ADO.NET
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Exchange ADO.NET Provider

SQL-based Access to Microsoft Exchange through ADO.NET for your custom .NET applications and SSAS.

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The Microsoft Exchange ADO.NET Data Provider enables user to easily connect to Microsoft Exchange data from .NET applications. The easiest way to integrate powerful Microsoft Exchange send and receive capabilities with .NET applications. Send & Receive Email, manage Exchange messages, folders, calendars, and more!

ADO architecture

Microsoft Exchange .NET Connectivity Features

  • Full support for custom and public folders
  • Connect to live Microsoft Exchange data, for real-time data access with the Microsoft Exchange Python Connectors
  • Full support for data aggregation and complex JOINs in SQL queries
  • Secure connectivity through modern cryptography, including TLS 1.2, SHA-256, ECC, etc.
  • Seamless integration with leading BI, reporting, and ETL tools and with custom applications via the Microsoft Exchange Connector.

Target Service, API

The driver connects to Exchange Web Services or Graph API. Email and calendar platform.

Schema, Data Model

Models Exchange items as tables. Mail, calendar, and contact data structure.

Key Objects

Mail, Calendar, Contacts, Tasks, and Folders. Full Exchange data access.

Operations

Full CRUD operations on Exchange items. Complex queries with filters.

Authentication

OAuth 2.0, NTLM, or Basic authentication. On-premises or Exchange Online.

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See what you can do with Microsoft Exchange ADO.NET provider

SSAS Cube
SSAS Cube

Use Microsoft Exchange from SQL Server Analysis Service (SSAS) multi-dimensional cubes. Keep your analytical data modeling and access to any source including cloud and on-premises.

Custom .NET Application
Custom .NET Application

The Microsoft Exchange ADO.NET Provider allows developers to build applications that connect to Microsoft Exchange using familiar SQL and Entity Framework. Integrate Microsoft Exchange to your mission -critical applications or create easy side-by-side applications.

Reporting & BI
Low-Code Dev Platforms

You can connect from ADO.NET compliant low-code development tools:

Reporting & BI
Reporting Tools

You can connect Microsoft Exchange from .NET-based reporting and analytics tools:

Standard ADO.NET Access to MicrosoftExchange

The Exchange ADO.NET Provider offers the most natural way to access Microsoft Exchange data from any .NET application. Simply use Exchange Data Provider objects to connect and access data just as you would access any traditional database. You will be able to use the Exchange Data Provider through Visual Studio Server Explorer, in code through familiar classes, and in data controls like DataGridView, GridView, DataSet, etc.

The CData ADO.NET Provider for Exchange hides the complexity of accessing data and provides additional powerful security features, smart caching, batching, socket management, and more.

Working with DataAdapters, DataSets, DataTables, etc.

The Exchange Data Provider has the same ADO.NET architecture as the native .NET data providers for SQL Server and OLEDB, including: MicrosoftExchangeConnection, MicrosoftExchangeCommand, MicrosoftExchangeDataAdapter, MicrosoftExchangeDataReader, MicrosoftExchangeDataSource, MicrosoftExchangeParameter, etc. Because of this you can now access Microsoft Exchange data in an easy, familiar way.

For example:

using (MicrosoftExchangeConnection conn = new MicrosoftExchangeConnection("...")) {
	string select = "SELECT * FROM Folders";
	MicrosoftExchangeCommand cmd = new MicrosoftExchangeCommand(select, conn);
	MicrosoftExchangeDataAdapter adapter = new MicrosoftExchangeDataAdapter(cmd);
	using (adapter) {
		DataTable table = new DataTable();
		adapter.Fill(table);		
		...
	}
}

More Than Read-Only: Full Update/CRUD Support

Exchange Data Provider goes beyond read-only functionality to deliver full support for Create, Read, Update, and Delete operations (CRUD). Your end-users can interact with the data presented by the Exchange Data Provider as easily as interacting with a database table.

using (MicrosoftExchangeConnection connection = new MicrosoftExchangeConnection(connectionString)) {
	MicrosoftExchangeDataAdapter dataAdapter = new MicrosoftExchangeDataAdapter(
	"SELECT Id, Where FROM Folders", connection);
  
	dataAdapter.UpdateCommand = new MicrosoftExchangeCommand(
		"UPDATE Folders SET Where = @Where " +
		"WHERE Id = @ID", connection);

	dataAdapter.UpdateCommand.Parameters.AddWithValue("@Where", "Where");
	dataAdapter.UpdateCommand.Parameters.AddWithValue("@Id", "80000173-1387137645");

	DataTable FoldersTable = new DataTable();
	dataAdapter.Fill(FoldersTable);

	DataRow firstrow = FoldersTable.Rows[0];
	firstrow["Where"] = "New Location";

	dataAdapter.Update(FoldersTable);
}

ADO.NET Provider Performance

With traditional approaches to remote access, performance bottlenecks can spell disaster for applications. Regardless if an application is created for internal use, a commercial project, web, or mobile application, slow performance can rapidly lead to project failure. Accessing data from any remote source has the potential to create these problems. Common issues include:

  1. Network Connections - Slow network connections and latency issues are common in mobile applications.
  2. Service Delays - Delays due to service interruptions, resulting in server hardware or software updates.
  3. Large Data - Intentional or unintentional requests for large amounts of data.
  4. Disconnects - Complete loss of network connectivity.

The CData ADO.NET Provider for Exchange solves these issues by supporting powerful smart caching technology that can greatly improve the performance and dramatically reduce application bottlenecks.

Smart Caching

Smart caching is a configurable option that works by storing queried data into a local database. Enabling smart caching creates a persistent local cache database that contains a replica of data retrieved from the remote source. The cache database is small, lightweight, blazing-fast, and it can be shared by multiple connections as persistent storage.

Caching with our ADO.NET Providers is highly configurable, including options for:

  • Auto Cache - Maintain an automatic local cache of data on all requests. The provider will automatically load data into the cache database each time you execute a SELECT query. Each row returned by the query will be inserted or updated as necessary into the corresponding table in the cache database.
  • Explicit Cache - Cache only on demand. Developers decide exactly what data gets stored in the cache and when it is updated. Explicit caching provides full control over the cache contents by using explicit execution of CACHE statements.
  • No Cache - All requests access only live data and no local cache file is created.

This powerful caching functionality increases application performance and allows applications to disconnect and continue limited functioning without writing code for additional local storage and/or data serialization/deserialization.

More information about ADO.NET Provider caching and best caching practices is available in the included help files.

Visual Studio Integration & Server Explorer

Working with the new Exchange ADO.NET Provider is easy. As a fully-managed .NET Data Provider, the Exchange Data Provider integrates seamlessly with the Visual Studio development environment as well as any .NET application.

As an ADO.NET Data Provider, Exchange ADO.NET Provider can be used to access and explore Microsoft Exchange data directly from the Visual Studio Server Explorer.

It's easy. As a standard ADO.NET adapter, developers can connect the Server Explorer to Exchange ADO.NET Provider just like connecting to any standard database.

  • Add a new Data Connection from the Server Explorer and select the Microsoft Exchange Data Source
  • Configure the basic connection properties to access your Microsoft Exchange account data.

Explore all of the data available! Exchange ADO.NET Provider makes it easy to access live Microsoft Exchange data from Visual Studio.

  • After configuring the connection, explore the feeds, views, and services provided by the Microsoft Exchange Data Source.
  • These constructs return live Microsoft Exchange data that developers can work with directly from within Visual Studio!

Developer Integration: Databind to Microsoft Exchange

Connecting Web, Desktop, and Mobile .NET applications with Microsoft Exchange is just like working with SQL Server. It is even possible to integrate Exchange ADO.NET Provider into applications without writing code.

Developers are free to access the Exchange ADO.NET Provider in whatever way they like best. Either visually through the Visual Studio Winforms or Webforms designers, or directly through code.

  • Developers can connect the Microsoft Exchange Data Source directly to form components by configuring the object's smart tags.
  • Add a new Data Connection from the Server Explorer and select the Microsoft Exchange Data Source. Then, select the feed, view, or services you would like to connect the object to.

Done! It's just like connecting to SQL Server.

  • Once the object is bound to the data source, applications can easily interact with Microsoft Exchange data with full read/write (CRUD) support.

Download the Microsoft Exchange ADO.NET driver today!