Application Class
Manages enterprise application definitions, and exposes methods to add, get, and delete enterprise application definitions.
Inheritance Hierarchy
System.Object
Microsoft.SharePoint.Portal.SingleSignon.Application
Namespace: Microsoft.SharePoint.Portal.SingleSignon
Assembly: Microsoft.SharePoint.Portal.SingleSignon (in Microsoft.SharePoint.Portal.SingleSignon.dll)
Syntax
'Declaration
<SingleSignonPermissionAttribute(SecurityAction.Demand, Access := SingleSignonAccess.Minimal)> _
Public Class Application
'Usage
Dim instance As Application
[SingleSignonPermissionAttribute(SecurityAction.Demand, Access = SingleSignonAccess.Minimal)]
public class Application
Examples
The following code example shows how to use the Application class.
using System;
using Microsoft.SharePoint.Portal.SingleSignon;
namespace SSOSampleCode
{
/// <summary>
/// Sample code for SharePoint Portal Single SignOn.
/// </summary>
class CMainEntry
{
[STAThread]
static void Main(string[] args)
{
try
{
//Create the application fields (max 5 fields).
Application.ApplicationField[] rgFields = new Application.ApplicationField[5];
rgFields[0] = new Application.ApplicationField(
"Field1 Label", //Application field name
true); //true == mask in the UI, false == don't mask in the UI
rgFields[1] = new Application.ApplicationField(
"Field2 Label",
false);
rgFields[2] = new Application.ApplicationField(
"Field3 Label",
true);
rgFields[3] = new Application.ApplicationField(
"Field4 Label",
false);
rgFields[4] = new Application.ApplicationField(
"Field5 Label",
true);
//Create group application information data.
Application.ApplicationInfo App = new Application.ApplicationInfo(
"MyIndividualApplicationID",
"My Individual Applicaiton Display Name",
Application.ApplicationType.Individual,
"someone@someplace.someext");
//Now, add the application.
Application.AddApplication(
App,
rgFields,
Application.ApplicationCreationDisposition.CreateNew);
Console.WriteLine("Successfully added the individual application!");
//Get the application.
Application.ApplicationInfo MyApp = null;
Application.GetApplication(
"MyIndividualApplicationID",
ref MyApp);
Console.WriteLine("Application Information:");
Console.WriteLine("Application ID: " + MyApp.ApplicationName);
Console.WriteLine("Application friendly name: " + MyApp.ApplicationFriendlyName);
Console.WriteLine("Application contact: " + MyApp.ContactName);
Console.WriteLine("Application type: " + MyApp.Type);
//Now, delete the application.
Application.DeleteApplication("MyIndividualApplicationID");
Console.WriteLine("Successfully deleted the individual application!");
}
catch (SingleSignonException esso)
{
Console.WriteLine("SingleSignonException caught.");
Console.WriteLine("Exception Code: " + "0x" + esso.LastErrorCode.ToString("x"));
Console.WriteLine("Source: " + esso.Source);
Console.WriteLine("StackTrace: " + esso.StackTrace);
Console.WriteLine("MethodName: " + esso.TargetSite.Name);
Console.WriteLine("Message: " + esso.Message);
}
catch (Exception e)
{
Console.WriteLine("Exception caught.");
Console.WriteLine("Source: " + e.Source);
Console.WriteLine("StackTrace: " + e.StackTrace);
Console.WriteLine("MethodName: " + e.TargetSite.Name);
Console.WriteLine("Message: " + e.Message);
}
}
}
}
Thread Safety
Any public static (Shared in Visual Basic) members of this type are thread safe. Any instance members are not guaranteed to be thread safe.