I'm developing an Android App based on Outlook-SDK-Android. The App talks with Outlook Calendar REST API to retrieve, book and delete events (see code examples here and here). Now I need to read someone else's calendar and I've been provided an Office365 account with delegate access (author permission level) towards other users.
I've registered my app using the provided account on the new portal. In my App I use the scope "https://outlook.office.com/Calendars.ReadWrite".
(The scope is used in com.microsoft.aad.adal.AuthenticationContext.acquireToken() to initialize an Office REST Client for Android OutlookClient, a shared client stack provided by orc-for-android)
When I try to read another user's calendar on which I have delegate access I just receive back a 403 response:
{
"error": {
"code": "ErrorAccessDenied",
"message": "Access is denied. Check credentials and try again."
}
}
Any help?
Is it a limitation of the API? If so why is the following method invocation chain provided then?
outlookClient.getUsers()
.getById("meetingRoom#company.com")
.getCalendarView()
UPDATE:
It seems like there are works in progress that will allow this scenario, as reported here: Office 365 REST API - Access meeting rooms calendars
So if progress in that direction has been made can I achieve my goal without using an "admin service app"? (see Office 365 API or Azure AD Graph API - Get Someone Elses Calendar)
Can I use basic authentication as suggested here?
Calendar delegation is a feature of Exchange, the Graph API and Outlook API do not allow the user to access the delegated calendar.
Currently, the alternative workaround could be use the EWS. And here is an sample for your reference:
static void DelegateAccessSearchWithFilter(ExchangeService service, SearchFilter filter)
{
// Limit the result set to 10 items.
ItemView view = new ItemView(10);
view.PropertySet = new PropertySet(ItemSchema.Subject,
ItemSchema.DateTimeReceived,
EmailMessageSchema.IsRead);
// Item searches do not support deep traversal.
view.Traversal = ItemTraversal.Shallow;
// Define the sort order.
view.OrderBy.Add(ItemSchema.DateTimeReceived, SortDirection.Descending);
try
{
// Call FindItems to find matching calendar items.
// The FindItems parameters must denote the mailbox owner,
// mailbox, and Calendar folder.
// This method call results in a FindItem call to EWS.
FindItemsResults<Item> results = service.FindItems(
new FolderId(WellKnownFolderName.Calendar,
"fx#msdnofficedev.onmicrosoft.com"),
filter,
view);
foreach (Item item in results.Items)
{
Console.WriteLine("Subject: {0}", item.Subject);
Console.WriteLine("Id: {0}", item.Id.ToString());
}
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
Console.WriteLine("Exception while enumerating results: { 0}", ex.Message);
}
}
private static void GetDeligateCalendar(string mailAddress, string password)
{
ExchangeService service = new ExchangeService();
service.Credentials = new WebCredentials(mailAddress, password);
service.TraceEnabled = true;
service.TraceFlags = TraceFlags.All;
service.AutodiscoverUrl(mailAddress, RedirectionUrlValidationCallback);
SearchFilter sf = new SearchFilter.SearchFilterCollection(LogicalOperator.And, new SearchFilter.IsEqualTo(AppointmentSchema.Subject, "Discuss the Calendar REST API"));
DelegateAccessSearchWithFilter(service, sf);
}
And if you want the Outlook and Graph API to support this feature, you can try to contact the Office developer team from link below:
https://officespdev.uservoice.com/
FindMeetingTimes is currently in preview! To view the details, use this link and then change it to view the Beta version of the article (top right in the main column): https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/office/office365/api/calendar-rest-operations#Findmeetingtimespreview
Details below from the article, but please use the link to get the latest:
Find meeting times (preview)
Find meeting time suggestions based on organizer and attendee availability, and time or location constraints.
This operation is currently in preview and available in only the beta version.
All the supported scenarios use the FindMeetingTimes action. FindMeetingTimes accepts constraints specified as parameters in the request body, and checks the free/busy status in the primary calendars of the organizer and attendees. The response includes meeting time suggestions, each of which is defined as a MeetingTimeCandidate, with attendees having on the average a confidence level of 50% chance or higher to attend.
Related
I have an Android application in which I'm using Azure AD B2C to authenticate users. Users login and logout of the application as needed. I would like to give the user the option to delete their own account.
I understand that I need to use the Azure AD Graph API to delete the user. This is what I have so far:
According to this link, it looks like deleting a user from a personal account (which is what the B2C users are using) is not possible. Is that correct?
Here's my code snippet for the Graph API call. Feel free to ignore it if I'm off track and there is a better way to solve this.
I believe I need a separate access token than what my app currently has (as the graph API requires other API consent). So, I'm getting the access token as follows:
AcquireTokenParameters parameters = new AcquireTokenParameters.Builder()
.startAuthorizationFromActivity(getActivity())
.fromAuthority(B2CConfiguration.getAuthorityFromPolicyName(B2CConfiguration.Policies.get("SignUpSignIn")))
.withScopes(B2CConfiguration.getGraphAPIScopes())
.withPrompt(Prompt.CONSENT)
.withCallback(getGraphAPIAuthCallback())
.build();
taxApp.acquireToken(parameters);
In the getGraphAPIAuthCallback() method, I'm calling the Graph API using a separate thread (in the background):
boolean resp = new DeleteUser().execute(authenticationResult.getAccessToken()).get();
Finally, in my DeleterUser() AsyncTask, I'm doing the following:
#Override
protected Boolean doInBackground(String... aToken) {
final String asToken = aToken[0];
//this method will be running on background thread so don't update UI from here
//do your long running http tasks here,you dont want to pass argument and u can access the parent class' variable url over here
IAuthenticationProvider mAuthenticationProvider = new IAuthenticationProvider() {
#Override
public void authenticateRequest(final IHttpRequest request) {
request.addHeader("Authorization",
"Bearer " + asToken);
}
};
final IClientConfig mClientConfig = DefaultClientConfig
.createWithAuthenticationProvider(mAuthenticationProvider);
final IGraphServiceClient graphClient = new GraphServiceClient.Builder()
.fromConfig(mClientConfig)
.buildClient();
try {
graphClient.getMe().buildRequest().delete();
} catch (Exception e) {
Log.d(AccountSettingFragment.class.toString(), "Error deleting user. Error Details: " + e.getStackTrace());
}
return true;
}
Currently, my app fails when trying to get an access token with a null pointer exception:
com.microsoft.identity.client.exception.MsalClientException: Attempt to invoke virtual method 'long java.lang.Long.longValue()' on a null object reference
Any idea what I need to do to provide the user the option to users to delete their own account? Thank you!
Thanks for the help, #allen-wu. Due to his help, this azure feedback request and this azure doc, I was able to figure out how to get and delete users silently (without needing intervention).
As #allen-wu stated, you cannot have a user delete itself. So, I decided to have the mobile app call my server-side NodeJS API when the user clicks the 'Delete Account' button (as I do not want to store the client secret in the android app) and have the NodeJS API call the Azure AD endpoint to delete the user silently. The one caveat is that admin consent is needed the first time you try to auth. Also, I have only tested this for Graph API. I'm not a 100% sure if it works for other APIs as well.
Here are the steps:
Create your application in your AAD B2C tenant. Create a client secret and give it the following API permissions: Directory.ReadWrite.All ;
AuditLog.Read.All (I'm not a 100% sure if we need the AuditLog permission. I haven't tested without it yet).
In a browser, paste the following link:
GET https://login.microsoftonline.com/{tenant}/adminconsent?
client_id=6731de76-14a6-49ae-97bc-6eba6914391e
&state=12345
&redirect_uri=http://localhost/myapp/permissions
Login using an existing admin account and provide the consent to the app.
Once you've given admin consent, you do not have to repeat steps 1-3 again. Next, make the following call to get an access token:
POST https://login.microsoftonline.com/{B2c_tenant_name}.onmicrosoft.com/oauth2/v2.0/token
In the body, include your client_id, client_secret, grant_type (the value for which should be client_credentials) and scope (value should be 'https://graph.microsoft.com/.default')
Finally, you can call the Graph API to manage your users, including deleting them:
DELETE https://graph.microsoft.com/v1.0/users/{upn}
Don't forget to include the access token in the header. I noticed that in Postman, the graph api had a bug and returned an error if I include the word 'Bearer' at the start of the Authorization header. Try without it and it works. I haven't tried it in my NodeJS API yet, so, can't comment on it so far.
#allen-wu also suggested using the ROPC flow, which I have not tried yet, so, cannot compare the two approaches.
I hope this helps!
There is a line of code: graphClient.getUsers("").buildRequest().delete();
It seems that you didn't put the user object id in it.
However, we can ignore this problem because Microsoft Graph doesn't allow a user to delete itself.
Here is the error when I try to do it.
{
"error": {
"code": "Request_BadRequest",
"message": "The principal performing this request cannot delete itself.",
"innerError": {
"request-id": "8f44118f-0e49-431f-a0a0-80bdd954a7f0",
"date": "2020-06-04T06:41:14"
}
}
}
I've been wracking my brain these past two days to try and understand how to use the authentication built into ASP.NET's WebAPI 2 using Google as an external authentication, and not being familiar with OAuth 2, I'm quite lost. I have followed this tutorial to set up the sign-in button on my Android client and send the "idToken" to the Web API. I've also followed this (now out of date) tutorial on setting up Google as an external login.
The problem happens when I try to send it I get {"error":"unsupported_grant_type"} as a response. Some other tutorials lead me to believe that the POST to mysite.com/token does not contain the correct data. This means I'm either building the request incorrectlyon the client, I'm somehow handling it incorrectly on the backend, I'm sending it to the wrong url, or I'm doing something entirely else wrong.
I found this SO answer which says to get a URL from /api/Accounts/ExternalLogins, but the sign-in button already gives me the access token that would supply to me (if I understand that correctly).
If someone could help me out here on what the exact process should be from start to finish, that would be amazing.
UPDATE: Okay, so here are some things that I've learned since I asked this question.
website.com/token URI is the redirect for the built in OAuth server in the WebAPI2 template. This is not useful for this particular problem.
The id_token is an encoded JWT token.
The website.com/signin-google URI is the redirect for normal Google login, but does not accept these tokens.
I may have to write my own AuthenticationFilter that uses the Google Client library to authorize through the Google API.
UPDATE 2: I'm still working on getting this AuthenticationFilter Implementation. Things seem to be going well at this point, but I'm getting stuck on some things. I've been using this example to get the token verification code, and this tutorial to get the AuthenticationFilter code. The result is a mix of both of them. I'll post it here as an answer once it's complete.
Here are my current problems:
Producing an IPrincipal as output. The verification example makes a ClaimPrincipal, but the AuthenticationFilter example code uses a UserManager to match the username to an existing user and returns that principal. The ClaimsPrincipal as created in the verification example directly does not auto-associate with the existing user, so I need to attempt to match some element of the claims to an existing user. So how do I do that?
I still have an incomplete idea of what a proper flow for this is. I'm currently using the Authentication header to pass my id_token string using a custom scheme: "goog_id_token". The client must send their id_token for every method called on the API with this custom AuthenticationFilter. I have no idea how this would usually be done in a professional environment. It seems like a common enough use case that there would be tons of information about it, but I haven't seen it. I have seen the normal OAuth2 flow, and since I'm only using an ID Token, and not an Access Token I'm a bit lost on what an ID Token is supposed to be used for, where it falls in a flow, and where it's supposed to live in an HTTP packet. And because I didn't know these things, I've kind of been making it up as I go along.
Wow, I did it. I figured it out. I... I can't believe it.
As metioned in my question Update 2, this code is assembled from Google's official API C# example and Microsoft's Custom AuthenticationFilter tutorial and code example. I'm going to paste the AuthorizeAsync() here and go over what each block of code does. If you think you see an issue, please feel free to mention it.
public async Task AuthenticateAsync(HttpAuthenticationContext context, CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
bool token_valid = false;
HttpRequestMessage request = context.Request;
// 1. Look for credentials in the request
//Trace.TraceInformation(request.ToString());
string idToken = request.Headers.Authorization.Parameter.ToString();
The client adds the Authorization header field with the scheme followed by a single space, followed by the id token. It looks something like Authorization: id-token-goog IaMS0m3.Tok3nteXt.... Putting the ID token in the body as given in the google documentation made no sense in this filter so I decided to put it in the header. For some reason it was difficult to pull custom headers from the HTTP packets so I just decided to use the Authorization header with a custom scheme followed by the ID token.
// 2. If there are no credentials, do nothing.
if (idToken == null)
{
Trace.TraceInformation("No credentials.");
return;
}
// 3. If there are credentials, but the filter does not recognize
// the authentication scheme, do nothing.
if (request.Headers.Authorization.Scheme != "id-token-goog")
// Replace this with a more succinct Scheme title.
{
Trace.TraceInformation("Bad scheme.");
return;
}
This whole point of a filter is to ignore requests that the filter doesn't govern (unfamiliar auth schemes, etc), and make judgement on requests that it's supposed to govern. Allow valid authentication to pass to the downstream AuthorizeFilter or directly to the Controller.
I made up the scheme "id-token-goog" because I had no idea if there was an existing scheme for this use case. If there is, somebody please let me know and I'll fix it. I guess it doesn't particularly matter at the moment as long as my clients all know the scheme.
// 4. If there are credentials that the filter understands, try to validate them.
if (idToken != null)
{
JwtSecurityToken token = new JwtSecurityToken(idToken);
JwtSecurityTokenHandler jsth = new JwtSecurityTokenHandler();
// Configure validation
Byte[][] certBytes = getCertBytes();
Dictionary<String, X509Certificate2> certificates =
new Dictionary<String, X509Certificate2>();
for (int i = 0; i < certBytes.Length; i++)
{
X509Certificate2 certificate =
new X509Certificate2(certBytes[i]);
certificates.Add(certificate.Thumbprint, certificate);
}
{
// Set up token validation
TokenValidationParameters tvp = new TokenValidationParameters()
{
ValidateActor = false, // check the profile ID
ValidateAudience =
(CLIENT_ID != ConfigurationManager
.AppSettings["GoogClientID"]), // check the client ID
ValidAudience = CLIENT_ID,
ValidateIssuer = true, // check token came from Google
ValidIssuer = "accounts.google.com",
ValidateIssuerSigningKey = true,
RequireSignedTokens = true,
CertificateValidator = X509CertificateValidator.None,
IssuerSigningKeyResolver = (s, securityToken, identifier, parameters) =>
{
return identifier.Select(x =>
{
// TODO: Consider returning null here if you have case sensitive JWTs.
/*if (!certificates.ContainsKey(x.Id))
{
return new X509SecurityKey(certificates[x.Id]);
}*/
if (certificates.ContainsKey(x.Id.ToUpper()))
{
return new X509SecurityKey(certificates[x.Id.ToUpper()]);
}
return null;
}).First(x => x != null);
},
ValidateLifetime = true,
RequireExpirationTime = true,
ClockSkew = TimeSpan.FromHours(13)
};
This is all unchanged from the Google example. I have almost no idea what it does. This basically does some magic in creating a JWTSecurityToken, a parsed, decoded version of the token string, and sets up the validation parameters. I'm not sure why the bottom portion of this section is in it's own statement block, but it has something to do with the CLIENT_ID and that comparison. I'm not sure when or why the value of CLIENT_ID would ever change, but apparently it's necessary...
try
{
// Validate using the provider
SecurityToken validatedToken;
ClaimsPrincipal cp = jsth.ValidateToken(idToken, tvp, out validatedToken);
if (cp != null)
{
cancellationToken.ThrowIfCancellationRequested();
ApplicationUserManager um =
context
.Request
.GetOwinContext()
.GetUserManager<ApplicationUserManager>();
Get the user manager from the OWIN context. I had to dig around in context intellisense until I found GetOwinCOntext(), and then found that I had to add using Microsoft.Aspnet.Identity.Owin; in order to add the partial class that included the method GetUserManager<>().
ApplicationUser au =
await um
.FindAsync(
new UserLoginInfo(
"Google",
token.Subject)
);
This was the very last thing I had to fix. Again, I had to dig through um Intellisense to find all of the Find functions and their overrides. I had noticed from the Identity Framework-created tables in my database that there is one called UserLogin, whose rows contain a provider, a provider key, and a user FK. The FindAsync() takes a UserLoginInfo object, which contains only a provider string and a provider key. I had a hunch that these two things were now related. I had also recalled that there was a field in the token format that included a key-looking field that was a long number that started with a 1.
validatedToken seems to be basically empty, not null, but an empty SecurityToken. This is why I use token instead of validatedToken. I'm thinking there must be something wrong with this, but since the cp is not null, which is a valid check for a failed validation, it makes enough sense that the original token is valid.
// If there is no user with those credentials, return
if (au == null)
{
return;
}
ClaimsIdentity identity =
await um
.ClaimsIdentityFactory
.CreateAsync(um, au, "Google");
context.Principal = new ClaimsPrincipal(identity);
token_valid = true;
Here I have to create a new ClaimsPrincipal since the one created above in validation is empty (apparently that's correct). Took a guess on what the third parameter of CreateAsync() should be. It seems to work that way.
}
}
catch (Exception e)
{
// Multiple certificates are tested.
if (token_valid != true)
{
Trace.TraceInformation("Invalid ID Token.");
context.ErrorResult =
new AuthenticationFailureResult(
"Invalid ID Token.", request);
}
if (e.Message.IndexOf("The token is expired") > 0)
{
// TODO: Check current time in the exception for clock skew.
Trace.TraceInformation("The token is expired.");
context.ErrorResult =
new AuthenticationFailureResult(
"Token is expired.", request);
}
Trace.TraceError("Error occurred: " + e.ToString());
}
}
}
}
The rest is just exception catching.
Thanks for checking this out. Hopefully you can look at my sources and see which components came from which codebase.
I am trying to integrate Google Plus and Google Plus Domain API In my android application.
I have integrated Google Plus API using Google Plus Services. It was quiet simple steps.
Now i want to fetch List of Circles by user. So i guess i need to use Google Plus Domain API . However I can not see any methods or class to Fetch Circles of user using Google Play services.
So i Goggled and found these libraries to call Google Plus Domain API.
Libraries are in this link https://code.google.com/p/google-api-java-client/wiki/Setup
As i have authenticated user from Google Play services , how to create object of PlusDomain to get List of Circles by User
Code example by Google
https://developers.google.com/+/domains/circles/listing
PlusDomains.Circles.List listCircles = plusDomains.circles().list("me");
listCircles.setMaxResults(5L);
CircleFeed circleFeed = listCircles.execute();
List<Circle> circles = circleFeed.getItems();
// Loop until no additional pages of results are available.
while (circles != null) {
for (Circle circle : circles) {
System.out.println(circle.getDisplayName());
}
// When the next page token is null, there are no additional pages of
// results. If this is the case, break.
if (circleFeed.getNextPageToken() != null) {
// Prepare the next page of results
listCircles.setPageToken(circleFeed.getNextPageToken());
// Execute and process the next page request
circleFeed = listCircles.execute();
circles = circleFeed.getItems();
} else {
circles = null;
}
}
"Domain API will work only with domain email id".
Now that the base is clear, here is the solution for your question. I know I am replying to this post very late, but I hope it will be helpful to others looking for the solution.
Steps:
Use GoogleAuthUtil to get Access token for the accountName (which is domain email address)
http://developer.android.com/reference/com/google/android/gms/auth/GoogleAuthUtil.html
String scope = “oauth2:”+ ”<profile scope>”+”<circles scope>”+.....maybe more...
// Replace <> part with scope URLs from Google Domain API scopes page
String token = GoogleAuthUtil.getToken(this, accountName , scope);
2.Initialize GoogleCredential with Access token and Initialize PlusDomain API Client with the credential from Step1.
GoogleCredential credential = new GoogleCredential().setAccessToken( token );
PlusDomains plusDomains = new PlusDomains.Builder(new NetHttpTransport, new
JacksonFactory, credential ).build();
//Example of retrieving profile
Person mePerson = plusDomains.people().get("me").execute();
//Retrieve circles, people
Note that SCOPE is very important, make sure you are providing appropriate scopes.
Authentication and app engine, there is a lot to be read about it, but a lot seems to be outdated!
Even the google pages https://developers.google.com/appengine/docs/java/endpoints/consume_android#making-authenticated-calls
Here, they talk about 'GoogleAccountCredential.usingAudience', but nowadays, you should use GoogleAuthUtil (as far as I know, please correct me if I'm wrong).
I am trying to set up an app engine as a backend to my Android app (and in future, my iOS app).
I am using Android Studio, used the 'new module' and chose app engine with cloud messaging there.
I created a simple endpoint, and have a function there, here is some code:
public class ReviewEndpoint {
// Make sure to add this endpoint to your web.xml file if this is a web application.
private static final Logger LOG = Logger.getLogger(ReviewEndpoint.class.getName());
/**
* This method gets the <code>Review</code> object associated with the specified <code>id</code>.
* #param id The id of the object to be returned.
* #return The <code>Review</code> associated with <code>id</code>.
*/
#ApiMethod(name = "getReview")
public Review getReview(#Named("id") Long id) {
// Implement this function
Review r = new Review();
r.setData("test!");
As you can see, this is nicely generated by Android Studio. I implemented some stuf like creating the 'review' object and return it at the end.
On the Android side, I can do this:
ReviewEndpoint.Builder b = new ReviewEndpoint.Builder(AndroidHttp.newCompatibleTransport(), new AndroidJsonFactory(), null);
ReviewEndpoint ep = b.build();
Review review = ep.getReview(1L).execute();
data = review.getData();
and yes, I get 'test!' :)
Now, I want to have this authenticated. I want to know which user wrote what, so I thought I am going to use GMail account and Facebook later.
Here I'm stuck. I am able to get a token from the user on Android:
token = GoogleAuthUtil.getToken(MainScreenActivity.this, mAccount.name, "oauth2:https://www.googleapis.com/auth/plus.me https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.profile");
then you are able to add this token as credential to the request:
Credential cr = new Credential(BearerToken.authorizationHeaderAccessMethod()).setAccessToken(token);
ReviewEndpoint.Builder b = new ReviewEndpoint.Builder(AndroidHttp.newCompatibleTransport(), new AndroidJsonFactory(), cr);
Then in the app engine I tried to get the user info, but how?
Will it be supplied as 'bearer'? How do I get this bearer token? Should I then do API request to get the data on the server?
this does not work:
OAuthService service = OAuthServiceFactory.getOAuthService();
try {
User user = service.getCurrentUser();
can anyone give me a heads up?
So finally, today, I found out how to do it! I had questions on Stackoverflow on this before and never had an answer, but these to sites gave me the answer:
https://developers.google.com/appengine/docs/java/endpoints/auth
https://developers.google.com/appengine/docs/java/endpoints/consume_android
The first shows what needs to be done on the app engine side. The second page will tell you how to get the credentials. I was quite close. I am not sure if the adjusting of the build.gradle file mentioned in the second link is necessary. What I added to the App Engine:
#Api(name = "reviewEndpoint", version = "v1", ...<<some more stuff here >>
scopes = {Constants.EMAIL_SCOPE},
clientIds = {Constants.WEB_CLIENT_ID, Constants.ANDROID_CLIENT_ID},
audiences = {Constants.ANDROID_AUDIENCE})
and then get the credentials:
// Initialize the scope using the client ID you got from the Console.
final String scope = "server:client_id:" + Constants.WEB_CLIENT_ID;
credential = GoogleAccountCredential.usingAudience(activity,scope);
You have to add the e-mail address of the user:
credential.setSelectedAccountName("some-mail-address#gmail.com");
you can get the e-mail address using the account picker (also example shown when you follow the link)
and next. you do a call to the endpoint, using the credential, I think Play Services will validate the user, because if I use an e-mail that is not logged in on the device, it will not work. The following code will throw an GoogleAuthIOException :
ReviewEndpoint.Builder b = new ReviewEndpoint.Builder(
AndroidHttp.newCompatibleTransport(),
new AndroidJsonFactory(), id_token);
ReviewEndpoint ep = b.build();
Review review;
review = ep.getReview(1L).execute();
for testing, I've put the e-mail address I get at the server side as a string in the review object, and there it gave me the e-mail address instead of the user object being null. Ow! I forgot to tell you, you need a user argument on the app engine side. Even though you do not see the 'user' argument in the 'getReview' call above, it will be added by App Engine.
So this is how my getReview looks now:
#ApiMethod(name = "getReview")
public Review getReview(#Named("id") Long id, User user) {
// Implement this function
Review r = new Review();
r.setData("user == " + (user == null ? "NULL " : user.toString()));
Hope this will help someone
I'm following the documentation of google plus list and I am using this code:
Plus.Activities.List listActivities = plus.activities().list("me", "public");
listActivities.setMaxResults(5L);
// Execute the request for the first page
ActivityFeed activityFeed = listActivities.execute();
// Unwrap the request and extract the pieces we want
List<Activity> activities = activityFeed.getItems();
// Loop through until we arrive at an empty page
while (activities != null) {
for (Activity activity : activities) {
System.out.println("ID " + activity.getId() + " Content: " +
activity.getObject().getContent());
}
// We will know we are on the last page when the next page token is null.
// If this is the case, break.
if (activityFeed.getNextPageToken() == null) {
break;
}
// Prepare to request the next page of activities
listActivities.setPageToken(activityFeed.getNextPageToken());
// Execute and process the next page request
activityFeed = listActivities.execute();
activities = activityFeed.getItems();
This does not work because I have to create a client object. I tried more example but I do not understand how to do. Now:
How do I create a client object?
Where do I insert this client object?
I've seen a lot of answers but none work. You can Help me.
The comment that proceeded that code sample asked you to take a look at the Google+ Java quickstart, see the source file in question for how to set up your credentials and Plus client. You'll also need to authorize your request, that sample project shows how to use Google+ Sign-In to authorize the user to get an access token. You must have an authorized user to search with "me".
This sample is Java code using the Google Java API client library, the Android SDK doesn't include the client library by default, so you'd need to import that into your project.
I think you should take a look at this project : google API calendar
It works exactly like that with the G+ API.