Actually this still does not seem to be sufficient, at least in my case.  With 
the suggested fixes, I can invoke getRepositories and createSession, but 
requesting an object results in a 401 unauthorized error.  If the admin 
disables NTLM, then the call succeeds.  Has anyone been successful with CMIS, 
Sharepoint, and NTLM?

"Florian Müller" <[email protected]> wrote:

>Hi Jess,
>
>There are two ways to achieve that. Both require a bit of effort.
>
>1. Download the WSDL with a web browser and store it on your local disk 
>(or on another web server). Provide a file://... URL to OpenCMIS. It 
>will then connect to the SharePoint service that is specified in the WSDL.
>
>2. Use java.net.Authenticator to provide the username and password. This 
>will enable the NTLM authentication that SharePoint actually wants. Note 
>that this sets the authentication for the whole JVM. That's why we can't 
>(shouldn't) do this in OpenCMIS directly.
>
>
>Regards,
>
>Florian
>
>
>On 19/09/2010 13:19, [email protected] wrote:
>> I was wondering if anyone has had success connecting to a SharePoint 2010 
>> service?  I've tried connecting with the web service bindings, but receive a 
>> 401 error code when the client attempts to pull the WSDL.  The WSDL url is 
>> protected with basic auth.  I'm supplying the user/password properties, but 
>> it doesn't seem that the client is negotiating basic auth for this purpose.  
>> I guess it is assuming only WS-Security.  Is there another setting to 
>> support basic auth when requesting the service WSDL?
>>
>> I tried going the REST route as well, but I cannot figure out the proper 
>> SharePoint URL format for this binding.
>>
>> Any help would be appreciated.
>>
>> best regards,
>>
>> Jess Evans
>>
>

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