Outlook won't re-connect to exchange after network is re-connected












14















I have a setup at my desk where I connect my computer to a an RJ45 switch that switches between two networks.



One network is the corporate network, which is maintained by my company's IT, and the other is my own private network where I do testing (the two networks have to be separated). The corporate network hosts the exchange server where I get e-mail.



When I switch from the private network to the corporate network, I expect Outlook to re-connect to the exchange server. However, I have found that sometimes when I come back, Outlook take an extremely long time to re-connect. Send/Receive will give me back the error 'The server is not available' (0x8004011D). It will sit there for 10 minutes to a few hours before it finally re-connects. The only other option is to reboot my computer, which is a huge pain for me since I run multiple VMs on it.



This usually happens when I'm connected to the private network for a significant amount of time, so I'm thinking it's because Outlook has cached the network status.



Is there a way to force Outlook to do a 'hard' re-connect to the exchange server?



I'm using Windows XP SP 3 with Outlook 2007.










share|improve this question























  • Does this also happen with other programs? How long do you wait between unplugging the network cable and replugging it into the other network? Does the problem persist if you wait a minute? If it does, could you try `ipconfig /flushdns' before retrying (in case it caches that mailserver.corp.foo is not valid).

    – Hennes
    Nov 1 '12 at 15:32













  • It only seems to happen with Outlook - though it is the only application I use that connects to the corporate intranet. I can still access the internet and corporate intranet web sites when in this state. I've also tried ipconfig /flushdns and releasing/renewing the IP, all with no results. If I wait it always comes back - though it sometimes takes several hours.

    – stan503
    Nov 2 '12 at 13:22











  • Happens to me all the time as well. I use a VPN and if it drops sync and outlook can't connect it won't ever connect again until I quite outlook and restart. Really quite a pain in the ass, but this is a Microsoft product I guess.

    – Bill Leeper
    Apr 23 '13 at 14:58
















14















I have a setup at my desk where I connect my computer to a an RJ45 switch that switches between two networks.



One network is the corporate network, which is maintained by my company's IT, and the other is my own private network where I do testing (the two networks have to be separated). The corporate network hosts the exchange server where I get e-mail.



When I switch from the private network to the corporate network, I expect Outlook to re-connect to the exchange server. However, I have found that sometimes when I come back, Outlook take an extremely long time to re-connect. Send/Receive will give me back the error 'The server is not available' (0x8004011D). It will sit there for 10 minutes to a few hours before it finally re-connects. The only other option is to reboot my computer, which is a huge pain for me since I run multiple VMs on it.



This usually happens when I'm connected to the private network for a significant amount of time, so I'm thinking it's because Outlook has cached the network status.



Is there a way to force Outlook to do a 'hard' re-connect to the exchange server?



I'm using Windows XP SP 3 with Outlook 2007.










share|improve this question























  • Does this also happen with other programs? How long do you wait between unplugging the network cable and replugging it into the other network? Does the problem persist if you wait a minute? If it does, could you try `ipconfig /flushdns' before retrying (in case it caches that mailserver.corp.foo is not valid).

    – Hennes
    Nov 1 '12 at 15:32













  • It only seems to happen with Outlook - though it is the only application I use that connects to the corporate intranet. I can still access the internet and corporate intranet web sites when in this state. I've also tried ipconfig /flushdns and releasing/renewing the IP, all with no results. If I wait it always comes back - though it sometimes takes several hours.

    – stan503
    Nov 2 '12 at 13:22











  • Happens to me all the time as well. I use a VPN and if it drops sync and outlook can't connect it won't ever connect again until I quite outlook and restart. Really quite a pain in the ass, but this is a Microsoft product I guess.

    – Bill Leeper
    Apr 23 '13 at 14:58














14












14








14








I have a setup at my desk where I connect my computer to a an RJ45 switch that switches between two networks.



One network is the corporate network, which is maintained by my company's IT, and the other is my own private network where I do testing (the two networks have to be separated). The corporate network hosts the exchange server where I get e-mail.



When I switch from the private network to the corporate network, I expect Outlook to re-connect to the exchange server. However, I have found that sometimes when I come back, Outlook take an extremely long time to re-connect. Send/Receive will give me back the error 'The server is not available' (0x8004011D). It will sit there for 10 minutes to a few hours before it finally re-connects. The only other option is to reboot my computer, which is a huge pain for me since I run multiple VMs on it.



This usually happens when I'm connected to the private network for a significant amount of time, so I'm thinking it's because Outlook has cached the network status.



Is there a way to force Outlook to do a 'hard' re-connect to the exchange server?



I'm using Windows XP SP 3 with Outlook 2007.










share|improve this question














I have a setup at my desk where I connect my computer to a an RJ45 switch that switches between two networks.



One network is the corporate network, which is maintained by my company's IT, and the other is my own private network where I do testing (the two networks have to be separated). The corporate network hosts the exchange server where I get e-mail.



When I switch from the private network to the corporate network, I expect Outlook to re-connect to the exchange server. However, I have found that sometimes when I come back, Outlook take an extremely long time to re-connect. Send/Receive will give me back the error 'The server is not available' (0x8004011D). It will sit there for 10 minutes to a few hours before it finally re-connects. The only other option is to reboot my computer, which is a huge pain for me since I run multiple VMs on it.



This usually happens when I'm connected to the private network for a significant amount of time, so I'm thinking it's because Outlook has cached the network status.



Is there a way to force Outlook to do a 'hard' re-connect to the exchange server?



I'm using Windows XP SP 3 with Outlook 2007.







microsoft-outlook exchange






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share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 1 '12 at 15:29









stan503stan503

71113




71113













  • Does this also happen with other programs? How long do you wait between unplugging the network cable and replugging it into the other network? Does the problem persist if you wait a minute? If it does, could you try `ipconfig /flushdns' before retrying (in case it caches that mailserver.corp.foo is not valid).

    – Hennes
    Nov 1 '12 at 15:32













  • It only seems to happen with Outlook - though it is the only application I use that connects to the corporate intranet. I can still access the internet and corporate intranet web sites when in this state. I've also tried ipconfig /flushdns and releasing/renewing the IP, all with no results. If I wait it always comes back - though it sometimes takes several hours.

    – stan503
    Nov 2 '12 at 13:22











  • Happens to me all the time as well. I use a VPN and if it drops sync and outlook can't connect it won't ever connect again until I quite outlook and restart. Really quite a pain in the ass, but this is a Microsoft product I guess.

    – Bill Leeper
    Apr 23 '13 at 14:58



















  • Does this also happen with other programs? How long do you wait between unplugging the network cable and replugging it into the other network? Does the problem persist if you wait a minute? If it does, could you try `ipconfig /flushdns' before retrying (in case it caches that mailserver.corp.foo is not valid).

    – Hennes
    Nov 1 '12 at 15:32













  • It only seems to happen with Outlook - though it is the only application I use that connects to the corporate intranet. I can still access the internet and corporate intranet web sites when in this state. I've also tried ipconfig /flushdns and releasing/renewing the IP, all with no results. If I wait it always comes back - though it sometimes takes several hours.

    – stan503
    Nov 2 '12 at 13:22











  • Happens to me all the time as well. I use a VPN and if it drops sync and outlook can't connect it won't ever connect again until I quite outlook and restart. Really quite a pain in the ass, but this is a Microsoft product I guess.

    – Bill Leeper
    Apr 23 '13 at 14:58

















Does this also happen with other programs? How long do you wait between unplugging the network cable and replugging it into the other network? Does the problem persist if you wait a minute? If it does, could you try `ipconfig /flushdns' before retrying (in case it caches that mailserver.corp.foo is not valid).

– Hennes
Nov 1 '12 at 15:32







Does this also happen with other programs? How long do you wait between unplugging the network cable and replugging it into the other network? Does the problem persist if you wait a minute? If it does, could you try `ipconfig /flushdns' before retrying (in case it caches that mailserver.corp.foo is not valid).

– Hennes
Nov 1 '12 at 15:32















It only seems to happen with Outlook - though it is the only application I use that connects to the corporate intranet. I can still access the internet and corporate intranet web sites when in this state. I've also tried ipconfig /flushdns and releasing/renewing the IP, all with no results. If I wait it always comes back - though it sometimes takes several hours.

– stan503
Nov 2 '12 at 13:22





It only seems to happen with Outlook - though it is the only application I use that connects to the corporate intranet. I can still access the internet and corporate intranet web sites when in this state. I've also tried ipconfig /flushdns and releasing/renewing the IP, all with no results. If I wait it always comes back - though it sometimes takes several hours.

– stan503
Nov 2 '12 at 13:22













Happens to me all the time as well. I use a VPN and if it drops sync and outlook can't connect it won't ever connect again until I quite outlook and restart. Really quite a pain in the ass, but this is a Microsoft product I guess.

– Bill Leeper
Apr 23 '13 at 14:58





Happens to me all the time as well. I use a VPN and if it drops sync and outlook can't connect it won't ever connect again until I quite outlook and restart. Really quite a pain in the ass, but this is a Microsoft product I guess.

– Bill Leeper
Apr 23 '13 at 14:58










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















9














I have the same problem. I've found this: http://office-watch.com/t/n.aspx?a=1562
I haven't tried yet because Outlook just connected.
It basically say:




In Outlook 2010 go to the Send/Receive tab and click on ‘Work Offline’, wait until the status bar changes from ‘Trying to connect’ to ‘Working offline’. Then click ‘Work Offline’ a second time, Outlook should then try to connect and, hopefully, succeed after a few seconds.




Edit: I tried this a few days ago and it worked like a charm.






share|improve this answer


























  • Welcome to SuperUser, On this site we prefer concrete answers over guessing, when you do try this, please edit your question to reflect the results.

    – David
    Mar 6 '14 at 17:01



















3














I have the same issue. As mentioned above, it seems to be related to the DNS cache, so go to command line (run program > cmd) then type in the following command and press Enter:




ipconfig /flushdns




Worked for me.






share|improve this answer


























  • This worked for me as well! No idea why down voted. Thanks!

    – AllenKll
    Mar 23 '16 at 12:42



















2














I have also had the same problem. It seems like the it could be happening when the mail server is set up with a domain name entry that has different values when inside the VPN vs on the Internet.



Easier set-up for the outlook admin, but you have to wait until the cached DNS for the mail server is flushed from your system.



I turned off caching exchange data and restarting outlook. Not always 100% success but seems to work a little better than waiting it out.






share|improve this answer































    0














    This worked for me: go to the Send/Receive tab and click on the "Download Headers" button. Outlook connects immediately.



    For me, toggling "Work Offline" did not work. I'm using Outlook 2013 connected to Exchange 2010.






    share|improve this answer






















      protected by Community Jan 30 '16 at 18:57



      Thank you for your interest in this question.
      Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



      Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      9














      I have the same problem. I've found this: http://office-watch.com/t/n.aspx?a=1562
      I haven't tried yet because Outlook just connected.
      It basically say:




      In Outlook 2010 go to the Send/Receive tab and click on ‘Work Offline’, wait until the status bar changes from ‘Trying to connect’ to ‘Working offline’. Then click ‘Work Offline’ a second time, Outlook should then try to connect and, hopefully, succeed after a few seconds.




      Edit: I tried this a few days ago and it worked like a charm.






      share|improve this answer


























      • Welcome to SuperUser, On this site we prefer concrete answers over guessing, when you do try this, please edit your question to reflect the results.

        – David
        Mar 6 '14 at 17:01
















      9














      I have the same problem. I've found this: http://office-watch.com/t/n.aspx?a=1562
      I haven't tried yet because Outlook just connected.
      It basically say:




      In Outlook 2010 go to the Send/Receive tab and click on ‘Work Offline’, wait until the status bar changes from ‘Trying to connect’ to ‘Working offline’. Then click ‘Work Offline’ a second time, Outlook should then try to connect and, hopefully, succeed after a few seconds.




      Edit: I tried this a few days ago and it worked like a charm.






      share|improve this answer


























      • Welcome to SuperUser, On this site we prefer concrete answers over guessing, when you do try this, please edit your question to reflect the results.

        – David
        Mar 6 '14 at 17:01














      9












      9








      9







      I have the same problem. I've found this: http://office-watch.com/t/n.aspx?a=1562
      I haven't tried yet because Outlook just connected.
      It basically say:




      In Outlook 2010 go to the Send/Receive tab and click on ‘Work Offline’, wait until the status bar changes from ‘Trying to connect’ to ‘Working offline’. Then click ‘Work Offline’ a second time, Outlook should then try to connect and, hopefully, succeed after a few seconds.




      Edit: I tried this a few days ago and it worked like a charm.






      share|improve this answer















      I have the same problem. I've found this: http://office-watch.com/t/n.aspx?a=1562
      I haven't tried yet because Outlook just connected.
      It basically say:




      In Outlook 2010 go to the Send/Receive tab and click on ‘Work Offline’, wait until the status bar changes from ‘Trying to connect’ to ‘Working offline’. Then click ‘Work Offline’ a second time, Outlook should then try to connect and, hopefully, succeed after a few seconds.




      Edit: I tried this a few days ago and it worked like a charm.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Mar 18 '14 at 12:01

























      answered Mar 6 '14 at 16:25









      Nicolas MalbranNicolas Malbran

      9315




      9315













      • Welcome to SuperUser, On this site we prefer concrete answers over guessing, when you do try this, please edit your question to reflect the results.

        – David
        Mar 6 '14 at 17:01



















      • Welcome to SuperUser, On this site we prefer concrete answers over guessing, when you do try this, please edit your question to reflect the results.

        – David
        Mar 6 '14 at 17:01

















      Welcome to SuperUser, On this site we prefer concrete answers over guessing, when you do try this, please edit your question to reflect the results.

      – David
      Mar 6 '14 at 17:01





      Welcome to SuperUser, On this site we prefer concrete answers over guessing, when you do try this, please edit your question to reflect the results.

      – David
      Mar 6 '14 at 17:01













      3














      I have the same issue. As mentioned above, it seems to be related to the DNS cache, so go to command line (run program > cmd) then type in the following command and press Enter:




      ipconfig /flushdns




      Worked for me.






      share|improve this answer


























      • This worked for me as well! No idea why down voted. Thanks!

        – AllenKll
        Mar 23 '16 at 12:42
















      3














      I have the same issue. As mentioned above, it seems to be related to the DNS cache, so go to command line (run program > cmd) then type in the following command and press Enter:




      ipconfig /flushdns




      Worked for me.






      share|improve this answer


























      • This worked for me as well! No idea why down voted. Thanks!

        – AllenKll
        Mar 23 '16 at 12:42














      3












      3








      3







      I have the same issue. As mentioned above, it seems to be related to the DNS cache, so go to command line (run program > cmd) then type in the following command and press Enter:




      ipconfig /flushdns




      Worked for me.






      share|improve this answer















      I have the same issue. As mentioned above, it seems to be related to the DNS cache, so go to command line (run program > cmd) then type in the following command and press Enter:




      ipconfig /flushdns




      Worked for me.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Jul 28 '15 at 13:47









      Kristian

      2,837819




      2,837819










      answered Jul 28 '15 at 13:22









      hwinterhwinter

      311




      311













      • This worked for me as well! No idea why down voted. Thanks!

        – AllenKll
        Mar 23 '16 at 12:42



















      • This worked for me as well! No idea why down voted. Thanks!

        – AllenKll
        Mar 23 '16 at 12:42

















      This worked for me as well! No idea why down voted. Thanks!

      – AllenKll
      Mar 23 '16 at 12:42





      This worked for me as well! No idea why down voted. Thanks!

      – AllenKll
      Mar 23 '16 at 12:42











      2














      I have also had the same problem. It seems like the it could be happening when the mail server is set up with a domain name entry that has different values when inside the VPN vs on the Internet.



      Easier set-up for the outlook admin, but you have to wait until the cached DNS for the mail server is flushed from your system.



      I turned off caching exchange data and restarting outlook. Not always 100% success but seems to work a little better than waiting it out.






      share|improve this answer




























        2














        I have also had the same problem. It seems like the it could be happening when the mail server is set up with a domain name entry that has different values when inside the VPN vs on the Internet.



        Easier set-up for the outlook admin, but you have to wait until the cached DNS for the mail server is flushed from your system.



        I turned off caching exchange data and restarting outlook. Not always 100% success but seems to work a little better than waiting it out.






        share|improve this answer


























          2












          2








          2







          I have also had the same problem. It seems like the it could be happening when the mail server is set up with a domain name entry that has different values when inside the VPN vs on the Internet.



          Easier set-up for the outlook admin, but you have to wait until the cached DNS for the mail server is flushed from your system.



          I turned off caching exchange data and restarting outlook. Not always 100% success but seems to work a little better than waiting it out.






          share|improve this answer













          I have also had the same problem. It seems like the it could be happening when the mail server is set up with a domain name entry that has different values when inside the VPN vs on the Internet.



          Easier set-up for the outlook admin, but you have to wait until the cached DNS for the mail server is flushed from your system.



          I turned off caching exchange data and restarting outlook. Not always 100% success but seems to work a little better than waiting it out.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Jul 19 '13 at 12:53









          David LevyDavid Levy

          1163




          1163























              0














              This worked for me: go to the Send/Receive tab and click on the "Download Headers" button. Outlook connects immediately.



              For me, toggling "Work Offline" did not work. I'm using Outlook 2013 connected to Exchange 2010.






              share|improve this answer




























                0














                This worked for me: go to the Send/Receive tab and click on the "Download Headers" button. Outlook connects immediately.



                For me, toggling "Work Offline" did not work. I'm using Outlook 2013 connected to Exchange 2010.






                share|improve this answer


























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  This worked for me: go to the Send/Receive tab and click on the "Download Headers" button. Outlook connects immediately.



                  For me, toggling "Work Offline" did not work. I'm using Outlook 2013 connected to Exchange 2010.






                  share|improve this answer













                  This worked for me: go to the Send/Receive tab and click on the "Download Headers" button. Outlook connects immediately.



                  For me, toggling "Work Offline" did not work. I'm using Outlook 2013 connected to Exchange 2010.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Feb 1 at 16:40









                  jaycerjaycer

                  1414




                  1414

















                      protected by Community Jan 30 '16 at 18:57



                      Thank you for your interest in this question.
                      Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



                      Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



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