Im currently using the Exchange EWS api to sync two calendars. There is a customer that does not want open up EWS to the public.
Are there any other methods, apis, etc to CRUD Exchange calendars?
DavMail is a POP/IMAP/SMTP/Caldav/Carddav/LDAP exchange gateway. It's implemented in Java and should run on any platform.
It's been a while since I've implemented it on local machines for single app use inside a WAN and also on web facing servers as a general gateway into Exchange for Linux users.
I don't know if it plays well with O365 etc, as I haven't needed to find out yet.
Its a SourceForge project with some sponsorship from the French Defense Agency.
This page states that before an application can access the API (I'm particularly interested in the Calendar API), it must be registered with Azure AD. Is this also true for organizations that may host their own Exchange servers?
Could someone provide a breakdown of what's necessary for me to get started with accessing the API to access the users' Calendar? I'm aware of the API reference, but I'm not entirely sure what's necessary to do before I can use the API.
That page is for Office365, not self hosted ones.
You can access your local/self hosted Exchange server with Exchange Web Services by using username/password, or even your local AD if you set it up correctly.
The API it is talking about is not available to on-premise Exchange Server, it is only available to Exchange Online in Office 365. This may change in the future, but currently you cannot use it in on-premise. Exchange Web Services is the way to go for on-premise.
I am going to develop a client application in C++ to access user availability and calander information from Excahnge server 2010. Which is the best to use MAPI or Exchange web service to develop client application in C++ to access user availability and calander information from Excahnge server 2010?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks.
You can use MAPI, but it will probably much harder than using EWS (though I don't know how hard it is to call WebServices from C++ - never done that).
Another way is to use Redemption (http://www.dimastr.com/redemption/home.htm), a COM MAPI Abstraction Layer.
I'm using Exchange Web Services Managed API 1.0 to access the Exchange servers (2007) in my organization. I need to iterate over all the mailboxes on a given server. I haven't seen a way to get the list of mailboxes defined for a given Exchange server. I have been able to use the AutoDiscover service to find the address of a hub server for a specific mailbox, but I'm interested in getting a list of all mailboxes. Can someone point me in the right direction?
If your problem is not yet solved I would you recommend use just pure LDAP queries instead of Exchange Web Services. The information which you need are saved in homeMDB, msExchHomeServerName and probably homeMTA Active Directory attributes. You can modify LDAP query from http://www.msexchange.org/tutorials/Creating_a_list_of_Users_and_their_email_addresses_in_Exchange_2000_2.html or http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb125087(EXCHG.65).aspx to receive information which you need.
I'm working at a client site, and connect to their Exchange 2000 server via web mail. I have Outlook 2007 running as well connected to my companies Exchange 2007 over HTTP.
Is there any way to connect to the client's Exchange 2000 server using anything other than web mail? Ideally, Outlook 2007 would be able to do it, but I don't think that is possible. POP isn't an option, because I need calendaring.
Thanks,
Zach
Unfortunately, Outlook 2007 can only connect to one Exchange server per profile. To get this capability, you can upgrade to Outlook 2010. Outlook 2010 will connect to multiple Exchange servers in a single profile with no problem.
As a consultant, I have the need to connect to multiple email accounts all the time--my current profile is configured to connect to my corporate Exchange server, a client's Exchange server, two different Office 365 (Exchange Online) accounts, two different Google Apps accounts, and a Hotmail account. I love being able to easily navigate among all the different email accounts I regularly use via the native Outlook 2010 UI; I could never go back to multiple browser windows and Outlook profiles!
[I realize this is a 'stale' question, but I noticed it popped up in a search on the topic so I'm posting this answer as this information isn't reflected in any of the earlier answers.]
You can always use more than one Outlook profile.
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/outlook/HA011471581033.aspx
There is a way of opening 2 Outlook instances running 2 different profiles.
Please see this link -> http://www.pcauthority.com.au/Feature/136036,server-101-access-multiple-exchange-servers-with-outlook.aspx
I dont think outlook will allow more than 1 exchange server connection. One option would be using another email clients like thunderbird to connect to the other exchange server [I haven't tried it though]. In case you need to know how to configure thnderbird to connect to exchange server, here is a link.
You can create multiple profiles in Outlook. You won't be able to open them all at the same time, but you can set outlook to ask you whihc profile to open when you start it.
this is an old link, but the process is essentially the same if dealing with 2003 or 2007.
http://www.cod.edu/it/howdoi/profiles/
hth...
andres
With Exchange 2000, external access is only possible using Outlook Web Access or POP/IMAP. With Exchange 2003 and 2007 you can connect using the outlook client using RPC, but not in 2000.
On a side, you can only have 1 Exchange connection in outlook, so you would have to use multiple profiles.
Apple's Mail Client will connect to any number of Exchange servers at a time. I believe that the Open Source Evolution mail client will similarly do so.