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I have an asp.net application in C# running IIS 7 on Windows 7.

An email is sent out when a certain event occurs, driven by the client user.

The code is as below: I am using Outlook Interop instead of Exchange SMTP server since the smtpClient is being blocked by McAfee and I am not allowed to change McAfee settings.

We have enterprise license for Office including Outlook, so licensing is not an issue.

When trying to send an email, following error is thrown:

System.Runtime.InteropServices.COMException (0x80030005): You don't have appropriate permission to perform this operation. at Microsoft.Office.Interop.Outlook.ApplicationClass.CreateItem(OlItemType ItemType) at in <.cs file name>.

IIS application pool is using NetworkService as ProcessModel identity. I also checked DCOMCNFG and it has Network service as an authorized user with appropriate permissions.

How can I fix this?

    using outlook = Microsoft.Office.Interop.Outlook;

    outlook.Application olkApp1 = new outlook.Application();

            outlook.MailItem olkMail1 = (outlook.MailItem)olkApp1.CreateItem(outlook.OlItemType.olMailItem);
            outlook.Accounts accounts = olkApp1.Session.Accounts;
            foreach (outlook.Account account in accounts)
            {
                if (account.SmtpAddress == "")
                {
                    olkMail1.To = toEmail;
                    if (ccEmail != null)
                    {
                        olkMail1.CC = ccEmail;
                    }
                    olkMail1.Subject = subjEmail;
                    olkMail1.Body = bodyEmail;
                    //olkMail1.Attachments.Add(filePath, outlook.OlAttachmentType.olByValue, 1, "attachment");
                    olkMail1.Save();
                    olkMail1.SendUsingAccount = account;
                    ((outlook._MailItem)olkMail1).Send();
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  • It is a horrible idea to use Office Interop from ASP.NET or another server technology. These APIs were written for use in a desktop application, for automating Office (a suite of desktop applications). Server applications are different in many ways that make it a very, very bad idea to use Office Interop in them. It's also unsupported by Microsoft, and may violate your Office license. See Considerations for server-side Automation of Office May 4, 2015 at 21:20
  • Licensing is the least of your problems. Office Interop is meant to automate one of the Office desktop products. It uses technologies which assume that the product is running in a Desktop environment, which is very, very, different from the server environment. For instance, synchronization in the desktop environment is by Windows messages sent to a message queue. This is not present in a server environment. You have made a horrible mistake and will regret it bitterly if you do not change your implementation. May 4, 2015 at 21:32
  • You will see bug after baffling bug, and you will think you have fixed them, but you will simply be moving the bug to a different set of circumstances. This is because the true bug is that you are using Office Interop in a server application, and you didn't fix that one. Take it from my experience. May 4, 2015 at 21:33
  • Yes, but would not it use the Outlook from the client user's machine to send email? May 5, 2015 at 14:42
  • No.The server can't reach into the client machine to run programs. That would be a severe security problem. May 5, 2015 at 14:47

1 Answer 1

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Outlook cannot be used from a service (such as IIS). Outlook was never designed to work from a service; it can and will display user prompts that no user will be able to dismiss.

Your options are

  1. Extended MAPI, but it is only accessible from the C++ or Delphi

  2. Exchange Web Services - see https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/office/dd877012(v=exchg.150).aspx

  3. Redemption (I am its author) - it is an Extended MAPI wrapper that can be used from a service in any language including C#, VB.Net or VB script:

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  • In addition, there will be synchronization problems because you will have multiple threads accessing code that is meant to be used by one thread at a time. In the Desktop version of Outlook, that synchronization would have occurred through the message loop. There will be no message loop in your server code. Also, Outlook on the desktop expects one user at a time. Each request to your web site could be from a different user. May 4, 2015 at 21:37
  • The bottom line is that you are violating the assumptions made by the creators of the software. They didn't write their code to work in the environment you're using it in, and they didn't test their code to work in that environment. In general, code that is not tested does not work. May 4, 2015 at 21:37
  • Multiple threads are fine since Outlook is an out-of-proc COM server and all COM calls are marshaled to its main thread. Multithreading is only a problem when the code is running inside the outlook.exe address space, which only applies to Outlook COM add ins and Outlook VBA. May 4, 2015 at 21:39
  • Also, Outlook can run a message loop when launched from a service, that is not a problem. May 4, 2015 at 21:40
  • Dmitry, I was talking about the OP's situation, of running Outlook Interop in a server application. In that environment, there is no message loop. Are you suggesting that Outlook creates a message loop when called from a service? And what happens when multiple threads access Interop code at the "same time"? May 4, 2015 at 21:42

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