I just can't get MAPI to work on our production machines. I've already created an application that uses MAPI and sites on that very machine but for some reason I can get my new app to work. I have no idea what I'm doing wrong.
Locally I've created an application that uses MAPI to log into a mail profile and retrieve messages. The messages are parsed and moved to 2 different folders one for errors and one for competed message. This all works perfectly on my computer but fails to login in production.
I know This is not a permissions issue because I'm using the same profile/pwd that my previous application is using. I thinking it may have something to do with the version of CDO or MAPI on my computer compared to the one in production but I'm just not sure.
Does anybody have any ensign into what CDO/MAPI versions I should be using, if some version don't work with different versions of windows...etc?
Solved my own problem. Basically using MAPI in a MTA(Multi-Threaded Apartment) is bad news and should be avoided as much as possible. The problem I was having was do to running my MAPI code inside a MTA thread.
Related
At a client of mine, in-house applications are all located on a network share. Users create shortcuts to the required applications from the network share so we can easily make sure everyone uses the latest version.
This works fairly well, although we often have an issue when users are still using applications when we'd like to release a new version. For most applications, we'd forcibly remove all the file locks on the server and release the new version. Not a very elegant solution, especially since we need assistance from another department for this.
For newer applications, I've developed a cleaner solution, where the application intermittently checks if it's still the most recent release. If it isn't, it shows a message to the user, asking him to quit the application at first convenience, or within 3 minutes. After 3 minutes, the application quits itself and all is well. However, some users will immediately try to re-start the application. The application will then show a simple MessageBox telling the user this version is currently not supported. My problem is this: while this MessageBox is visible, my executable is still locked.
I'm looking for any of the following solutions:
Releasing all locks on the current assembly files from within code
Showing a message box that lingers after the current assembly has exited
This is exactly precisely the problem that .NET ClickOnce deployment is meant to solve. Users have a shortcut they can click, the latest version is downloaded on application start, and there are no server-side executables to be locked if a user leaves their process open.
ClickOnce Deployment Overview
HowTo:Publish a ClickOnce Application
We have an application that can run as a Windows service (or as a user mode app). As part of it's processing, it launches a second executable that interacts with MAPI to read the contents of an MSG file. The executable is 32 bit. Office is 32 bit. So far, we've only tested using Outlook 2013.
This has worked fine for quite some time, but we've recently discovered a corner case where things do not work.
When we run as a Windows Service, and Outlook is not running in the user's session, then the application runs properly. However, if we launch Outlook, then MAPIInitialize fails with a return code of -7 (0xfffffffd).
I've tried calling with and without the MAPI_NT_SERVICE flag added (honestly, I can't figure out what that flag actually does), but it makes no difference.
So far in our testing, the Windows service account has been the same as the user logged into the Windows session that has Outlook installed - not sure if that might be important or not.
I can't for the life of me figure out how a process running under one session could interfere with a process running in another session.
I found this post a few minutes ago: https://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/office/en-US/7a9cc40a-ffd6-4f83-9973-5410615b4df4/mapi-working-when-accessed-from-normal-application-but-not-from-the-service?forum=outlookdev
I'll give that a shot, but it seems super unlikely that this could be the issue (it's not like we do anything different with COM initialization, and certainly that wouldn't have anything to do with whether Outlook was running or not).
Can anyone point me in direction(s) to pursue this?
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More interesting information:
This appears to only happen with Outlook 2013. It definitely does not happen with Outlook 2010.
I have problem printing reports to PDF through bullzip from Navision Application Server (1) if user is not in Local Admin group (2). Only under both conditions.
In Nav code I'm doing the following: init bullzip automation object (set all parameters to suppress GUI), run report to print document to virtual bullzip printer, catch output file. Thats it. Straight as a rail.
I have two environments: Windows Server 2008 and Windows 7 (different versions of Nav, but this is changing nothing). On Windows 7 it just do nothing (but works if user is admin). On server I can see error in Event Log (translated to English)
Faulting application gui.exe, version 9.8.0.1599, time stamp 0x517126dc, faulting module USER32.dll, version 6.0.6002.18541, time stamp 0x4ec3e39f, exception code 0xc0000142, fault offset 0x0006f52f, the process ID 0x3bc, application start time 0x01ce562238369fa9.
Gui.exe is a part of bullzip.
If I run the same code from Nav Classic Client, or from the same NAS launched in command line, or under local administrator account, or if i put the NAS user in local admin group - it works just fine.
To solve this problem i need to find out one of two and how to fix it:
What is the difference between local admin and regular user that could cause application to crash in non-interactive mode (service) under regular user account.
What is the difference in running NAS as service and as command line that could cause application to crash when run as service.
What I've tried so far: extend non-interactive desktop heap, give user all local privileges that admin have in gpedit. Not works. Don't know direction for further digging.
Any alternative free pdf printers advices are welcome.
This question is still actual. Though I've managed to setup PDF printing with PDFCreator. The tough part was to let several different NAS to print simultaneously. And now the setup have a bottleneck - PDFCreator's printing queue. With bullzip automations it could be avoided.
We've had some cases where third party DLL's have crashed within NAV due to permission restrictions.
The only effective way we could narrow down the files that it was trying to access was through using Process Monitor to try narrow down what was causing permission issues.
We found a folder within System32 to do with the System's Network Profile that some DLLs use. On that note, NAS's and such should be run under a domain account.
I think re-installing the application will do that,
Just make sure you are uninstalling each bullzip and ghost script,
Now Ghost script is tricky thing, if you are installing 32 bit over 64 then you are having problem,
refer this download link download appropriate version, install it,
and then install bullzip, after downloading new version from here
this will do..
then also if any problem(if you are using application for automation, you require new com object..) refer Forum, that explains most of application interface problems..
where you need to use public class PdfSettings with namespace bioPdf.
I hope this will help ..
We have a VB.NET applciation that is run from a mapped network drive. This works fine on all PCs expect those with Windows 7, on those we get the following:
"application generated an exception that cannot be handled" System.Security.SecurityException was unhandled
If the application folder is copied locally and run from there it works fine.
Anyone know a way aroudn this issue? I assume it is related to Windows 7 netowrk security but not sure how to work around it.
Well, normally you should get this error on all PCs, not only on your Win7 PCs. But I guess for your older Windows PCs someone has solved this issue some time ago. Read this article
http://thebackroomtech.com/2009/04/01/using-caspolexe-to-grant-net-applications-rights-to-a-remote-network-share/
how to deal with the problem. Here is an SO post
.NET Deployment to Network Share
which might help you, too.
There is a reason this error comes up, It is not a good idea to grant applications access to network shares just to run them.
.Net and Click Once makes it very easy to deploy an application to a network share and distribute it to all the client computers to be run from there.
The app can then check for updates whenever it is launched and download any changes. You get all the ease of deploying to a shared drive without mucking about with code access security policies and potentially leaving a nasty hole in your network security.
I've attempted just about everything to get our ClickOnce VB.NET app to run under Terminal Services as a RemoteApp. I have a batch file that runs the .application file for the app.
This works fine via RDP desktop session on the terminal server. As a TS RemoteApp, however, well... not so much.
I get a quick flash of command prompt (the batch file) on the client system and then... nothing...
Same goes for having it point to the .application file directly (without using a batch file) or even copying the publication locally and having it point to that.
I found a technet.microsoft.com discussion about a similar issue, but there's no resolution to it listed.
For anyone who has run into this before and got it working, what did you have to do?
We currently use RemoteApp's for everything else on that server, so I'm hoping to stick with that if possible.
The current workaround is to build and run an MSI-based installer for the app on our terminal server whenever we publish via OneClick out to the network, but this can be quite a pain at times and is easy to forget to do.
Since the app works fine via Terminal Services when run in full desktop mode but not during RemoteApp, I don't think it's anything specific to Terminal Server permissions so much as ClickOnce requiring something that isn't available when running as a RemoteApp.
The Key to getting it to work is to use Windows Explorer "C:\windows\explorer.exe". This process is the base process when you login to a full session.
If you setup the RemoteApp to use Windows Explorer and the command line argument of the path to the .application file for the ClickOnce application then it will work when launched as a remote application. Windows Explorer will flash for a second when it starts, but it will disappear then the ClickOnce application will launch.
Why does it have to be a ClickOnce application? I would consider just deploying the exe file and assemblies.
I know it only half a solution, but if the application does not change much, it might be a good solution.
I believe your problem is related to the fact that ClickOnce needs to store it's data in a special user folder called the ClickOnce application cache. Apparently because of how Terminal Services sets up user folders ClickOnce can't access this in TerminalServices mode.
See this link for more information.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/267k390a(VS.80).aspx
There may not be a way to do it :(
Can you launch the .exe directly? It's buried under your profile in \AppData\Local\Apps\2.0[obfuscated folders], but you should be able to find it.
That will skip the built-in update process, but if it can be launched that way you could then write code to do a manual update after the application starts.
Faced the same problem this morning and got it resolved by copying the clickonce app's directory from the user settings folder to somewhere like c:\MyApp\ - I know its nasty and not very ideal.. but good enough for me!
We recently ran across this issue and decided to post a bug report on this issue to the Visual Studio development team. Feel free to comment on the bug report. It has to be a bug in ClickOnce caused by some changes in Server 2008.
https://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedback/details/653362/net-clickonce-deployment-not-working-as-remoteapp-or-citrix-xenapp-on-server-2008-server-2008-r2
We also have a discussion on the MSDN forums covering this issue:
http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/winformssetup/thread/7f41667d-287a-4157-be71-d408751358d9/#92a7e5d9-22b6-44ba-9346-ef87a3b85edc
Try using RegMon and FileMon when starting the app - You may be able to track it down to a file and/or registry permission issue.
Also maybe check the event logs to see if anything's getting logged when the process fails.