Add appointments by using Exchange impersonation
Learn how to use impersonation with the EWS Managed API or EWS in Exchange to add appointments to users' calendars.
You can create a service application that inserts appointments directly into an Exchange calendar by using a service account that has the ApplicationImpersonation role enabled. When you use impersonation, the application is acting as the user; it's as if the user added the appointment to the calendar by using a client such as Outlook.
When you are using impersonation, keep in mind the following:
- Your ExchangeService object must be bound to the service account. You can use the same ExchangeService object to impersonate multiple accounts by changing the ImpersonatedUserId property for each account that you want to impersonate.
- Any item that you save to an impersonated account can only be used once. If you want to save the same appointment in multiple accounts, for example, you have to create an Appointment object for each account.
Prerequisites
Your application needs an account to use to connect to the Exchange server before it can use impersonation. We suggest that you use a service account for the application that has been granted the Application Impersonation role for the accounts that it will be accessing. For more information, see Configure impersonation
Add appointments by using impersonation with the EWS Managed API
The following example adds an appointment or meeting to the calendar of one or more Exchange accounts. The method takes three parameters.
- service — An ExchangeService object bound to the service application's account on the Exchange server.
- emailAddresses — A System.List object containing a list of SMTP email address strings.
- factory — An object that implements the IAppointmentFactory interface. This interface has one method, GetAppointment that takes an ExchangeService object as a parameter and returns an Appointment object. The IAppointmentFactory interface is defined IAppointmentFactory interface.
private static void CreateAppointments(ExchangeService service, List<string> emailAddresses, IAppointmentFactory factory)
{
// Loop through the list of email addresses to add the appointment.
foreach (var emailAddress in emailAddresses)
{
Console.WriteLine(string.Format(" Placing appointment in calendar for {0}.", emailAddress));
// Set the email address of the account to get the appointment.
service.ImpersonatedUserId = new ImpersonatedUserId(ConnectingIdType.SmtpAddress, emailAddress);
// Get the appointment to add.
Appointment appointment = factory.GetAppointment(service);
// Save the appointment.
try
{
if (appointment.RequiredAttendees.Count > 0)
{
// The appointment has attendees so send them the meeting request.
appointment.Save(SendInvitationsMode.SendToAllAndSaveCopy);
}
else
{
// The appointment does not have attendees, so just save to calendar.
appointment.Save(SendInvitationsMode.SendToNone);
}
}
catch (ServiceResponseException ex)
{
Console.WriteLine(string.Format("Could not create appointment for {0}", emailAddress));
Console.WriteLine(ex.Message);
}
}
}
When saving the appointment, the code checks to determine whether any attendees have been added to the RequiredAttendees property. If they have, the Appointment.Save method is called with the SendToAllAndSaveCopy enumeration value so that the attendees receive meeting requests; otherwise, the Appointment.Save method is called with the SendToNone enumeration value so that the appointment is saved into the impersonated user's calendar with the Appointment.IsMeeting property set to false.
IAppointmentFactory interface
Because you need a new Appointment object each time that you want to save an appointment on an impersonated user's calendar, the IAppointmentFactory interface abstracts the object used to populate each Appointment object. This version is a simple interface that contains only one method, GetAppointment, that takes an ExchangeService object as a parameter and returns a new Appointment object bound to that ExchangeService object.
interface IAppointmentFactory
{
Appointment GetAppointment(ExchangeService service);
}
The following AppointmentFactory class example shows an implementation of the IAppointmentFactory interface that returns a simple appointment that occurs three days from now. If you uncomment the appointment.RequiredAttendees.Add
line, the GetAppointment method will return a meeting and the email address specified in that line will receive a meeting request with the impersonated user listed as the organizer.
class AppointmentFactory : IAppointmentFactory
{
public Appointment GetAppointment(ExchangeService service)
{
// First create the appointment to add.
Appointment appointment = new Appointment(service);
// Set the properties on the appointment.
appointment.Subject = "Tennis lesson";
appointment.Body = "Focus on backhand this week.";
appointment.Start = DateTime.Now.AddDays(3);
appointment.End = appointment.Start.AddHours(1);
appointment.Location = "Tennis club";
// appointment.RequiredAttendees.Add(new Attendee("sonyaf@contoso1000.onmicrosoft.com"));
return appointment;
}
}
Add appointments by using impersonation with EWS
EWS enables you application to use impersonation to add items to a calendar on behalf the calendar's owner. This example shows how to use the CreateItem operation to add an appointment to the calendar of an impersonated account.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<soap:Envelope xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xmlns:m="http://schemas.microsoft.com/exchange/services/2006/messages"
xmlns:t="http://schemas.microsoft.com/exchange/services/2006/types"
xmlns:soap="https://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/">
<soap:Header>
<t:RequestServerVersion Version="Exchange2013" />
<t:TimeZoneContext>
<t:TimeZoneDefinition Id="Pacific Standard Time" />
</t:TimeZoneContext>
<t:ExchangeImpersonation>
<t:ConnectingSID>
<t:SmtpAddress>alfred@contoso.com</t:SmtpAddress>
</t:ConnectingSID>
</t:ExchangeImpersonation>
</soap:Header>
<soap:Body>
<m:CreateItem SendMeetingInvitations="SendToNone">
<m:Items>
<t:CalendarItem>
<t:Subject>Tennis lesson</t:Subject>
<t:Body BodyType="HTML">Focus on backhand this week.</t:Body>
<t:ReminderDueBy>2013-09-19T14:37:10.732-07:00</t:ReminderDueBy>
<t:Start>2013-09-21T19:00:00.000Z</t:Start>
<t:End>2013-09-21T20:00:00.000Z</t:End>
<t:Location>Tennis club</t:Location>
<t:MeetingTimeZone TimeZoneName="Pacific Standard Time" />
</t:CalendarItem>
</m:Items>
</m:CreateItem>
</soap:Body>
</soap:Envelope>
Note that other than the addition of the ExchangeImpersonation element in the SOAP header to specify the account that we are impersonating, this is the same XML request used to create an appointment without using impersonation.
The following example shows the response XML that is returned by the CreateItem operation.
Note
The ItemId and ChangeKey attributes are shortened for readability.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<s:Envelope xmlns:s="https://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/">
<s:Header>
<h:ServerVersionInfo MajorVersion="15" MinorVersion="0" MajorBuildNumber="775" MinorBuildNumber="7" Version="V2_4"
xmlns:h="http://schemas.microsoft.com/exchange/services/2006/types"
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/exchange/services/2006/types"
xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" />
</s:Header>
<s:Body xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
<m:CreateItemResponse xmlns:m="http://schemas.microsoft.com/exchange/services/2006/messages"
xmlns:t="http://schemas.microsoft.com/exchange/services/2006/types">
<m:ResponseMessages>
<m:CreateItemResponseMessage ResponseClass="Success">
<m:ResponseCode>NoError</m:ResponseCode>
<m:Items>
<t:CalendarItem>
<t:ItemId Id="AAMkA" ChangeKey="DwAAA" />
</t:CalendarItem>
</m:Items>
</m:CreateItemResponseMessage>
</m:ResponseMessages>
</m:CreateItemResponse>
</s:Body>
</s:Envelope>
Again, this is the same XML that is returned when you use the CreateItem operation without using impersonation.