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Get-FederationInformation

This cmdlet is available in on-premises Exchange and in the cloud-based service. Some parameters and settings may be exclusive to one environment or the other.

Use the Get-FederationInformation cmdlet to get federation information, including federated domain names and target URLs, from an external Exchange organization.

For information about the parameter sets in the Syntax section below, see Exchange cmdlet syntax.

Syntax

Get-FederationInformation
   -DomainName <SmtpDomain>
   [-BypassAdditionalDomainValidation]
   [-Force]
   [-TrustedHostnames <MultiValuedProperty>]
   [<CommonParameters>]

Description

The Get-FederationInformation cmdlet retrieves federation information from the domain specified. Results from the cmdlet can be piped to the New-OrganizationRelationship cmdlet to establish an organization relationship with the Exchange organization being queried.

The domain specified should have federation enabled.

You need to be assigned permissions before you can run this cmdlet. Although this topic lists all parameters for the cmdlet, you may not have access to some parameters if they're not included in the permissions assigned to you. To find the permissions required to run any cmdlet or parameter in your organization, see Find the permissions required to run any Exchange cmdlet.

Examples

Example 1

Get-FederationInformation -DomainName contoso.com

This example gets federation information from the domain contoso.com.

Parameters

-BypassAdditionalDomainValidation

The BypassAdditionalDomainValidation switch specifies that the command skip validation of domains from the external Exchange organization. You don't need to specify a value with this switch.

We recommend that you only use this switch to retrieve federation information in a hybrid deployment between on-premises and Exchange Online organizations. Don't use this switch to retrieve federation information for on-premises Exchange organizations in a cross-organization arrangement.

Type:SwitchParameter
Position:Named
Default value:None
Required:False
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False
Applies to:Exchange Server 2010, Exchange Server 2013, Exchange Server 2016, Exchange Server 2019, Exchange Online, Exchange Online Protection

-DomainName

The DomainName parameter specifies the domain name for which federation information is to be retrieved.

Type:SmtpDomain
Position:Named
Default value:None
Required:True
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False
Applies to:Exchange Server 2010, Exchange Server 2013, Exchange Server 2016, Exchange Server 2019, Exchange Online, Exchange Online Protection

-Force

The Force switch hides warning or confirmation messages. You don't need to specify a value with this switch.

A confirmation prompt warns you if the host name in the Autodiscover endpoint of the domain doesn't match the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) certificate presented by the endpoint and the host name isn't specified in the TrustedHostnames parameter.

Type:SwitchParameter
Position:Named
Default value:None
Required:False
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False
Applies to:Exchange Server 2010, Exchange Server 2013, Exchange Server 2016, Exchange Server 2019, Exchange Online, Exchange Online Protection

-TrustedHostnames

The TrustedHostnames parameter specifies the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of federation endpoints. Federation endpoints are the client access (frontend) services on Mailbox servers in an organization with federation enabled. Explicitly specifying the TrustedHostnames parameter allows the cmdlet to bypass prompting if the certificate presented by the endpoint doesn't match the domain name specified in the DomainName parameter.

Type:MultiValuedProperty
Position:Named
Default value:None
Required:False
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False
Applies to:Exchange Server 2010, Exchange Server 2013, Exchange Server 2016, Exchange Server 2019, Exchange Online, Exchange Online Protection

Inputs

Input types

To see the input types that this cmdlet accepts, see Cmdlet Input and Output Types. If the Input Type field for a cmdlet is blank, the cmdlet doesn't accept input data.

Outputs

Output types

To see the return types, which are also known as output types, that this cmdlet accepts, see Cmdlet Input and Output Types. If the Output Type field is blank, the cmdlet doesn't return data.