I try to write a Java application that access an Exchange Web Services in order to read emails. Thus, I use the Exchange Web Services (EWS
) Java API provided by Microsoft.
I already had several issues with it, and I finally found that the authentication should be done using LDAP. Unfortunately, I'm not sure how to do such a thing. Does the EWS API allows to configure the authentication scheme to be used when connecting to the Exchange server ? If yes, how to configure that?
This is the code I use for connection, but it uses the default authentication scheme, i.e. NTLM
:
String url = "https//my-server/EWS/exchange.asmx";
ExchangeService service = new ExchangeService(ExchangeVersion.Exchange2007_SP1);
service.setTraceEnabled(true);
service.setCredentials(new WebCredentials("user", "password"));
service.setUrl(url.toURI());
Mailbox mailbox = new Mailbox("[email protected]");
FolderId folder = new FolderId(WellKnownFolderName.Inbox, mailbox);
ItemView view = new ItemView(10);
view.getOrderBy().add(ItemSchema.DateTimeReceived, SortDirection.Descending);
FindItemsResults<Item> items = service.findItems(folder, view);
We resolved this issue. In fact, we had 2 solutions for that:
In the Microsft EWS API, the class NTLM
was wrong. So we re-built the JAR with the following code for the class:
private class NTLM {
/** Character encoding */
public static final String DEFAULT_CHARSET = "ASCII";
/**
* The character was used by 3.x's NTLM to encode the username and
* password. Apparently, this is not needed in when passing username,
* password from NTCredentials to the JCIFS library
*/
private String credentialCharset = DEFAULT_CHARSET;
void setCredentialCharset(String credentialCharset) {
this.credentialCharset = credentialCharset;
}
private static final int TYPE_1_FLAGS = NtlmFlags.NTLMSSP_NEGOTIATE_NTLM
| NtlmFlags.NTLMSSP_NEGOTIATE_UNICODE
| NtlmFlags.NTLMSSP_NEGOTIATE_NTLM2;
private String generateType1Msg(String host, String domain) {
jcifs.ntlmssp.Type1Message t1m = new jcifs.ntlmssp.Type1Message(
TYPE_1_FLAGS, domain, host);
return jcifs.util.Base64.encode(t1m.toByteArray());
}
private String generateType3Msg(String username, String password,
String host, String domain, String challenge) {
jcifs.ntlmssp.Type2Message t2m;
try {
t2m = new jcifs.ntlmssp.Type2Message(
jcifs.util.Base64.decode(challenge));
} catch (IOException e) {
throw new RuntimeException("Invalid Type2 message", e);
}
final int type2Flags = t2m.getFlags();
final int type3Flags = type2Flags
& (0xffffffff ^ (NtlmFlags.NTLMSSP_TARGET_TYPE_DOMAIN | NtlmFlags.NTLMSSP_TARGET_TYPE_SERVER));
jcifs.ntlmssp.Type3Message t3m = new jcifs.ntlmssp.Type3Message(
t2m, password, domain, username, host, type3Flags);
return jcifs.util.Base64.encode(t3m.toByteArray());
}
}
Another solution is to use the JWebServices library (commercial).
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