Office 365 guide series – 101 ways to share a document


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101 ways to share a document.

Fellow SharePoint lovers! (And OneDrive for Business…)

SharedLove

Share the Love

More and more individuals and organizations are starting to realize the beauty of OneDrive for Business, the way it allows you to be always up to date and to be able to always access your information no matter where you are or on what device you are on.

This article will delve© into detail on how you can keep the information in one place, instead of spreading multiple copies and versions around like we have always done using email as the sharing method of choice (Not to mention USB sticks). As you all most likely know, every time you send an email with an attachment of one of your files, a new copy and possible a new version of that document is created, it happens out of your control as well and this is not something that we want, it has simply been the only way to share, externally for sure and internally it has been the easiest way for the lazy.

Now, what has changed? What’s new? What’s so special with OneDrive for Business so that we can share thru some kind of Microsoft magic and files never have to be sent in email? What’s up with that? Well, implementing OneDrive for Business as a part of Office 365 is one step, you can however still work like you always have…removing the old Home directory and the Shared folders is another. You can however still work like you always have, sending attachments using email, but, these steps will allow you and your coworkers to adopt a new way of doing things, a better more secure and controlled way to work.

ShareTrad1

Traditional sharing, send a copy of the original to each user, same as when printing a letter and posting it…

ShareNew1

Modern sharing, one original, no copies. Everyone reads or edits the same file.

As you all also probably know and think right now, there are other cloud services that can do this and yes, I agree, but if you have invested in Office 365 already, then you get OneDrive for Business with 1TB (!) storage for free (or it is included in the price but free sounds better, and compared to using a different service like dropbox or box, then it IS free). You have a single sign on between the different applications in Office 365 and if you have implemented ADFS, then you will even have single sign on from your PC. Yes, I know that storage will be unlimited soon…but honestly, 1TB IS unlimited…

But enough of that, now I will show you where you can share a document from your OneDrive for business.

First off, there is a setting that are configured globally in the SharePoint admin portal of Office 365 that we need to know about.

Share1

External Sharing, there are 3 levels to select from. Can be set on the tenant or per Site collection. This setting can only be configured by a Global Office 365 Administrator.
The third level means anonymous access…(No! You really shouldn’t)

Share2

(Note also that if you restrict sharing on the tenant, then you cannot allow it on the site collection level) When these are set, you can start sharing.

There are a lot of places to do this for the mobile OneDrive for Business user

Share3

– OneDrive for Business Online
– OneDrive for Business Offline (from the local cache)
– The Office Applications
– The OneDrive for Business mobile app (Windows Phone, IOS, Android)
– Office Mobile (Windows Phone, IOS, Android) only shares a link, does not grant access
– Outlook Online (formerly known as Outlook Web Access)

It is more or less the same experience everywhere, the web dialog for sharing a document looks like this, from here you can share with internal users as well as external users, and all you need is an email address.

OneDrive for Business Online

Share4

Click SHARE then select how to share, or select the document(s) and click on the Share ‘button’

Share5

The dialog then looks like this

Share6

As you can see, the checkbox for ‘Require sign-in’ is checked by default, unchecking that allows anonymous access to this document.
This checkbox is only available if anonymous sharing is enabled at the tenant and at the site collection level.

The names can be internal users by name or email address, it can be external users by email or it can be everyone.

Share7

The permission level can also be set here, they speak for themselves. (Note that sharing with edit allows the recipient to in turn share with or without edit)

Share8

You can type in a message, this will be the text in the email that is sent to the recipient

Share9

Under SHOW OPTIONS you have the option to not send an email at all.

Share10

The recipient receives an email with this content

Share11

Clicking the link takes the user straight to the shared file, in its location.

Under Shared with, you can see who currently has access to this document.

Share12

When a document is shared, you can also see that the little user icon is replaced to show that someone else besides you now also has access to this document or this file.

Share13

Unshare the file again by clicking on that icon and in the Shared with dialog, select Stop sharing and save Changes.

Share135

After a quick refresh, you will see that the little icon is back to the Padlock.

Share14

This is how you share things in the OneDrive for Business Online, it is very similar in SharePoint Online (A few exceptions like unsharing differs).

The rest you will know when you see them:

The OneDrive for Business Offline (from the local cache)

Share15

The Office Applications

Share16

The OneDrive for Business mobile app (Windows Phone, IOS, Android)

Share17

Office Mobile, Word, Excel, PowerPoint (Windows Phone, IOS, Android) only shares a link, does not grant access

Share18

Outlook Online (formerly known as Outlook Web Access)

Select INSERT

Share19

Select Share with OneDrive (They really should stop confusing the business version with the consumer version…)

Share20

Apply the proper permission level, read or read/write

Share21

Share22

Note that the file is not sent as an attachment unless you specifically choose to do so. It only looks like an attachment, the file never leaves your personal OneDrive for Business.

And, to sum it all up, a message from inside Outlook Online:

Share23

SharedLove

 

References and Credits

None at this time…

Credits & many thanks to

LabCenter – you guys always publish my articles!

Mattias Gutke at Xperta

My family.

SP2013logo

_________________________________________________________

Enjoy!

Regards

Twitter | Technet Profile | LinkedIn

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Office 365 guide series – Verify Provisioned OneDrives using PowerShell


 Office365logo       SP2013logo

Hi SharePoint Online administrators!

This time I will show you how to:

Verify if a provisioned OneDrive for Business site was provisioned.

AminneBrukx

 Is this really right…? What did they…(Åminne bruk, Värnamo, Sweden)

 

If you followed my previous post, Office 365 guide series – Provision OneDrive for Business using PowerShell then you will mst likely have a bunch of sites that you Think you have provisioned and are not really sure if it worked?
There are obviously ways to verify manuelly but if the list of users was long, then that is not the funniest work out there…

I suggest you use this script instead…:-)

If you have a single emaildomains in your oranization use the first one, if you have multiple emaildomains, use the second.
All you have to do is copy or retype the script to a Prompt/ps1 or ISE session, then run the script. You have the option to save some time by entering your account name in the script(see start)

 

1. Script 1 Use this script if your organization only uses one domainname as email domain. For example, if you use only ‘contoso.com’ then you should use this script.
2. Script 2 Use this script if your organization only uses multiple domainnames as email domains. For example, if you use ‘contoso.com’, ‘microsoft.com’, northwindtraders.com’ as UPN names within your O365 tenant, then use this script. You will here be asked for the domain used in the O365 tenant address.
3. Example 1 Example of a usecase with multiple emaildomains and script 2.
4. Example 2 Example of a usecase with a single emaildomain and script 1.

Note: If you copy paste the code from here into a PowerShell promt or ISE, please verify that all quotes and doublequotes are copied correctly, character coding may cause problems. 

 

Single email domain in your oranization:

***** SCRIPT 1 STARTS HERE *****

#
# By Thomas Balkeståhl - http://blog.blksthl.com
#
$o365cred = Get-Credential -Username "thomas.balkestahl@cramo.onmicrosoft.com" -Message "Supply a Office365 Admin"
$Userlist = read-host "submit your list of users that have been provisioned"
$Userlist = $Userlist -replace " ", ""
$Emails = $userlist -split ","
#Splitting list into Array
Foreach($Email in $Emails)
{
    # Constructing URL from the UPN/Email address
    $struser = $Email
    $pos= $strUser.IndexOf("@")
    $len = $struser.Length -1
    $strUser = $strUser.SubString(0, $pos)
    $strUser = $strUser -replace "\.", "_"
    $orgpos = $pos + 1
    $orglen = $len - $pos
    $strOrg = $Email.SubString($orgpos, $orglen)
    $strOrgNamePos = $strOrg.IndexOf(".")
    $strOrgName = $strOrg.SubString(0, $strOrgNamePos)
    $strOrgSuffixPos = $strOrgNamePos +1
    $strOrgNameLen = $strOrg.Length - $strOrgSuffixPos
    $strOrgSuffix = $strOrg.SubString($strOrgSuffixPos, $strOrgNameLen)
    $strOrg = $strOrg -replace "\.", "_"
    $PersonalOrgURL = "https://" + $strOrgName + "-my.sharepoint.com/personal/"
    $SiteUrl= $PersonalOrgURL + $strUser
    $SiteUrl= $SiteUrl+ "_" + $strOrg
    write-host "Verifying user:" $Email
$HTTP_Request = [System.Net.WebRequest]::Create($SiteUrl)
$HTTP_Request.UseDefaultCredentials = $true
$HTTP_Request.Credentials = $o365cred
try {
    $HTTP_Response = $HTTP_Request.GetResponse()
}
catch [System.Net.WebException] {
    $HTTP_Response = $_.Exception.Response
}
$HTTP_Status = $HTTP_Response.StatusCode
If ($HTTP_Status -eq 200 -or $HTTP_Status -eq 403 )   { 
    Write-Host -ForegroundColor Green "Site for user $Email exists!" 
}
Else {
    Write-Host -ForegroundColor Yellow "The OneDrive site for user $Email does not respond, try again later or provision it again"
}
$HTTP_Request = $null
$HTTP_Response = $null
$HTTP_Status = $Null
}

***** SCRIPT 1 ENDS HERE *****

If you have multiple email domain in your oranization, use this second script:
***** SCRIPT 2 STARTS HERE *****

#
# By Thomas Balkeståhl - http://blog.blksthl.com
#
$O365Admin = read-host "Supply your Office 365 Admin username(UPN)"
# Add you admin account below, uncomment and comment out the line above to save time...
# $O365Admin = "admin.user@domain.com"
$o365cred = Get-Credential -Username $O365Admin -Message "Supply a Office365 Admin"
$strO365OrgName = read-host "submit your O365 orgname (Only organization, like 'contoso')"
$Userlist = read-host "submit your list of users that have been provisioned"
$Userlist = $Userlist -replace " ", ""
$Emails = $userlist -split ","
#SPlitting list into Array
Foreach($Email in $Emails)
{
    # Constructing URL from the UPN/Email address
    $struser = $Email
    $pos= $strUser.IndexOf("@")
    $len = $struser.Length -1
    $strUser = $strUser.SubString(0, $pos)
    $strUser = $strUser -replace "\.", "_"
    $orgpos = $pos + 1
    $orglen = $len - $pos
    $strOrg = $Email.SubString($orgpos, $orglen)
    $strOrgNamePos = $strOrg.IndexOf(".")
    $strOrgName = $strOrg.SubString(0, $strOrgNamePos)
    $strOrgSuffixPos = $strOrgNamePos +1
    $strOrgNameLen = $strOrg.Length - $strOrgSuffixPos
    $strOrgSuffix = $strOrg.SubString($strOrgSuffixPos, $strOrgNameLen)
    $strOrg = $strOrg -replace "\.", "_"
    $PersonalOrgURL = "https://" + $strO365OrgName + "-my.sharepoint.com/personal/"
    $SiteUrl= $PersonalOrgURL + $strUser
    $SiteUrl= $SiteUrl+ "_" + $strOrg
    write-host "Verifying user:" $Email
$HTTP_Request = [System.Net.WebRequest]::Create($SiteUrl)
$HTTP_Request.UseDefaultCredentials = $true
$HTTP_Request.Credentials = $o365cred
try {
    $HTTP_Response = $HTTP_Request.GetResponse()
}
catch [System.Net.WebException] {
    $HTTP_Response = $_.Exception.Response
}
$HTTP_Status = $HTTP_Response.StatusCode
If ($HTTP_Status -eq 200 -or $HTTP_Status -eq 403 )   { 
    Write-Host -ForegroundColor Green "Site for user $Email exists!"
}
Else {
    Write-Host -ForegroundColor Yellow "The OneDrive site for user $Email does not respond, try again later or provision it again"
}
$HTTP_Request = $null
$HTTP_Response = $null
$HTTP_Status = $Null
}

***** SCRIPT 2 ENDS HERE *****

Example 1

Multiple emaildomains
O365 Orgname: contoso
Users: test.user1@contoso.com, test.user2@northwind.com, test.user3@contoso.com, test.user4@contoso.com, test.user5@contoso.com

PS1

Like you can see, the list contains users with different emaildomains, contoso and northwind. THe submitted O365 orgname is however used to verify the OneDrive site, contoso.
In this example, the user test.user@contoso.com does not seem to have the OneDrive site provisioned.

Example 2

Single emaildomain
Users: test.user1@contoso.com, test.user2@contoso.com, test.user3@contoso.com, test.user4@contoso.com, test.user5@contoso.com

PS2

Like you can see, the list contains users with only contoso as emaildomain.
In this example, the user test.user2@contoso.com does not seem to have the OneDrive site provisioned. Try to provision again/verify manuelly.

References and Credits


Office 365 guide series – Provision OneDrive for Business using PowerShell
https://blog.blksthl.com/2014/08/07/office-365-guide-series-provision-onedrive-for-business-using-powershell/

 

Credits & many thanks to

Jörgen Andersson, Xperta

Always, Mattias Gutke at CAG

 

SP2013logo

_________________________________________________________

Enjoy!

Regards

Twitter | Technet Profile | LinkedIn

Office 365 guide series – Provision OneDrive for Business using PowerShell


 Office365logo       SP2013logo

Hi SharePoint Online administrators!

This time I will show you how to:

Provision OneDrive for Business using only PowerShell.

Lisebergx

Get the people up there…into the Clouds…(Liseberg, Gothenburg, Sweden)

Time to roll out OneDrive for Business in the Enterprise? Or maybe you just want to implement OneDrive for Business in a controlled way, and you may not be a hardcore developer either.

If you want to do any kind of preparation before letting the users into their OneDrives, then you will need to have them created/provisioned first, after that you can go ahead and give yourself permission (separate blogpost) and migrate a users files (separate blogpost), preconfigure, brand, and so on.
I have in this guide tried to offer a way to provision the OneDrive for Business to your users in a way that do not require you to know C#, Visual Studio or any development at all, how does that sound? All you need to do is follow this guide to the letter, and you will be sucessfull.

The only way I have found so far to provision a users OneDrive for Business as a administrator is to use code developed by the Office AMS Community Project. This includes among other things, a great Visual Studio sample Project for provisioning users OneDrive for business, and this is really spot on. But…it is not that easy to get going, for a non-developer it may prove to be impossible.

I have used code developed in the samples but I will only use PowerShell to execute it. This is what will make it easy for others (such as you?) to use.
The Office AMS Project also includes the SharePoint client assemblies needed to do anything with SPO using CSOM, Client Side Object Model(Code executed on the client).

In order to get started provisioning your users OneDrive for Business sites(or we can just as well call them MySites, since this is wat they really are…), you just follow these steps:

Quickguide

1. Download Download and unpack the Office App Model Samples from Codeplex, last tested version is currently 2.0 found here: DOWNLOAD Office AMS.
2. Get assemblies Locate the Microsoft.sharepoint.client assembles in the unpacked Office App Model Samples folders, located in <unpack location>\Office App Model Samples v2.0\Assemblies\16\ Copy the files Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.dll, Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.UserProfiles.dll and Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.Runtime.dll and put them in a folder of your choice, I used C:\Temp\ in my sample. (You can also leave the files as is, but then you have to alter the PowerShell code to reference the path in the Office AMS folders)
3. Run the script In a PowerShell prompt/ISE running as admin, run the PowerShell script available below andHERE (Download as Word file), this will load the code needed to access SPO and start provisioning. (Verify and update if needed the $MyAssemblies line at the very bottom)
4. Execute Execute the code in your PowerShell prompt/ISE running as admin (It has to be the same prompt/ISE used to execute the script), use this syntax: Syntax: [OneDriveforBusiness.Provision]::Execute(<SharePointAdminURL>,<GlobalTenantAdminAccount>,<AdminAccountPassword>,<ListofUsersEmailSeparatedbyCommas>)
5. Done – Verify… Done! Verify that the sites have been provisioned by entering the address in your browser of choice.
References/Credits Reference links and credits

 

The detailed Guide:

1. Download

 

New!
Download the latest version of SharePoint Server 2013 Client Components SDK x86 or x64. This SDK contains the dll’s needed.
During the install, the dll’s will be added to the following path:
C:\Program Files\Common Files\microsoft shared\Web Server Extensions\16\ISAPI\

Download the latest version (Office App Model Samples 2.0 – July 2014 – Update 1) of the Office App Model Samples, the Project has been renamed to the more formal Office365 Developer Patterns & Practices but it is still the same.
The last tested version is currently 2.0 found here: DOWNLOAD Office AMS

 

Back to Menu

2. Get the assemblies

Unpack the files to a location of choice. (The files will ironically enough not synch very well if stored in a OneDrive for Business synchronized folder – long path among other issues).
Locate the ‘assemblies\16’ folder, in this folder you will find the 3 files we need, Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.dll, Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.UserProfiles.dll and Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.Runtime.dll. Either you put these Three files in a better location, or you make a note of the path to the folder.

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3. Run the script

Start a PowerShell prompt/ISE running as administrator. This is where all the magic will happen. Copy the powershell script below, or download the scriptfile HERE (Word file), then add the script to the Prompt/ISE.
Before executing the script, you will need to alter one thing, the path to the assembly files. Update the line where we give a value to the $MyAssemblies to reflect where you have your SharePoint.client dll files. This is crucial since the code needs to be able to access these asseblies during execution.

$MyAssemblies = (‘C:\Temp\Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.dll’,’C:\Temp\Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.Runtime.dll’,’C:\Temp\Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.UserProfiles.dll’,’System’,’System.Security’)

Unless you have stored your SharePoint.client.dll’s in C:\Temp folder, you will have to update the Three paths to reflect where the files are stored. Example:

$MyAssemblies = (‘C:\Users\Thomas\Documents\Office App Model Samples v2.0\Assemblies\16\Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.dll’,’C:\Users\Thomas\Documents\Office App Model Samples v2.0\Assemblies\16\Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.Runtime.dll’,’C:\Users\Thomas\Documents\Office App Model Samples v2.0\Assemblies\16\Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.UserProfiles.dll’,’System’,’System.Security’)

Once this is done, you can go ahead and execute the script.

HERE (Download as Word file)

# By Thomas Balkeståhl - blog.blksthl.com August 6 2014
#
# 1. Run script to load the C# code into the Assembly
# 2. Execute using the following syntax:
#
# Syntax:  [OneDriveforBusiness.Provision]::Execute(<SharePointAdminURL>,<GlobalTenantAdminAccount>,<AdminAccountPassword>,<ListofUsersEmailSeparatedbyCommas>)
# Example: PS C:\> [OneDriveforBusiness.Provision]::Execute("https://donkeymind-admin.sharepoint.com","globaladmin@donkeymind.com","MyVerySecretPassWord1!","user1@donkeymind.com,user2@donkeymind.com,user3@donkeymind.com")
# Input:            
# adminurl = The Tenanat Admin URL for your SharePoint Online Subscription, example: "https://donkeymind-admin.sharepoint.com".
# adminuser = The Credentials of the user who has tenant admin permission, example: "admin@donkeymind.com".
# password = The password in cleartext to your tenant admin account(I know, not ideal...but it was a quick and dirty to make it work).
# users = The email IDs for users who's personal site you want to create in the form of a comma-separated string, example: "user1@donkeymind.com,user2@donkeymind.com,user3@donkeymind.com". Do not enter more than 200 users at a time.
$MyCSharpSource = @" 
using Microsoft.SharePoint.Client;
using Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.UserProfiles;
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Security;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
namespace OneDriveforBusiness
{
    public class ProvisionOneDrive
    {
        public static void Execute(string adminurl, string adminuser, string password, string users)
        {
        
            string siteUrl = adminurl;
            string userName = adminuser;
        
            SecureString pwd = GetPassword(password);
            string[] emailIds = GetEmailId(users);
            /* End Program if no Credentials */
            if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(userName) || (pwd == null) || emailIds == null || string.IsNullOrEmpty(siteUrl))
                return;
            SharePointOnlineCredentials _creds = new SharePointOnlineCredentials(userName, pwd);
            CreatePersonalSiteUsingCSOM(_creds, siteUrl, emailIds);
            Console.Read();
        }
        public static SecureString StringToSecure(string nonSecureString)
        {
            SecureString _secureString = new SecureString();
            foreach (char _c in nonSecureString)
                _secureString.AppendChar(_c);
            return _secureString;
        }
        // tenantAdminUrl = The Tenanat Admin URL for your SharePoint Online Subscription
        // spoCredentials = The Credentials of the user who has tenant admin permission.
        // emailIDs = The email IDs for users whos personal site you want to create.
        public static void CreatePersonalSiteUsingCSOM(SharePointOnlineCredentials spoCredentials, string tenantAdminUrl, string[] emailIDs)
        {
            using (ClientContext _context = new ClientContext(tenantAdminUrl))
            {
                try
                {       
                    _context.AuthenticationMode = ClientAuthenticationMode.Default;
                    _context.Credentials = spoCredentials;
                    ProfileLoader _profileLoader = ProfileLoader.GetProfileLoader(_context);
                    _profileLoader.CreatePersonalSiteEnqueueBulk(emailIDs);
                    _profileLoader.Context.ExecuteQuery();
                    Console.Write("Provisioning of the users supplied has been initiated, please allow for the provisioning to finish, this can take up to 5 minutes.");
                }
                catch (Exception _ex)
                {
                    Console.WriteLine(string.Format("Provisioning failed, find the problem and try again. The error message is {0}", _ex.Message));
                }
            }
        }
        
        public static SecureString GetPassword(string password)
        {
            SecureString sStrPwd = new SecureString();
            foreach (char ch in password) sStrPwd.AppendChar(ch);
            return sStrPwd;
        }
        public static string[] GetEmailId(string users)
        {
            string[] emailID;
            try
            {
                string Output = "Provisioning the supplied list of users: " + users;
                Console.WriteLine(Output);
                string emailInput = users;
                if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(emailInput))
                {
                    emailID = emailInput.Split(new char[] { ',' });
                    return emailID;
                }
                else
                {
                    return null;
                }
            }
            catch (Exception e)
            {
                Console.WriteLine(e.Message);
            }
            return null;
        }
    }
}
"@
$ass1 = [System.Reflection.Assembly]::LoadFile("c:\temp\Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.dll") 
$ass2 = [System.Reflection.Assembly]::LoadFile("c:\temp\Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.Runtime.dll") 
$ass3 = [System.Reflection.Assembly]::LoadFile("C:\temp\Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.UserProfiles.dll")
$MyAssemblies = @( $ass1.FullName, $ass2.FullName,$ass3.Fullname,"System","System.Core","System.Security")
Add-Type -ReferencedAssemblies $MyAssemblies -TypeDefinition $MyCSharpSource -Language CSharp -PassThru

HERE (Download as Word file)

Back to Menu

4 Executing the provisioning code

ISE2

We have now loaded the code into memory (a .NET Framework class in your Windows PowerShell session), where it will be available just like if we had created a C# DLL and loaded it into the GAC. Remember though, the code is now static and connot be altered. If you need to make any Changes, have a look in the references section where I will show how to be able to alter the code after it has been loaded once.

Now, we have to call on the code laoded into memory, this is done from the same prompt/ISE used to load the code, the code only exists in that prompt session so it will not be available in any other prompt.

Use the following syntax to execute:

Syntax: [OneDriveforBusiness.ProvisionOneDrive]::Execute(<SharePointAdminURL>,<GlobalTenantAdminAccount>,<AdminAccountPassword>,<ListofUsersEmailSeparatedbyCommas>)

Example: PS C:\> [OneDriveforBusiness.ProvisionOneDrive]::Execute(“https://donkeymind-admin.sharepoint.com&#8221;,”globaladmin@donkeymind.com”,”MyVerySecretPassWord1!”,”user1@donkeymind.com,user2@donkeymind.com,user3@donkeymind.com”) 

What you need to supply when running the code, is your SharePoint online admin address, a tenent admin account and password, plus a list of emailadresses to the users that will be provisioned with a OneDrive for Business.

Start by typing in this:

[OneDriveforBusiness.ProvisionOneDrive]::Execute

ISE4

What this does is call the code we just loaded from PowerShell, The Namespace is OneDriveforBusiness, the Class is ProvisionOneDrive and finally, the void or function is Execute.

<SharePointAdminURL>: The Admin address is available if you go the the Admin/SharePoint administration web. This will be visible in the address field of your browser:

Admin1x

Admin0x

Note the address: https://donkeymind-admin.sharepoint.com.

<GlobalTenantAdminAccount>: An account that is a global Office 365 Tenant Administrator.
The account must have this setting in Office 365 Admin Center/Users & Groups – User object:

Parameters1x

<AdminAccountPassword>: The password of the <GlobalTenantAdminAccount>. This will be entered in cleartext, not the ideal security solution but this is the only way I could solve it.
(Suggestions on how to prompt for the password in a secure way is welcome!)

<ListofUsersEmailSeparatedbyCommas>: This is the users that will have provisioned with OneDrive for Business. A list of UPN’s (User Principal Name) separated by commas. The UPN must be the one registered in Office 365. The UPN is in the form of a emailadress, for example: user@domain.com. Enter the string using double quotes on both sides.

This is what the string should look like: “user1@donkeymind.com, user2@donkeymind.com, user3@donkeymind.com, user4@donkeymind.com, user5@donkeymind.com”

When you have all the values in order, type in the command with your parameters and execute the provisioning:

PS C:\PSScripts> [OneDriveforBusiness.ProvisionOneDrive]::Execute(“https://donkeymind-admin.sharepoint.com&#8221;,”thomas@donkeymind.onmicrosoft.com”,”**********”,”testaccount@donkeymind.onmicrosoft.com”)

When executed ok, you will see this:

ISE9

The limit for submitting users to be provisioned have been set by Microsoft to 200 at the time. This code do allow more but it will cause issues. Better to do them 200 at the time, wait unitl done and then do 200 more, alternatively, alter the code to include a check so that every user have been provisioned ok Before moving onto the next.

Now, you can execute the commend again and again. You can also use the code obviously for other tenants. Simple provide the commend with a different account, a different admin URL and you are good to go. Good luck!

Back to Menu

5. Done! Verify….

For a tool to verify your list of users directly, check out this guide: Office 365 guide series – Verify Provisioned OneDrives using PowerShell

Verify that the sites have been provisioned by browsing to the direct URL using your admin account. The URL will look like this:

User: thomas.balkestahl@donkeymind.onmicrosoft.com
URL: https://donkeymind-my.sharepoint.com/personal/thomas_balkestahl_donkeymind_onmicrosoft_com/

User: han.solo@alliance.org
URL: https://donkeymind-my.sharepoint.com/personal/han_solo_alliance_com/

Since you are using your admin account, you have access to the private part of the OneDrive/MySite.

Note: All the steps in this guide have been verified on a Windows 8.1 Update 1 machine, using PowerShell ISE and the Office AMS July 2014 Update 1. All tests have been done during August of 2014, the functionality of Office 365 may change over time and may thus cause this guide to fail. If this happens I will try to be alert and update the guide accordingly. 

Possible errors

1. You need to alter the script, then run the script again?

You have two choices if this happens, you have loaded the code once and you need to edit it and run again. If you do this you may get the error message saying that the ‘Type has already been added’ or similar. If you get this, simply restart your PowerShell prompt/ISE, OR, Change the name of the public class:

Code1x

Add for example a number after, so that the class is called: ProvisionOneDrive1, then 2 and so on.

2. Nothing happens, no OneDrive shows up?

Verify all your values, then execute the command again. Remember though, that the time it takes for a site to show up may vary and can take up to 5 minuter PER SITE. Wait a moment longer, try it again

If you have the wrong address when verifying, you will see either of these pages depending on the URL used:

A link like:
https://donkeymind-my.sharepoint.com/personal/testuser4_donkeymind_onmicrosoft_com/_layouts/start.aspx#/Documents/Forms/All.aspx?LoadProfile=TRUE

Error1

A link like:
https://donkeymind-my.sharepoint.com/personal/testuser4_donkeymind_onmicrosoft_com

error2

404 could also just mean that the site is in queue and has not been provisioned yet.

References and Credits


Stefan Gossners old post: Using CSharp (C#) code in Powershell scripts
http://blogs.technet.com/b/stefan_gossner/archive/2010/05/07/using-csharp-c-code-in-powershell-scripts.aspx

Office365 Developer Patterns & Practices/Office App Model Samples
http://officeams.codeplex.com/

TechNet Add-Type
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh849914.aspx

Credits & many thanks to

Kimmo Forss, Microsoft

Jörgen Andersson, Xperta

All the contributors of Office AMS

Always, Mattias Gutke at CAG

Stefan Gossner, Microsoft (Blog) for that short and concise post written a few years back.

My love for putting up with me while solving this problem and writing this post!

SP2013logo

_________________________________________________________

Enjoy!

Regards

Twitter | Technet Profile | LinkedIn

Office 365 guide series – Information Rights Management in SharePoint Online


 

Hi folks, long time no blogging…

A lot has happened in my life since I last updated my blog, I switched jobs so I have a slightly new focus now in my workplace, it has shifted more against SharePoint Online and Office 365. Say what you want about the cloud service named Office 365 but Microsoft is determined…to make it work and piece by piece it gains in value.

One of the great things offered in Office 365 that is also part of the SharePoint Online offering, is Information Rights Management. Thru the use of the other cloud service Azure Rights Management Service (Azure RMS), real IRM protection can be offered to all SharePoint Online customers on the adequate subscription plan. There is still a lot to be done with the service, but as is, it is way, WAY better than nothing, which is what most people have available today in their current solution. IRM or RMS is available to all customers with an onpremises solution as well, but setting RMS up is a challenge for any administrator. In SharePoint online, you will have it up and running in a total of 5 clicks…(depending on what you count as a click…)

Antsx

IRM – Its all about stopping unwanted access

And what is so great about this IRM, RMS or DRM you may wonder? A beloved child has many names (Old saying in Sweden), well…it is fantastic. IRM offers you the possibility to set a policy on documents (and email messages) that allows you to specify what the user may or may not do with the document, you may also specify exactly what user or grop may or may not read, write, print, download and so on. The really great thing with IRM is that even if you put a document on a USB drive and someone gets their hand on that USB drive, they still need to authenticate against the Azure RMS service before getting any access at all to the document, and even then, what you may do is controlled by the IRM policy. You are in Control of the data even after the document leaves your controlled environment…not bad huh?

So, how is all this greatness achieved you ask? Well, I will not go into all the magic behind the scenes in this post, but I will show you how you can do it yourself, in your current Office 365 tenant or if you prefer, in an evaluation tenant to avoid the risk of affecting your users (which is virtually impossible anyway but just as a precaution…and to make your bosses feel safe).
Lets get started, jump drectly to a section using the links below:

 The complete guide to enabling IRM protection in a SharePoint document library Jump straigt to the guide, a step by step on how you implement RMS and IRM protection in SharePoint Online.
 Who gets access to RMS, license plans listed Get the list of what subscription plan includes RMS and what does not.
 What works and what doesn’t? The cmplete list of supported OS’s and Applications that support Azure RMS and the ones that do no yet support Azure RMS.
 About the IRM/RMS technology – How does it work, what does it do? The functionality explained.
 References/Links – Find the information online Link to when you get all the info you need in the sometimes difficult Microsoft TechNet way…

 

The complete guide to enabling IRM protection in a SharePoint document library

This is done in four steps:
– Activate Azure RMS in the Office 365 administration portal.
– Activate RMS in SharePoint online
– Create and set a IRM policy in a document library
– Quickly verify your Information Rights Management

Step 1. Activate Azure RMS in the Office 365 administration portal.

1.1 Log on to your Offcie 365 tenant as a global administrator, go to the Office 365 admin center. You will find the shortcut in the admin dropdown.

O365 admin 0x

1.2 The Office 365 admin center

O365 admin 1

1.3 Now select on the lefthand menu, service settings

O365 admin 2x

1.4 In the top menu select ‘rights management’

O365 admin 3x

1.5 Click on the link to Manage your ‘Azure Rights Management’

O365 admin 4x

1.6 This is where you leave your Office 365 tenant, note the URL you now se in your browsers address field:

O365 admin 5x

1.7 In Azure RMS you will be met by this text saying that yiou have not activated Rights Management yet.

Azure RMS 1x

1.8 In order to activate the RM feature, click on ‘activate’…DUH! Then click on ‘activate’ again…if you are absolutely sure…

Azure RMS 2x

1.9 Wait for it….

Azure RMS 3

1.10 Now you should see this, A nice green checkmark telling you that Rights Managemen has been activated.

Azure RMS 4x

1.11 Done! Now you can move on with activating Rights Management in your SharePoint Online admin portal. The steps you have now taken makes the RMS service available in all parts of your Office 365 tenant, like in Exchange, SharePoint (and Lync).
(As you can see, you can lso make some additional configurations of RMS, for example you can create your own custom policys, fr some reason though, you are required to sign up for a separate Azure RMS suscription for this…the link to where you sign up is added to the page to make things simpler for you)

 

Step 2. Activate RMS in SharePoint online

2.1 Go to the SharePoint administration portal. Find the shortcut in the Admin dropdown.

SP admin 0x

2.2 In the lefthand pane, select Settings.

SP admin 1x

2.3 Scroll downto the section named ‘Information Rights Management (IRM)’

SP admin 2

2.4 Under Information Rights Management (IRM), on the right side, select ‘Use the IRM service specified in your configuration’

SP admin 3x

2.5 Click on the ‘Refresh IRM Settings’ button. (Buttons…welll…maybe they are touch buttons?)

SP admin 41x

2.6 In ashort while, you will see the text ‘We successfully refreshed your settings’ below the button.

SP admin 4xx

2.7 Done! This means that IRM functionality has been enabled in your SharePoint Online tenant and the IRM settings will now be available in SharePoint.

Note! If you have not previously activated IRM in your Office 365 admin portal, then you will see this massage instead:SP admin 42xIf that is the case, simply go back to Step 1 in this guide and activate IRM in Office 365 first.

 

 

Step 3. Create and set a IRM policy in a document library

3.1 Go to a site in your SharePoint Online site collection of choice (can be the rootsite or a subsite), go to a document library (default is probably ‘Documents’).
Now, click on the ‘Library’ tab.

Library1x

 

3.2 To the right in the ribbon, click on ‘Library Settings’

Library2x

3.3 Click on ‘Information Rights Management’

Library3x

3.4 This is the Information Rights settings for the current Document Library, what you change here will only affect this document library and the documents in it. Remember though, that what you change here will affect ALL documents in this library, in all folders, of all types. By default, IRM is disabled and has no affect at all.

Library4

3.5 What you see here, is only the name and the description and the activate button. In order to see more of the settings, click on SHOW OPTIONS. This offers all the settings that are currently available for a document library in SharePoint Online.
Start now by giving your policy a name and type in a description, this is what will be shown to the user, so its better to use a good explainatory description.

Library5

3.6 Click on ‘SHOW OPTIONS’. Configure what the policy is and what is allowed and what isn’t. For the sake of easily verifying the functionality, only configure that the document cannot be opened in a browser. In the first section, ‘Set additional IRM library settings’ check the box to prevent the documents from opening in the browser.

Library6x

3.7 The two other sections has even more options, ‘Configure document access rights’…

Library7

3.8 …and ‘Set group protection and credentials interval’.

Library8

3.9 When you have configurd the policy like you want it, hit Ok.

Library9

3.10 Done! All document in your library are now protected uing the IRM policy you configred. THat IRM is used cannot be seen unless you have access to the IRM setting in the Library Settings. What a regular user can see, is the effect of the policy alone.

3.11 Whithout the policy activated you get a preview of the document(offered by Office Web Apps) and the option to view and edit in browser like below:

Document1

 

Document4x

 

3.12 When the policy has been activated, you do not get any preview and the view and edit in browser options are gone.

Document2

 

Document3

3.13 You are now done, your document library is IRM protected using Azure Rights Management Service.

 

Step 4. Quickly verify your Information Rights Management

4.1 Upload a Word document to the document library. (Your document is now IRM protected)

4.2 Click on Edit, you should be prompted to download the document. Cancel the dialog.

4.3 Click on the three dots, you should see a notice that a preview is prevented by RMS.

4.4 You will also notice that the dropdown many does not offer any choice to open in browser or preview in browser.

4.5 Done!

 

Note: A good bestpractise is to Always verify that your IRM protection policy is activated and works as expected. Some settings must be tested using a Office client application andsome can be tested onin like in this scnario.

Who gets access to RMS, license plans listed

Licensing option Office 365 Small Business Office 365 Small Business Premium Office 365 Midsize Business Office 365 Enterprise E2Office 365 Education A2 Office 365 Enterprise E3Office 365 Education A3Office 365 Government G3 Office 365 Enterprise E4Office 365 Education A4Office 365 Government G4 Office 365 Enterprise K1 SharePoint Plan 2 Exchange Online Plan 2
Information Rights Protection (IRM) No No No No Yes Yes No No No

Like you can see, far from all license plans include RMS.

In addition to the Ofice 35 subscptions that include RMS, there is also a RMS for individuals subscription that will allow a user outside of the organization to open and access IRM protected documents from an organizaton that uses IRM protection using RMS.

Note: If you have a subscription plan that does not include RMS, like a Office 65 E1 or E2, then you can get the RMS functionality as an add-on from Micosoft (Azure RMS Standalone). Talk to you account represenative or your LAR/license vendor. This optio cos a lot less than to upgrade to a E3 plan simply for the RMS functionalty.

What works and what doesn’t?

So, we wat to use RMS and IRM protection, but what is supported, can we use it whereever we want and whenever we want? No, you can’t…
There are some things that work and sometings that don’t work, I have tried to list them all blow, as time goes by, Micrsoft will most likely subtract from the No list and add to the Yes list *.

Implementation Supports Azure RMS
Operating Systems
Windows 7 Professional SP0 Yes
Windows 7 Enterprise SP0 Yes
Windows 7 Ultimate SP0 Yes
Windows 7 Professional SP1 Yes
Windows 7 Enterprise SP1 Yes
Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 Yes
Windows 8 Pro Yes
Windows 8 Enterprise Yes
Windows 8.1 Pro Yes
Windows 8.1 Enterprise Yes
Mac OS X (minimum 10.7, Lion) Yes
Mobile Devices
Windows Phone 8 Yes
Android 4.0.3 Yes
iOS 6.0 Yes
Windows 8 RT Yes
Windows 8.1 RT Yes
Applications
Office 365
Office Professional Plus 2013 Yes
Office Professional 2010 (With RMS addon) Yes
Microsoft Office for Mac 2011 No
Microsoft Office for iPad No
Microsoft OneDrive (formerly SkyDrive) No
Microsoft OneDrive for Business (formerly SkyDrive Pro) No (!)
Sharing Applications
Minimum OS version of Windows 7 Service Pack 1 Yes
For Mac OS No
On premise Servers
Exchange 2013 Yes
Exchange 2010 Yes
SharePoint Server 2013 Yes
SharePoint Server 2010 Yes
Windows Server 2012 (FCI) Yes
Windows Server 2012 R2 (FCI) Yes

* I asume that all else not listed here does not support Azure RMS.

The RMS connector is supported on Windows Server 2012 R2, Windows Server 2012, and Windows Server 2008 R2.

About the IRM/RMS technology – How does it work, what does it do?

(This section is a direct quote from Microsoft, they actually have a pretty good short and to the point explaination here.)

What is Azure Rights Management:

Azure Rights Management lets you encrypt and assign usage restrictions to content when your organization subscribes to Microsoft online services. Rights Management helps protect content that is created and exchanged by using Microsoft Office as well as other applications or services that have been updated to integrate with the Rights Management service. By implementing a cloud-based rights management service, Rights Management provides an alternative for organizations seeking information protection capabilities within Microsoft Office 365.

Rights management provides the following:

Safeguards sensitive information
Applications and services such as Microsoft Office 2010 and Microsoft Office Professional Plus 2013, SharePoint Online and Microsoft Exchange Online are enabled to help safeguard sensitive information. Users and administrators can define who can open, modify, print, forward, or take other actions with the information. Organizations are provided usage policy templates such as “Company Confidential – Read Only” that can be applied directly to the information.

Provides persistent protection
Rights Management persists protection of file data when at rest and in motion. Once information is locked, only trusted entities that were granted usage rights under the specified conditions (if any) can unlock or decrypt the information.

Supports closer management of usage rights and conditions
Organizations and individuals can assign usage rights and conditions using rights management that define how a specific trusted entity can use rights-protected content. Examples of usage rights are permission to read, copy, print, save, forward, and edit. Usage rights can be accompanied by conditions, such as when those rights expire.

Integrates rights management with Office 365
Rights Management is integrated with SharePoint Online, Exchange Online, and other Office 2010 and Office Professional Plus 2013 applications to provide rights management functionality across the Microsoft Office suite.

References

Office 365 Information Protection using Azure Rights Management
http://blogs.technet.com/b/rms/archive/2013/11/11/office-365-information-protection-using-azure-rights-management.aspx

Set up Information Rights Management (IRM) in SharePoint admin center
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/office365-sharepoint-online-enterprise-help/set-up-information-rights-management-irm-in-sharepoint-admin-center-HA102895193.aspx

Azure Rights Management
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj585024.aspx

Administering Azure Rights Management by Using Windows PowerShell
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj585027.aspx

Requirements for Azure Rights Management
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn655136.aspx

Cloud subscriptions that support Azure RMS
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn655136.aspx#BKMK_SupportedSubscriptions

 

 

SP2013logo

_________________________________________________________

Enjoy!

Regards

Twitter | Technet Profile | LinkedIn

Office 365 guide series – Using your document templates in SharePoint online


Office365logo      SP2013logo

Greetings SharePoint Online users!

This is the third in the Office 365 and SharePoint Online series.

1. Office 365 guide series – Create a new list from an Excel spreadsheet
2. Office 365 guide series – A guide to SharePoint Navigation using metadata
3. Office 365 guide series – Using your document templates in SharePoint online (This post)

This time I will explain how to:

Use Office templates within your SharePoint Online document libraries. In every organisation, or at least the majority, you talk about templates and you know that you have them, somewhere, but in the end, you and everyone else end up using an existing document and make changes, like you take an agreement from one customer and make changes to the numbers and customer names…would it not be nice if you could get everyone to use the same template? And if a change to the template affected everyone? Wouldn’t that be just smashing eh?

Now I’ll show you the easy steps you have to follow to just get started, We’ll use a simple word template in this example, but you can use any template that you allready have.

Note: In this guide, I will show the quick and easy method, in a later post, I wil show how to use Content Types wich will also allow you to use custom templates, but in a much more controlled way. A link to that post will be added here when that guide has been posted. 

Start by locating a word template, or create one, add some info to the header with logo and company name and address maybe, and add something to the footer for example and save the file as a dotx file. Save it locally so that you easily can access it when we want to upload it to our SharePoint online. – I have created a simple letter template for the company DonkeyMind, with their logo and some additional info in it. I’ll use this in my step by step guide below. I saved this as letter.dotx in my ..\documents\DonkeyMind templates\ folder.

Letter1

In a SharePoint Online site, now do this:

1.0 Upload the template file. This is not the easies thing to do, unfortunately Microsoft has choosen to make it a lot harder in SPO and SharePoint 2013 than it really has to be (Browse button from 2010 has been removed), unknown to me why. But this is how you do it:

1.1 Browse to your document library in SharePoit online, where you want to use your own custom document template.

Documents1

1.2 Click the tab, Library. This will present the ribbon for you with the settings available for a document library.

Documents2

1.3 In the ribbon, click on Open with Explorer

Documents3

Note: The site URL has to be added to the ‘Local intranet sites’ or ‘Trusted sites’ with added logon automatically, if it isn’t, you will get a popup telling you that it will not work otherwise.

1.4 Click ok on the Internet Explorer Security warning

Documents4

1.5 The library will now open in a Explorer window, in this windows you will see a folder named forms which is a bit greyed out.

Documents5

1.6 Double-click on the folder forms, now you will see the following list of files

Documents6

1.7 Now, in a separate explorer window on your computer, locate your saved template file (dotx)

Note: In my case, I stored it under ..\Documents\DonkeyMind templates\

Documents7

1.8 Put the tw0 explorer windows side by side

Documents8

1.9 Drag and drop the template file from your local folder to the SharePoint library forms folder

Documents9

1.10 The file will now be uploaded to the SharePoint forms folder

Documents91

2.0 When the file is uploaded ok, go back to your browser and the document library

Documents1

2.1 Now, we need to change the template used from the default template.dotx to our own template, in my case, letter.dotx. Again, click on the Library tab.

Documents2

2.2 Click on Library Settings

Library1

2.3 In the Library Settings dialog, click on Advanced settings

Library2

2.4 Locate the Document Template section

Library3

2.5 Change the filename in the Template URL to reflect your template files name

Library4

2.6 Click on OK

Library5

2.7 Click on Documents in the ‘breadcrumbs’ to go back to the library again.

Library6

2.8 Click on the Files tab

Library7

2.9 Now, on the New Document button, click on the dropdown and New Document

Library8

2.10 Press Yes in the dialog asking if you really want to open this file, because you do…

Note: Avoid this by changing the Trust Center settings in your Office applications.
1. Allow trusted locations on my network.
2. Add new location
3. Type in the https path to your SharePoint Online tenant
(See references for 2007 and 2010)

Library9

2.11 You may also get prompted for your username/email address for the Office 365 account. Type it in and press Next

Note: This dialog only shows up if you are not logged into your office applications using your Office 365 account 

Open1

2.12 And Password…Sign in

Open2

2.13 The new document opens, based on the template

Word2

2.14 When you have types your letter and are done, simply press Save, this will show you the save as dialog with the path to the SharePoint document library at the top

Word3

2.15 Select that and type in a filename and save the file

2.16 You are done, use the New Documents button to create your standard letters based on the custom template, again and again.

Done1

3.0 Done!

Note: All the same steps apply in SPO as well as SharePoint 2013 onpremise, exept for the ‘add site URL to trusted sites’ issue. In an onprem situation the URL is most of the time already considered Trusted or Local intranet.

References

Learn how to set up a template for a library.

How to enable or disable hyperlink warning messages in 2007 Office programs and in Office 2010 programs
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/925757

SP2013logo

_________________________________________________________

Enjoy!

Regards

Twitter | Technet Profile | LinkedIn

Office 365 guide series – Create a new list from an Excel spreadsheet


 Office365logo       SP2013logo

Greetings SharePoint Online users!

This is the first in a series of Office 365 and SharePoint Online guides primarily aimed at users and power users, my aim with these guides is to show in an easy to grasp way, how you do a few relatively easy but important tasks in SharePoint Online/Office 365. Tasks that will give you a lot of functionality with relatively little effort. Since a lot have been covered already for SharePoint onprem in blogs and other online documentation like TechNet, but not specifically for Office 365 or SharePoint Onlne, I feel that there is a gap to fill here.

1. Office 365 guide series – Create a new list from an Excel spreadsheet
2. Office 365 guide series – A guide to SharePoint Navigation using metadata
3. Office 365 guide series – Using your document templates in SharePoint online

This first time, I will explain how to:

Create a new custom list from an existing excel spreadsheet
This task is simple if everything goes smoothly, but if you have never done it before, or if you have tried but got stuck on any of the little hickups you may encounter, then this may be the perfect guide for you.

– Start by creating your Excel spreadsheet. Make sure that it is a xlsx file. You may also use an existing spreadsheet with your listdata, copy from an old file, save another format as xlsx.

In the spreadsheet, follow the following rules to get a good result:
– Make sure that you do not have any empty column headers between columns. This will cause all headers to be imported as row 1 instead of beeing headers, new column headers will be created as 1, 2, 3 and so on.
– Keep the spreadsheet ‘clean’, remove empty rows, empty columns and any text above the header row and to the right or under of the table or cell range.
– The first column to the left will be the default edit field in the SharePoint list. Make sure that it has values on all rows.
– For best result, avoid formulas with calculated values.
– Use Excel 2013.

In a SharePoint Online site, do this:
1. Decide on a name for the list, it will be the URL and name of the list.
2. Go to the ‘cogs’/Settings and select Add an app

AddanApp

3. You will now see a list of all available apps (installed)
4. Search for Import or scroll down until you find the app called Import Spreadsheet
5. Click on Import Spreadsheet

ImportSpreadsheet

6. Type in the Name of the new list
7. Type in a optional Description
8. At the File location field, click Browse…
9. Browse to your xlsx file on your computer
10. Click on Import

AddApp1

11. The Import Wizard starts, by default, the Range type is set to Table Range
12. Change this to Range of cells
13. Click in the Select Range field
14. In the Spreadsheet, select the top left cell and then make sure that you select the entire table of data you want imported
15. It should now read something similar to: Sheet1!$A$1:$G$400 (top left : bottom right)

ImportWiz2

16. Now you click on Import
17. You may now get a logonprompt from Excel, enter the emailaddress for the SPO account and click next
18. Enter the account password and click on Sign in
19. Excel will now create the list and start importing the data, you will see a little progressbar at the bottom of the Excel application.
20. When the import is done, the new list will open and you will see the columns from the top

NewList

Note: You may note sometimes that a ‘mailto:’ has been added to the email column values.
ColumnError2
This is added in excel but hidden when a cell is formatted as an email address. In the example above, note that the first row has the value of ‘Email’ which made the list field be formatted as single line of text instead of email.
The trick is most of the time to make sure that all fieldvalues in a column are consistent in format. One cell with a different format will cause the entire column to get a different formatting.

21. Done!

– You may now want to add a link in the left hand navigation to the list. Check the url in the addressbar of IE and copy it.
– Click on EDIT LINKS
– Click on +Link
– Type in the Text to display (will be seen in the navigation), for example ‘Contacts’ and paste the URL into Address
– Click OK
– Try the link out to make sure
Done! (Again)

Error list

1
You get ‘The specified file is not a valid spreadsheet or contains no data to import’
When: When you browse to your Excel spreadsheet and click Import
Fix: Add site URL to trusted sites in Internet Explorer, it has to be in either trusted sites or Local Intranet sites.

2
A new header row is created instead of the headers I got (Column1, Column2, Column3…) and the headers becomes values if the first datarow
When: You have one or many empty headers in your cellrange
Fix: Remove all columns with blank headers, or add a value to them, this is only within your cell span.

ColumnError2

3
If you get the error, ‘An unexpected error has occured. (-2147467259)’
When: Something is wrong with the SPO User session you have open
Fix: Sign out of your SPO session, close all IE windows, Close Excel – logon again to SPO, Add app…same procedure as last time.

Error1


4

Very large files, field data types get wrong, you expect Single line of text but get Multiple lines of text
When: The cellrange probably contain one or more ‘special’ values that is interpreted by excel/SPO as something else than it is.
Fix: With large files, create a new excelfile with only header and one row, make sure that the header row or the data row do not contain any value or characters out of the ordinary. Then, copy paste the rest of the rows in quick edit or datasheet view.

5
The wrong Column becomes the default edit column with the ‘…’ for the edit dropdown meny.
When: The column you want to use for default edit is not the first from the left.
Fix: First column will be the default edit field with the …make sute the Cell range starts with the top left cell.

Note: All the same steps apply in SPO as well as SharePoint 2013 onpremise, exept for the Excel logon prompt and the ‘add site URL to trusted sites issue. In an onprem situation the URL is most of the time already considered Trusted or Local intranet.

References

None so far 🙂

SP2013logo

_________________________________________________________

Enjoy!

Regards

Twitter | Technet Profile | LinkedIn

Loopback Check configuration Tool released – free download


Win2012  logo  SharePoint2013Logo70x338

Hi All.

It is here! Free for all! DOWNLOAD

I am happy to announce that the Loopback Check Tool has finally been made available at Codeplex – https://loopbackchecktool.codeplex.com
No more last minute t-shooting the loopback check and ending up disabling it, trying to find the KB or a decent blog post on how to do it.

This Tool takes care of it all for you. Download the exe, put it on your servers, run it to configure the Loopback Check feature simple and easy.

Its simple.
Its small (21kb zipped)
Only click and make it happen
No installation, one single exe that works on most Windows Servers (and clients)
Disable the Loopback check completely (Not recommended)
Enable or Disable the Loopback Check function
Enable it and add excluded URLs (Recommended, now easy to do)

This is a preview image of what the tool looks like

Form

The tool works fine on:

Windows Server 2012
Windows Server 2012 R2
Windows Server 2008 R2
Windows Server 2008
Windows 7
Windows 8
Windows 8.1
And probably a few more…

References:

You receive error 401.1 when you browse a Web site that uses Integrated Authentication and is hosted on IIS 5.1 or a later version
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/896861/en-us

A quick guide to configuring the Loopback check
https://blog.blksthl.com/2013/05/07/a-quick-guide-to-configuring-the-loopback-check/

DisableLoopbackCheck & SharePoint: What every admin and developer should know.
http://www.harbar.net/archive/2009/07/02/disableloopbackcheck-amp-sharepoint-what-every-admin-and-developer-should-know.aspx

Thanks to:

Herakles and Gutke!

Win2012  logo  SharePoint2013Logo70x338

___________________________________________________________________________________________________

Enjoy!

Regards

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A quick-guide to setting up OWA with SharePoint 2013 – start to finish


Future and existing Office Web Apps – OWA Lovers!
😁
This time, I just found that a quick guide like this was something that I needed myself, and since I could not find anything that was short and compact enough, I made my own guide…
This Little guide is completely based on the TechNet articles mentioned in the references section, but this is nontheless a lot shorter and easier to follow.

Oakwood_clockx

The old Clock at Oakwood station



Click your OWA task of choice:
Step 1
Prepare a 2008 R2 Server to run OWA
Prepare a 2012 Server to run OWA
Step 2
Install Office Web Apps Server
Step 3
Deploy a single-server Office Web Apps Server farm that uses HTTPS
Step 4
Configure SharePoint to use OWA over https (recommended)
Configure SharePoint to use OWA over http
Additional
Disconnect SharePoint from OWA farm
Configure the Default open behavior for documents
Credits and References




Prepare a 2008 R2 server to run Office Web Apps Server

1. Install the following software (Minimum required):

2. Import the server module
(In a PowerShell prompt running as administrator and with the SharePoint snapin loaded)
Import-Module ServerManager

3. Add the required Features and Roles by running this command:
Add-WindowsFeature Web-Server,Web-WebServer,Web-Common-Http,Web-Static-Content,Web-App-Dev,Web-Asp-Net,Web-Net-Ext,Web-ISAPI-Ext,Web-ISAPI-Filter,Web-Includes,Web-Security,Web-Windows-Auth,Web-Filtering,Web-Stat-Compression,Web-Dyn-Compression,Web-Mgmt-Console,Ink-Handwriting,IH-Ink-Support

4. Restart the server if prompted when the command finishes.

5. Done

TechNet Reference
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Prepare a 2012 server to run Office Web Apps Server

1. In a PowerShell prompt running as administrator, add the required Features and Roles by running this command:
Add-WindowsFeature Web-Server,Web-Mgmt-Tools,Web-Mgmt-Console,Web-WebServer,Web-Common-Http,Web-Default-Doc,Web-Static-Content,Web-Performance,Web-Stat-Compression,Web-Dyn-Compression,Web-Security,Web-Filtering,Web-Windows-Auth,Web-App-Dev,Web-Net-Ext45,Web-Asp-Net45,Web-ISAPI-Ext,Web-ISAPI-Filter,Web-Includes,InkandHandwritingServices

2. Done

TechNet Reference
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Install Office Web Apps Server
1. Download Office Web Apps Server from the Microsoft Download Center (Link).

2. Run Setup and walk through the steps in the wizard.
Windows Server 2012, open the .img file directly and run Setup.exe
Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1, use any program that can mount or extract .img files. Then run Setup.exe

3. Download and install the Office Web Apps Server update KB2810007.

TechNet Reference
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Deploy a single-server Office Web Apps Server farm that uses HTTPS

If components of the .NET Framework 3.5 were installed and then removed, you might see “500 Web Service Exceptions” or “500.21 – Internal Server Error” messages when you run OfficeWebApps cmdlets. To fix this, run the following sample commands from an elevated command prompt to clean up settings that could prevent Office Web Apps Server from functioning correctly:
In Windows Server 2008 R2:
%systemroot%\Microsoft.NET\Framework64\v4.0.30319\aspnet_regiis.exe -iru
iisreset /restart /noforce
In Windows Server 2012:
dism /online /enable-feature /featurename:IIS-ASPNET45

1. Create the Office Web Apps Server farm

New-OfficeWebAppsFarm -InternalUrl <InternalURL> -ExternalUrl <ExternalURL> -CertificateName <CertificateName> -EditingEnabled

<InternalURL> FQDN name of the server that runs Office Web Apps Server
<ExternalURL> FQDN name that can be accessed on the Internet
<CertificateName> Is the friendly name of the https/SSL certificate used
-EditingEnabled, optional and is added to enable editing in Office Web Apps

2. Verify that the Office Web Apps Server farm was created successfully

Go to the https://internal.url.com/hosting/discovery
If you see a (WOPI)-discovery XML file in your web browser then all is good.

Depending on the security settings of your web browser, you might see a message that prompts you to select Show all content before the contents of the discovery XML file are displayed.

3. Done

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Configure SharePoint to use OWA over https (recommended)
(In a PowerShell prompt running as administrator and with the SharePoint snapin loaded)

The Web Application to be used must be configured to use Claims as authentication method, else OWA will not work.

1. Create new binding:
New-SPWOPIBinding -ServerName <WacServerName>
(<WacServerName> must be the FQDN internal URL)

2. Verify current zone:
Get-SPWOPIZone

3. Change to internal-https if it is set to http:
Set-SPWOPIZone –zone “internal-https

4. Verify https:
Get-SPWOPIZone

5. Verify functionality in a document library (Not using the system account, appearing as sharepoint\system)
Click on the ‘Three dots’ after a documents name and see if you get a preview, if you do, its all good!

6. Done

TechNet Reference
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Configure SharePoint to use OWA over http
(In a PowerShell prompt running as administrator and with the SharePoint snapin loaded)

The Web Application to be used must be configured to use Claims as authentication method, else OWA will not work.

1. Create new binding:
New-SPWOPIBinding -ServerName -AllowHTTP
( must be the FQDN internal URL)

2. Verify current zone:
Get-SPWOPIZone

3. Change to internal-http:
Set-SPWOPIZone –zone “internal-http”

4. Verify http:
Get-SPWOPIZone

5. Check AllowoverHttp setting:
(Get-SPSecurityTokenServiceConfig).AllowOAuthOverHttp

6. Set AllowOAuthOverHttp to True.
$config = (Get-SPSecurityTokenServiceConfig)
$config.AllowOAuthOverHttp = $true
$config.Update()

7. Verify change:
(Get-SPSecurityTokenServiceConfig).AllowOAuthOverHttp

8. Verify functionality in a document library (Not using the system account, appearing as sharepoint\system)
Click on the ‘Three dots’ after a documents name and see if you get a preview, if you do, its all good!

9. Done

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Disconnect SharePoint from OWA farm
(In a PowerShell prompt running as administrator and with the SharePoint snapin loaded)

1. Remove the binding
Remove-SPWOPIBinding –All:$true

2. Done

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Configure the Default open behavior for documents

1. On a per farm level: Adjust the default open behavior on a per-file-type basis by using the New-SPWOPIBinding and Set-SPWOPIBinding Windows PowerShell cmdlets.

2. On a per Site Collection level by activating the ‘Open Documents in Client Applications by Default’ site Collection feature.

3. On a per Document library level using the Library setting – Advanced setting – ‘Default open behavior for browser-enabled documents’

4. Done

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References:

Deploy Office Web Apps Server
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj219455.aspx

Configure SharePoint 2013 to use Office Web Apps
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff431687.aspx

Configure the default open behavior for browser-enabled documents (Office Web Apps when used with SharePoint 2013)
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee837425.aspx

Set-SPWOPIBinding
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj219454.aspx

Plan Office Web Apps (Used with SharePoint 2013)
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff431682.aspx

SharePoint authentication requirements for Office Web Apps
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff431682.aspx#authentication

Configuring Office Web Apps in SharePoint 2013 (Steve Peschka – Microsoft)
http://blogs.technet.com/b/speschka/archive/2012/07/23/configuring-office-web-apps-in-sharepoint-2013.aspx

Enabling Licensing and Editing for Office Web Apps in SharePoint 2013 (Steve Peschka – Microsoft)
http://blogs.technet.com/b/speschka/archive/2012/12/31/enabling-licensing-and-editing-for-office-web-apps-in-sharepoint-2013.aspx

Thanks to:

Mattias Gutke! All the time dude!
Ankie D – a great customer who has forced me to learn more on OWA
Stefan K – Another customer who made me refresh my knowledge
Steve Peschka, he wrote the original guide…see ref section


___________________________________________________________________________________________________

Enjoy!

Regards

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