What you need to do is, create a website (not the owa site), use that site as the front for owa, use that sites index page to redirect to the owa site. To have the site use just the fqdn then, in IIS, in the properties of the owa site, on the home directory tab, select a redirection to an url. In the redirect box, use /exchange, and select the a directory below url entered checkbox. S -----Original Message----- From: Andrew English [mailto:andrew@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Monday, February 21, 2005 10:07 AM To: ISA Mailing List Subject: [isalist] HTTP to HTTPS and HTTPS to HTTPS http://www.ISAserver.org Hi, I have Exchange 2003; ISA 2004 Server is doing the FBA for OWA I have tried everything from Microsoft's method of creating a .asp file to inserting a html file which directs the HTTP to HTTPS and everything I try to access http://owa.smoothrunnings.ca I get "page can not be displayed..... forbidden 403". I am thinking its an ISA thing since it is ISA who is doing all the grunt work?? Anyhow I would like to do HTTP to HTTPS and HTTPS without the /exchange to HTTPS with the /exchange. So if someone can help me I would appreciate it. Andrew ------------------------------------------------------ List Archives: http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp ISA Server FAQ: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/larticle.asp?type=FAQ ------------------------------------------------------ Other Internet Software Marketing Sites: World of Windows Networking: http://www.windowsnetworking.com Leading Network Software Directory: http://www.serverfiles.com No.1 Exchange Server Resource Site: http://www.msexchange.org Windows Security Resource Site: http://www.windowsecurity.com/ Network Security Library: http://www.secinf.net/ Windows 2000/NT Fax Solutions: http://www.ntfaxfaq.com ------------------------------------------------------ You are currently subscribed to this ISAserver.org Discussion List as: isalist@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe visit http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx The haggis is unusual in that it is neither consistently nocturnal nor diurnal, but instead is active at dawn and dusk (crepuscular), with occasional forays forth during the day and night.