Activesync Exchange Server Password Prompt - 8125, K-JAM, P4300, MDA Vario General

I have an 8125 with Summiter's 2.3 Rom installed. I am trying to establish a connection to my exchange server which is hosted. When I enter the server, user ID, password and Domain info correctly, activesync keeps prompting me with "Please correct your Exchange Server password"
My provider insists that the settings were correct on their side and their crack tech support staff told me that WM5 has problems storing the password. They said that the only thing to do is to keep deleting the server connection on the device and recreating it.
Through this persistence, I was able to get it configured once. It was syncing (with push email) for most of the day... until I connected the device to the PC with the USB cable to charge it. Then Activesync on the PC kicked in and the password prompts began.
I have deleted and reconfigured the server on the device in excess of 20 times now with every combination of soft resets in between to try to get this resolved.
Any thoughts? Your help is greatly appreciated!
***EDIT***
email host needed to create a pre-NT4 alias for the userid due to the naming convention ues by our company in their provisioning console. Therefore once I found out the alias the config was a snap. working perfectly now! Thanks.

What tech support for your host meant to tell you is that they do not have a clue what they are talking about. I support numerous WM implementations using AUTD and Push email with WM devices of all flavors that support one of those options (2003, 2003se, 2005) and NONE of my customers have to continually put in ANY information to keep syncing.
It is true that using the special sms tickle method of pull on 2003 devices does sometimes hang up and have to be restarted manually but even then you should not be asked for information you already saved about the connection.
Find a new mail host.

Well, since you have no problems setting up "WM implementations using AUTD and Push email with WM devices", I would love to hear your thoughts on why I keep getting a password prompt over and over again with the message "Please corrrect your exchange Server password".
Using Cingluar 8125 with stock 2.25 ROM.
Mobile services are enabled under ESM
Pre-2k alias is set in the username
SSL is installed on the server with front end virtual directory
I have disabled certificate checking on the device itself by hacking the registry on the device since I'm using self singed cert
Exchange SP2 is installed
Activesync on the PC with USB works like a charm
But, trying to sync over GPRS/EDGE with the exchange server it keeps prompting me to correct exchange server password which I know it's correct since I administer the server myself.
I've seen NUMEROUS posts about this issue but no one seems to have the answer.
This is driving completely bonkers

You say you can sync while connected via USB to a computer but you do not specify whether that computer is INSIDE or OUTSIDE your network. So I am going to assume it is INSIDE, and bet that were you to try the same test from OUTSIDE your network it would fail just as it does using GPRS. If so the indications point to incorrectly putting in your user name/domain information and not the password itself.

I assure you, the domain\username and password combinations are quite right. It's DOMAIN\username and then the password. I mean you can't really get away from that format when you enter the information in the pocket pc or activesync on your pc since it asks you for the domain and the username and the password. I can however login to webmail and oma through the web browser using the exact username and password.
Any more thoughts?

I have no more thoughts until you answer the question I asked. Can you sync while connected to a computer that is OUTSIDE your network?
When putting in your information on the mobile device, in the username field if you are putting domain\user you are wrong. That box is USER NAME ONLY.

Let me start over again. No, usb or gprs outside doesn't work. And yes, the username is put in as just the username with no domain\ in front of it. Activesync substitutes the domain from the domain field as domain\ is what I meant.

So it doesn't work from outside no matter what the connection. Again, the problem is the domain reference. We just have to figure out what is wrong with it.
From outside your network, can you access Ouloook Web Access? If so, EXACTLY what is the URL you use?

I'm using https://servername/exchange
I can also user https://servername/oma from the phone and it works too.

I would really like to see https://servername/exchange work from outside your network. I am interested to know how you got a NETBIOS name to resolve from outside your DNS zone over the internet.
Please read the question asked before answering so I can stop asking you the same thing twice. I asked you:
From outside your network, can you access Ouloook Web Access? If so, EXACTLY what is the URL you use?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Your answer might work inside your network but no way will it work outside. And if you are afraid that advertising your domain name will compromise your Exchange box you should just shut it down anyway.

Ok,
I'm REALLY trying to be tolerant here. Unfortunately, I'm starting to reach the end of my patience. You and I BOTH know that I'm not advertising my NETBIOS name on the Internet. We BOTH know EXACTLY what I mean when I say https://servername/exchange. It means a URL accessible from the outside which points to the server via NAT on our firewall and then /exchange. So, here's the URL:
https://mail.glaucomaexpert.com/exchange
When I say that webmail works, I REALLY REALLY mean that it works. I'm not making it up. If you don't know the answer or if you are not sure of the answer, just let me know. That's no problem. I'm really starting to think that this issue is due to the registry hack on the phone to remove certificate checking.
Unfortunately, I'm using a self generated cert and I've tried using the .cab method to import the cert, that didn't work. I simply copied into a file (DER encoded) and tried to import it no workie either. I tried copying as a Base-64 encoded, copied to the phone and when I tried to import it said it was unable to access certificate. Before I disabled certificate checking, it wouldn't accept the certificate. So, now it accepts it but it keeps asking for the password.
I have gone over the exchange settings over and over and over again and I'm simply not seeing anything wrong.
So....here's where I am.

Great. Thanks for answering the question. So in your server configuration fields you are filling in those blanks like this:
Server Address: "mail.glaucomaexpert.com"
User Name: "jdoe" or whatever your user ID is
Password: "Password1!" Your CaSE sEnsiTIvE password
Domain: "myeyessuck" your internal NETBIOS domain name which may or may not be the same as your FQDN
Does all of that sound like what you are using? If you feel more comfortable PMing the information then thats fine. But your settings should resemble what I wrote.
Are you forcing users to use SSL for Outlook Web Access? If so, you might try turning it off TEMPORARILY and test syncing without requiring SSL to eliminate the self signed cert possibility. I won't be much use troubleshooting that as I get my customers fo flip for a Thawte certificate to avoid untrusted root cert authorities.

That's exactly what I'm using:
Server Address: "mail.glaucomaexpert.com"
User Name: "jdoe" or whatever your user ID is
Password: "Password1!" Your CaSE sEnsiTIvE password
Domain: "myeyessuck" your internal NETBIOS domain name
Under secure communications I do not have require secure channel checked.
I just enabled http(port 80) access to the exchange server and it's working like a charm.
So I guess it's still a certificate issue. I guess disabling certificate checking is not doing the trick but instead cause more problems.
I really wish I could import the self signed certificate. This really sucks. Your help is appreciated. Thanks. I should had tried this before. I just assumed this registry hack wouldn't have any bearing on it originally.

@deeztech - I'm also suspicious of the registry hack to disable the certificate checking. This worked for me in the 2003 days with my client's Blue Angels but I've never been able to get it to work with WM5. I have numerous Exchange 2003 servers that I maintain here in So. Fla and they all have self generated certs. I use MMC and add the Certificates snap-in. From the Trusted Root Authorities I'll right click my certificate - all tasks and then export to a Der encoded x.509. Copy to my storage card and execute it from there.
Of course it sounds like your certificate is installed correctly as your logon to OWA and OMA are working which is why I suspect that reg hack you mentioned.
I did read on exchange-experts to check the authentication on the webserver....
Curious if it's just your PDA or are there others with the same issue?

Glad you narrowed it down. Unfortunately I don't have a magic bullet for the self signed certificate piece but I do have some suggestions for you.
1) Enable forms based authentication: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/830827/
2) Require SSL for access
3) Unless you intend to offer services you might turn off the default website at https://mail.glaucomaexpert.com/
If you are interested in a cert from a trusted CA check out Thawte, where you can get an SSL123 certificate in just a few minutes for as little as $149: https://www.thawte.com/process/retail/new_ssl123?language=en&productInfo.productType=fssl2

Related

activesync 4.1 and exchange server 2003

I'm trying to synchronizise with the exchange server at my work.
But for some reason it doesn't work. I've filled in everything in the right way (address, domein etc.) the fault code is 80070002.
Can somebody help me with this?
same here at home (no firewalls)
Works fine for me. Exchange server needs just some configuration.
Priit said:
Works fine for me. Exchange server needs just some configuration.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What kind of configuration?
First, your Outlook Web Access (yes, OWA!) can not use forms based authentication nor SSL encryption. If you don want to use these (you most probably want to use SSL) then you need to create another virtual OWA directory without SSL and force ActiveSync (and Outlook Mobile Access) to use it.
More information at
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;817379
Check if you can access OMA (Outlook Mobile Access) using http://yourserver/oma and check also Exchange server logs.
I thought this wasn't supported on WM5 until AKU 2.0 comes out (hopefully soon)
So ur saving I have to turn Forms authentication off and ssl off on OWA for my mobile device to work ?
sounds a bit of a poor show.
I need Forms based auth ideally as it goes through firewalls where as the other type does not.
Ours works here and we use SSL.
For the server name make sure you are using the fully qualified domain name that you use from the internet. IE: mail.domain.com. You don't have to put the /exchange on the end.
username, password and domain are all the same as what you use to log in.
OH, and the certificate you use on the server should be for mail.domain.com and not servername.
Hope this helps.
@spartanrob: DirectPush needs AKU2.0. You have always had possibility to sync manually. Or if your operator provides e-mail to SMS then you have the same functionality already today.
@Karzi:
No, I'm not saying you have to turn off SSL and/or forms-based auth., but you need to create another virtual OWA directory, which does not require SSL and forms-based authentication. You can limit access to this directory to localhost only so there will be no security concerns.
@MrHappy:
Your server is probably set up in that way.
Please go read this it helped me with the same error
http://hardware.mcse.ms/archive35-2005-11-248477.html
Basicly says that you have to download the cert from https://server.domain.com/certsrv then install the certificate on your desktop and your handheld then activesync will work....
I was hesitant but it worked for me.... it changed the path in the cert from my ip to my server.domain.com

ActiveSync Exchange Issues

HI guys,
Got my new TyTn out the box, set it up with some of my files, now i am trying to sync with my exchange server.
If I take off SSL, it tells me I don't have permission to initiate sync, which i know i do, cause i set it up on my account.
If i put SSL on, it says the server cannot be reached,
Could someone out there please help me. I have been trying for weeks, in the end i thought it was the unit, so this is my new unit now.
Be sure that the OWA folder (http://yourserver/exchange) has the "require SSL" unticked in security option of IIS, also check that integrated authentification is ticked.
Check that your tytn trust the CA and that the cert match the server name (with both internal/external DNS if possible).
If you want to go without SSL (which is far from being a good idea, everything will go through the network in plain text) have a check in the server log; there will be a critical event explaining you what is going on and what to do in that case
Hi man,
Thanks for the response, how do i issue the CA certificate for the Tytn from the server?
Is that maybe my problem that the relationship between the device and the server hasn't been established properly?
I just want to get my e-mail, why has microsoft made it such an issue?
Surely if you enter in all the correct details for the server and the user account it should work, just like setting up teh IMAP with the send and recieve schedule like u used to on the IIi's?
Appreciate the help mate
Thanks
Microsoft deny you to check your email if you don't trust the CA. This is normal and a part of the SSL security; SSL certs are used to cipher AND to auth.
If the certificat is not issue by a trusted root CA it won't be trusted by your device. You have to connect to http:/ca_server/certsrv and here select "download" CA cert. Just transfert the cert to your device and set it up. If you can not acces the CA web service that way you may be able to gather the certificate while surfing to te OWA with explorer: go to https://your_server/exchange click on the little lock, go to "certification's path" double click the certificat on the top of the "tree" go to detail and select save to file. Select *.cert format and then finaly send this file to your PPC.
No can't connect to the Cert page, and with the OWA page, if you mean the little lock that appears at the bottom of some web pages in one of the blocks, I don't get that with my OWA. I am a bit lost...
ruski said:
No can't connect to the Cert page, and with the OWA page, if you mean the little lock that appears at the bottom of some web pages in one of the blocks, I don't get that with my OWA. I am a bit lost...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
use https://your/owa instead of http://your/owa. Using the OWA without cipher is far from being a good idea; your user/password (wich is in fact an active directory user, that a some power) goes in plain text through the internet.
aaw, man, Thanks so much, I see now... OK, I will get the certificate off tomorrow and copy it onto my Tytn. I really hope that works! Thanks for your help!
OK, now I have made the certificate and copied it onto the Tytn, Still says The server could not be reached! Support code: 0x80072EE2
Ok, just want to check, when setting up the server, under server name, I have the servers external IP address. SSL is ticked, the user name and password and domain should be correct, username is @domain.local
Other than that, not much complicated, i don't seem to be understanding microsofts issue here, i have searched for white papers, which seem to be very vague and no step by step on how to set it up.
Hooooaarg speaking english is giving me headache
You are only satisfying one of the requirement at now:
-Your tytn trust your CA
In IIS you have issued a certificat to a name, for instance server.domain.local; if you contact this server through a SSL connexion by another name you will get an error; the name you accessed doesn't match the name in the certificate; so for IE and your PPC the security may be compromised. In active sync, under server name, you have to enter the exact same name you entered when you issued the SSL certificat in IIS, if it is internal (server.domain.local) it will only work as long as you are on your network. There are several ways to solve that; you can revoque this certificat in IIS and issue a new one matching your external DNS, with this solution you will be able to setup your activesync to connect through the external name of your server, keep in mind that NAT forwarding must be configured to route the traffic from HTTP socket (80) to the exchange server.
You can also setup a VPN server (L2TP/IPSEC should work fine), so that you will always be on the internal network and so able to get your email. This should be the safest way to go, but I guess that it generate more traffic, thanks to the encapsulation; so if you are greedy and pay per byte, avoid this solution.
You could, at last, also disable the SSL encryption; but in my opinion this FAR from being the good way to go, it should only be used for testing purpose.
If you can speak afrikaans I will happily change! lol
OK, if I turn off SSL and connect to the server external IP, it says I don't have permission to synchronise,
If i turn on SSL it tells me the server can't be reached, wish it would make up it's mind.
I am not very good with IIS, I am staring at it now. I am not sure if i did the certificate thing right. As there are 2 options to export , DER encoded and Base-64, I used DER first time round.
If i try and access the server name ie. https://servername it says i cannot use my existing connection and must check properties.....
Thanks for your help man!
You may want to check that you are also forwarding port 443 or what ever port you are using for https access for external use at the server end.
You had to get ActiveSync permitted for your account (by administring it with "Active Directory users and computers" in one of the tab for your users) but you also need it activated on the Exchange "System Manager" under organisation settings (have a look at www.httpsync.net)
André

Accessing Company Email

Quick question .. not sure if anyone can help or not.
My Company uses Xchange email and was wondering if there was a way to get this email pushed on to the phone first. I guess the main problem is that I am not sure if the company has pop enabled. Not really even sure what the incoming mail server and outgoing mail server are or where to find this information. Asking them really isnt an option... any thoughts?
This is the first thing that i tested with my Dopod. When it asked for servers, i just put in the web address to our Outlook Web Access site.
Hard reset after about 30 mins because my server enforced a 30min lock policy and i wasnt sure if i was allowed to hook my dopod upto the exchange server (we have strict policies about attaching non approved hardware to servers and or network)
Exchange servers don't use POP or SMTP, they use Exchange. So there are no 'incoming' or 'outgoing' mail server names.
Get your Exchange server address from your internal tech support group or your system administrator and go through the email account setup on your phone. You'll find one of the options early on is "Exchange Server".
You say that asking them for this info isn't an option, but it's the only way you're going to get this information. If you know where to look on your desktop, you can check your Outlook installation for the Exchange server name there. Otherwise, you're stuck having to ask someone.
If you just simply can't ask anyone, and can't find out on your own, it's a safe bet that your company doesn't want you to do this, and someone might get upset if you try.
i guess the real question here is. If I were to install the BBconnect 4.0 software on my phone; would this then allow me to access my company email on my Tytn?. The problem is that I am trying to get my company email on my Tytn without having to go to my corporate IT department and ask for official permission as they are idiots and say I do not have a need for this. Currently certain people have blackberry's in the company which they receive there email. From my point of view I could careless what they think I have a need for or dont. So in the end I am just trying to circumvent the IT department to achieve what I need. Any thoughts on how this could be done?
- Should also be noted that I have gone into my outlook settings on my Work PC; retrieved what is listed in there as the Microsoft Exchange server address and inputed this along with my netwrok id and password into my Tytn but when you do the Sync it does not work. I have also pinged the server address and inputed the IP# and tried that way unsucessfully as well ... any thoughts?
It's a pretty involved process. You will need to know the server addresss, user name and password and additionally an SSL certificate in order to get true push email. That's unless they use a big company like Verisign to provide SSL certificates. So you might have to talk to them...
First things first though.... Find out what the name of the exchange server is. You will also need a domain name. I'm sure you know what your username and password are.
NRGZ28 said:
It's a pretty involved process. You will need to know the server addresss, user name and password and additionally an SSL certificate in order to get true push email. That's unless they use a big company like Verisign to provide SSL certificates. So you might have to talk to them...
First things first though.... Find out what the name of the exchange server is. You will also need a domain name. I'm sure you know what your username and password are.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have retrieved the domain name from going into the control panel and system icon and checked under computer name. So I know what the domain name is; I have also retrieved what is listed in the Microsoft Exchange Server address. However for some reason it still does not work; I am wondering if what is listed in the MES address field is only accessible if you are on the company internet and not an outside connection? - Thoughts?
If you retrieved that address from a computer on their internal network, than it's an "inside" address and it wont work on your phone. You need to figure out what the outside address is and it's pretty easy to do. It's usually "mail.blahblahcompanyname.com" or something like that.
Any thoughts on when the usual mail.blahblahcompanyname.com doesn't work? Any thoughts where one might find this information?
Yes. See above for my thoughts.
Pk2007 said:
Any thoughts on when the usual mail.blahblahcompanyname.com doesn't work? Any thoughts where one might find this information?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As mentioned by one of the posters above, the Outlook Web Access address is the best one to use to ensure that it is a valid routable host. You also mention that some of the other network users have blackberry devices. If your corporate IT guys are using Blackberry Enterprise Server, it may mean that Exchange Activesync is not enabled at the server end (or indeed that they are not using a late enough version of Exchange server) in which case, you will not be able to use it no matter what settings you have.
embeeowes said:
As mentioned by one of the posters above, the Outlook Web Access address is the best one to use to ensure that it is a valid routable host. You also mention that some of the other network users have blackberry devices. If your corporate IT guys are using Blackberry Enterprise Server, it may mean that Exchange Activesync is not enabled at the server end (or indeed that they are not using a late enough version of Exchange server) in which case, you will not be able to use it no matter what settings you have.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
By Outlook Web Address; do you mean the website that you can visit to get your company email when you are away from the office?
Yes, try that address. Ours is https://blahblah.wahwah.com/exchange
If yours is also HTTPS you'll need the certificate. If it's a MAJOR provider like someone else posted, no worries, your device will handle it on its own. If it's a self-signed certificate, SOL.
pkley said:
Yes, try that address. Ours is https://blahblah.wahwah.com/exchange
If yours is also HTTPS you'll need the certificate. If it's a MAJOR provider like someone else posted, no worries, your device will handle it on its own. If it's a self-signed certificate, SOL.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah I tried the web address that I login into my web mail when I am not in the office. However that does not seem to work either.
Thank you to all those who replied with useful information. Combined with the answers I received a little tinkering around; I was able to successfully accomplish what i was trying to do; which was receive company email without the involvement of the IT department.
computer misuse act
without sounding picky, you shouldnt be doing this unless you have explicit permission.
IT departments have specific policys in place to safeguard the data transmitted to mobile devices, and in this case, I doubt you know what these policies are and potentially opening up your corporate network for attack
all you have to do is call your IT department. Tell them you want to enable Outlook Mobile Access (OMA) on the server.
Once this is done, ask them for the Outlook Web Access (OWA) URL. Also, check to see if your server requires SSL or a domain (if you are unsure).
Once you're off the phone with IT, launch activesync on your ppc. press menu and choose "add server source"
enter your OWA address (without http:// or https://) and be sure to include " /exchange " without quotations at the end. press next. enter your outlook username. this is usually the same as your email before the @ symbol, however it can be different.
enter your password and then domain. ensure 'save password' is check. choose next
choose what you want to sync wirelessly , such as contacts, calendar, and task.
note: whatever you sync wirelessly will be deleted if you ever decide to stop using exchange activesycn
choose finish. the initial sync will begin. also, your company's security or it policy may force you to have a password on your phone. if so, you will be prompted during the initial sync to set up a password.
if you need any more help, let me know..

Exchange OMA Help!

I have searched and searched for an answer to this problem and have not been able to find anything. Hopefully someone here has run into this before and might have an idea or solutuion. Her is my problem.
I have two exchange servers (2003 SP2) on of which is a front end server handling OWA and OMA. We sync about 18 Windows Mobile 6.1 devices over the air using OMA. We are using SSL. All of our devices have random problems connecting to the server. They will sync fine most of the time but will randomly for no particular reason ask the user for their exchange password. We are not enforcing any password policies on the server and we are always checking the box to save the password. In order to get the device synching again the user has to re-enter their password multiple times and often has to kill and restart activesync on their device.
Any ideas as to what might be causing this?
Any help would be much appreciated.
You could try unchecking the box in Activesync on the phone that requires SSL. We use SSL as well, but we have to uncheck that box on the phone. Although our problem is that the phone never syncs when its checked as opposed to your problem of randomly not syncing and asking for a password.
Unfortunately that is not an option. Our SSL is required for authentication. It will not connect without it. It seems like what is happening is that the device is not always passing the credentials to the server. Usually when it asks me for the password I enter the password once making sure I check the Save Password box then when it asks me the second time I hit cancel. ActiveSync then gives me a could not authenticate error. Now if I just hit Sync again it goes through and works just fine without asking for the password. So my guess is that it is not passing the credentials until after the connection is reinitialized.
From what I understand, Push Email relies on the OMA functionality which uses IIS. The problem my lie there. Although I've never tried, you may have to uninstall/reinstall (or confirm) that the OMA part of Exchange is functioning correctly. Sorry I can't be of more help.
Do the log files on the server show anything when a phone can't log in?
No, the exchange logs don't show much. I almost think it might be something with the device configuration. At this point I just don't know. We will be migrating to Exchange 2007 sometime in the next few months. Hopefully that will resolve the problem permanently. I was just hoping maybe by some chance someone here had seen this problem before. Thanks a bunch for your help.
Is the FE server doing the authentication (NTLM) or is there an ISA server in the way configured with Forms Based Authentication? You should make sure the IIS virtual directory for OMA is set only for Basic Auth - and the following article might be worth a read.... http://searchexchange.techtarget.com/tip/0,289483,sid43_gci1188440,00.html
Hope that helps - good luck!!
Mark.
^^^What he said. Took the words right out of my mouth. You'll still be secured through the SSL certificate, even though you're doing "basic auth" you aren't exactly sending your password as clear text. Requiring SSL on the OMA site will automatically encrypt the connection so you have no need to worry.
Try it out and get back in here. I manage a site with about 50 WM 6.1 Black Jack II's that sync with Exchange 2007 with no issues whatsoever. Also verify that you have all your hotfixes related to OMA installed on your Exchange 2003 server.

ActiveSync config for Exchange

Trying to set up ActiveSync on my Telus P4000 (Titan), although the issue should be the same with an WM6.1 phone...
I can't for the life of my figure the right server settings to enter in the Configure Server section, and I have yet to find a definitive "this is how you do it" procedure for it. As near as I've been able to glean, for the "Server address" section, you give it JUST the domain name of the Exchange server, without an http:// or a /exchange or /oma or anything... correct so far? But the catch in my particular instance is that Exchange web access is on port 8080, rather than 80 or 433.
I've tried adding a :8080 to the server address, I've tried adding the http:// and/or https://, I've tried adding the /oma and /exchange to the end, and all combinations of the above, with no luck... when I go back into the settings, it's reverted to JUST the domain name. Is there somewhere else I can tell it to use a non-standard port? Registry key, maybe?
I'm not sure it works with other ports than 80 (HTTP) and 443 (HTTPS).
You just need to put your external A record in the server value.
Try using standard ports first to be sure everything is working, then switch.
Okay, well I managed to get rid of the "Cannot reach server" messages by switching back to "require SLL", and as it turns out, the server wasn't set up for SSL (it is now). So now I'm connecting, but getting certificate errors. At least I've found plenty of info about solving that issue, so on to the next step...
Soundy106 said:
Okay, well I managed to get rid of the "Cannot reach server" messages by switching back to "require SLL", and as it turns out, the server wasn't set up for SSL (it is now). So now I'm connecting, but getting certificate errors. At least I've found plenty of info about solving that issue, so on to the next step...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You will probabby have to install a certificate on the phone to be able to communicate with the exchange server. At least i had to...
playerkiller said:
I'm not sure it works with other ports than 80 (HTTP) and 443 (HTTPS).
You just need to put your external A record in the server value.
Try using standard ports first to be sure everything is working, then switch.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've searched everywhere for info on using non-standard ports for activesync, and I haven't found anything, and I couldn't get it to work.
jeen said:
You will probabby have to install a certificate on the phone to be able to communicate with the exchange server. At least i had to...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, did that... still not helping
Go to first new post ActiveSync config for Exchange
Exchange ActiveSync cannot access the server if SSL is set to be required. For
information about how to correctly configure Exchange virtual directory
jeen is right. Unless the certificate is issued form a Trusted Certificate Authority, you will need to import the issuing CA in the Root Certification Authority store of your Phone.
If it's a self signed cert, just export it from exchange server (without Private key) and copy it to your phone. Then, double click it from File Manager. This should be enough.
^Yeah, I did that right off the top (see my reply to jeen). Still no joy.
Perhaps Tendulkar can finish his thought...
To disable SSL requirements for Activesync service is very easy:
Win2003 (IIS6.0)
Open IIS on your cas, expand the Default Website (or the website where ASVritualDir resides) right click on Microsoft-Server-ActiveSync and choose properties.
Go to the tab Directory Security, choose EDIT under Secure Communication.
Remove flag from Require Secure Channel.
Obvsiulsy Click ok.
Win2008 (IIS7)
Open IISManager.
Navigate through site, default website, hilight Microsoft-Server-ActiveSync.
Make sure you have the features view selected (should be by default).
Choose SSL Settings.
Unflag "Remove SSL".
Obviusly click Accept.
playerkiller said:
To disable SSL requirements for Activesync service is very easy:
Win2003 (IIS6.0)
Open IIS on your cas, expand the Default Website (or the website where ASVritualDir resides) right click on Microsoft-Server-ActiveSync and choose properties.
Go to the tab Directory Security, choose EDIT under Secure Communication.
Remove flag from Require Secure Channel.
Obvsiulsy Click ok.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hmmm... "require SSL" was already un-checked. I've re-checked it, let's see what happens with that.
OK lemme know.
make sure you have the same root certificate installed also. you have to trust the same certificate authority as the certificate that you have on your exchange server.
Did anyone find solution
I am having same problem. Certificate installed and tried all connection settings that can find on internet. Cannot get ActiveSync to syn with my server (same certificate error, but hosting company states tested with WM6.1 that all is working fine on their end) and also cannot get Windows Live Messenger to work, states there's a connectivity problem. Funny thing is MMS, surfing net with IE, and Google Maps with GPRS work fine. Only Microsoft network products are not working. My phone is Palm Treo Pro with WM6.1 Professional. Vodaphone version but bought in China and have since added A4 Chinese text editor, which I think could be problem, but need to hard reset phone to check. Any ideas? Better yet, any solutions?
One tip for getting this working in my case (same certificate errors) was that I had to get the certificate off the internally facing OWA server, rather than the externally facing version. Although they're both the same server, the external one goes through an IAS box which seems to be presenting its own certificate rather than the one on the exchange server. Don't ask me - I don't run the system.
As soon as I add the Internal version of the cert, Exchange, OTA Sync and ActiveSync spring into life.

Categories

Resources