Concerning the issue with the 403 errors, you mean bad creds for the SharePoint 
server itself ?

So I can create a ticket for at least the 503 error ?

De : Karl Wright
Envoyé le :vendredi 24 mai 2019 15:37
À : dev
Objet :Re: SharePoint connector behavior

The connector already should be ignoring certain kinds of errors and simply
skipping the documents.  The issue with 403 errors is that these *may*
indicate bad credentials so we do not have any way of distinguishing these
cases.  A 503 error might be more easy to unambiguously deal with.

Karl


On Fri, May 24, 2019 at 9:32 AM Julien <julien.massi...@francelabs.com>
wrote:

> Hi Karl,
>
> I recently experienced a particular case with the SharePoint connector
> (2016) :
>
> During a job, it may occur, for some reasons (related to the SharePoint
> server configuration, not the job), that some resources of a site are not
> available (for instance if it requires some credentials to open a
> resource). In that case, the SP connector gets a 403 or a 503 response code
> from the SharePoint. The problem is that whenever it gets this kind of
> response code, the job is aborted with an error.
> This is problematic as it means that it will be painfull to complete a
> crawl of an entire SP site as we cannot predict the resources that will not
> be available. We could add filtering rules in order to avoid the resource
> causing the error, but if we are talking about thousands or more of such
> resources, it does not really scale from a human perspective.
> Since the response codes are clearly identified (403 and 503), could we
> envision that instead of aborting the job, we continue the job and log
> something into the repo history ?
>
> Regards,
> Julien Massiera
>
>
>
> ---
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