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I'm currently in the process of implementing a method that returns all emailaddresses found (search parameter is the first part of a mail address) on the active directory. In the first iteration of the method I used the interop methods but they took over 40 seconds to get me the needed results. Then I tried the directory searcher and it returned the results in 2 (or less) seconds. So I'm going down this route now. When I use the following code I get all proxy addresses that have Test as part of their name (if I would use smtp:{0}* I would get all proxy addresses that start with Test).

Now what I'm not sure about is (and what my question is about) how could I expand the filter so that it gets me all entries where proxyaddresses, uniquenames OR main smtp addresses have Test as part of their value (thus for all 3 things at the same time with them being seen as an "OR" filtering instead of an and)?

String emailPart = "Test";
String customFilter = string.Format("(& (proxyaddresses=*{0}*) (objectClass=user))", emailPart);
             using (DirectoryEntry gc = new DirectoryEntry("GC:"))
             {
                 foreach (DirectoryEntry z in gc.Children)
                 {
                     using (DirectoryEntry root = z)
                     {
                         using (DirectorySearcher searcher = new DirectorySearcher(root, customFilter, new String[] { "proxyAddresses", "displayName", "distinguishedName" }))
                         {
                             searcher.ReferralChasing = ReferralChasingOption.All;
                             SearchResultCollection resultCollection = searcher.FindAll();
                             foreach (SearchResult searchResult in resultCollection)
                             {
                                 // Do what I need to do with the search results
                             }
                         }
                     }
                 }
             }

1 Answer 1

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The MSDN Search Filter Syntax page would suggest:

(&(objectClass=user)(|(proxyAddresses=*{0}*)(displayName=*{0}*)(mail=*{0}*)))

NB: I'm using displayName as an example, because I'm not sure which property you're calling "uniquenames".

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  • uniquenames was a write error on my part. Meant "distinguishedname". so that I get the notation right it is so that I put the operator at the beginning of a ( part and then just all operations after it (all with their own () )?
    – Thomas
    Aug 20, 2014 at 14:40
  • @Thomas: That's correct. It's a form of Polish / prefix notation. Aug 20, 2014 at 14:47

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