does not have OWA enabled on her account and she has not been trying to get into her email via OWA. Is someone else trying to get into her email...guessing her password etc? Should I be worried. Here's the entry that's in the log:
#Fields: date time s-sitename s-ip cs-method cs-uri-stem cs-uri-query s-port cs-username c-ip cs(User-Agent) sc-status sc-substatus sc-win32-status
2008-04-03 14:03:35 W3SVC1 "ip address of server" OPTIONS / - 80 - "ip address of users workstion" Microsoft-WebDAV-MiniRedir
2008-04-03 14:03:35 W3SVC1 "ip address of server" OPTIONS / - 80 "domian\user and their ip address of their workstation" Microsoft-WebDAV-MiniRedir
2008-04-03 14:03:35 W3SVC1 "ip address of server" PROPFIND /c$ - 80 - "ip address of users workstation" Microsoft-WebDAV-MiniRedir
2008-04-03 14:03:35 W3SVC1 "ip address of server" PROPFIND /c$ - 80 "domain\user and their workstation ip address" Microsoft-WebDAV-MiniRedir
2008-04-03 14:03:35 W3SVC1 "ip address of server" PROPFIND /c$ - 80 - "ip address of workstation" Microsoft-WebDAV-MiniRedir
2008-04-03 14:03:36 W3SVC1 "ip address of server" PROPFIND /c$ - 80 "domain\user and their ip address of workstation" Microsoft-WebDAV-MiniRedir
#Software: Microsoft Internet Information Services 6.0
Please advise-
Thanks!
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by: tigermattPosted on 2008-07-13 at 02:59:01ID: 21991851
From the log, it would appear that they are not actually visiting the /exchange directory at all, but rather they are just accessing the root of your Default IIS Web Site. If this is the case and the user might have done this, perhaps just by typing the server name into the address bar, or even accessing some resources stored on it, then you need not be worried.
-tigermatt