Adapter-specific configuration properties provide information for the adapter that is specific to the application or technology that the adapter integrates. Adapter-specific properties enable you to change adapter behavior without having to recode and rebuild the application-specific component.
Table 6 lists the adapter-specific configuration properties for the e-Mail adapter. See the sections that follow for explanations of the properties.
Table 6. Adapter-specific configuration properties
Name | Possible values | Default value | Required? |
---|---|---|---|
ApplicationPassword | This property is not currently used by the adapter | No | |
ApplicationUserName | This property is not currently used by the adapter | No | |
BusinessObjectMimeCharset | a valid character set value | No | |
BusinessObjectMimeEncoding | a valid data encoding value | No | |
DataHandlerConfigMO | Data handler meta-object name | MO_DataHandler _Default | Yes |
DebugMode | true or false |
false |
No |
DefaultVerb | a verb value that is valid for the business objects handled by the adapter | Create | No |
MailsPerMailBox | Any positive integer |
1 |
No |
MessageContentMimeCharset | a valid character set value | No | |
MessageContentMimeEncoding | a valid data encoding value | No | |
MessageHeaderMimeCharset | a valid character set value | No | |
MessageHeaderMimeEncoding | a valid data encoding value | No | |
PollConfigMO | Meta-object name | No | |
PollQuantity | Any positive integer |
1 |
No |
SMTP_MailHost | Mail host name | Yes |
This property is not currently used by the adapter.
This property is not currently used by the adapter.
The character set for business objects contained in the e-mail. Reference the e-mail RFC documents to determine the proper value for the environment. An example is iso-8859-1, which is the Latin 1 character set of Western European languages.
The encoding for business objects contained in the e-mail. Reference the e-mail RFC documents to determine the proper value for the environment. As an example, you specify Q for "Quoted-Printable" and B for "Base64". If this property is set to a value then business objects are sent as message parts; if it is not specified then business objects are sent as attached files.
Name of the meta-object that the Data Handler uses to set configuration properties. Also used by the DataHandler base class to determine which DataHandler class to use for a particular content type. For information on this meta-object, see Data handler meta-objects.
Specifies whether JavaMail debug messages are sent to STDOUT.
For information on starting an adapter, stopping an adapter, and the adapter's temporary startup log file, see the IBM WebSphere InterChange Server Express System Administration Guide.
Specifies the value that is inserted in the Verb attribute for top-level business objects created by the adapter during event notification if the Verb attribute does not contain a value. In some situations the adapter may poll an event and create a business object, but the original data source (such as an XML document) might not have information in it that directly corresponds to the Verb attribute of the business object definition. If business objects are delivered to the integration broker without a valid verb then they are regarded as not being subscribed to, and do not get processed. You can specify a valid verb (such as Create) for this property to populate the Verb attribute of the top-level business objects handled by the adapter in the case that the verb is blank or null.
The default value is Create.
Specifies the number of messages processed in each mailbox before the adapter proceeds to process the next mailbox.
The character set for the message content. Reference the e-mail RFC documents to determine the proper value for the environment. An example is iso-8859-1, which is the Latin 1 character set of Western European languages.
The encoding for the message content. Reference the e-mail RFC documents to determine the proper value for the environment. As an example, you specify Q for "Quoted-Printable" and B for "Base64".
The character set for the message header. Reference the e-mail RFC documents to determine the proper value for the environment. An example is iso-8859-1, which is the Latin 1 character set of Western European languages.
The encoding for the message header. Reference the e-mail RFC documents to determine the proper value for the environment. As an example, you specify Q for "Quoted-Printable" and B for "Base64".
The name of the meta-object that the e-Mail adapter uses for polling. For information on the e-Mail adapter meta-object, see Using e-Mail adapter meta-objects.
Specifies the maximum number of events polled during a single poll call.