


Federation must be enabled for the external communications for the online tenant, which is configured by using the Skype for Business Online Control Panel.The Allowed domains list in the on-premises deployment must exactly match the Allowed domains list for your online tenant.The Blocked domains list in the on-premises deployment must exactly match the Blocked domains list for your online tenant.

If partner discovery is not enabled, then closed federation must be configured for your online tenant If partner discovery is enabled on the on-premises deployment, then open federation must be configured for your online tenant.Domain matching must be configured the same for your on-premises deployment and your Office 365 tenant.Skype for Business Online, Windows PowerShell Moduleĭetermine Office 365 Federation settings to be replicated to on-premises, keeping the following in mind:.Skype for Business Server Administration Tools.Install the following tools where you intend to run migrations from: Your solution is being backed up – once cut over, the on-premises deployment will manage SfB Online and On-Premises sign-in requests.You have deployed AD Connect and are syncronising on-premises AD with Office 365 Azure AD, and are using password sync or Active Directory Federation Services (AD FS) for single sign-on.You have a fully deployed and working Skype for Business Server on-premises.Your Skype for Business users are homed in Skype for Business Online.I will improve the article as I test it in the field, and welcome any feedback and experiences. Did you deploy Lync or Skype for Business Online before deploying Skype for Business (Lync) Server on-premises? And now you’d like to move your online user accounts to your on-premises server deployment? Here’s how!ĭisclaimer: this article is a work in progress, put together from lots of very untidy notes from the field.
