All Answers
- Wow that’s nice of you. I’ll happily pay the upgrade fee. I keep forgetting to check Health Reports. (I am only using the server in my home. Been doing that since Novell Netware.)
- I appreciate that. ; -) No need though seeing as it’ll be included with the upcoming update for the WSEE Installer. If you used the WSEE Installer to install WSEE on Windows Server 2019, 2022, or 2025 then feel free to reach out to me via email and I’ll provide you with early access to the update (as I’m not sure when it’ll be release to the public as of yet).
- Okay, I just released a new build of the WSEE Installer with the Health Report Outlook Mailer included. I’d love to hear if/how it works for everyone.
- Mike thanks for the efforts with email health reports. Followed your instructions but receive this message – We’re unable to complete your request invalid_request: The provided value for the input parameter ‘redirect_uri’ is not valid. The expected value is a URI which matches a redirect URI registered for this client application. Any clues? Charlie ponchard
- Hmm… That’s strange as it’s working just fine for me here. Are you using a free Outlook.com (etc.) account for your Microsoft account, or do you have a paid Microsoft 365 account? Can you try signing in to https://portal.azure.com (with your Microsoft account; i.e., with the same account you’re using as your ‘From email’ address in health report settings), go to “App registrations”, click on the “All applications” tab (or click on the “View all applications in the directory” button), click on your “Health Report Outlook Mailer” application (or whatever you named it), click on the “Authentication” item (that’s listed under the “Management” drop-down section over in the left-hand list of items), click the “Add URI” link, and type in https://login.microsoftonline.com/common/oauth2/nativeclient (if it’s not already in the list). Once you’ve added the URI, make sure that its checkbox is checked, make sure that your supported account types is “Accounts in any organizational directory (Any Microsoft Entra ID tenant – Multitenant) and personal Microsoft accounts (e.g. Skype, Xbox)”, and then click the “Save” button to save your changes. Does that resolve the error for you?
- Okay, I’ve just updated the documentation to include entering in the nativeclient Redirect URI. Hopefully that resolves the issue, but if not, then please do let me know.
- Thankyou Mike. All working here! I had missed a step. Thankyou again. Charlie Ponchard
- That’s terrific news! Thank you for letting me know that adding the URI fixed the issue for you. Sorry for the oversite on my part. Take care and enjoy being able to send health reports from your Microsoft account. ; -)
- Mike, just received this email from Microsoft do I need to be worried? — Upgrade now to keep building in Azure You’re receiving this email because your free credit has expired. Because of this, your Azure subscription and services have been disabled. To restore your services, upgrade to pay-as-you-go pricing. Keep using your configured services and data and get access to 12 months of popular services for free and more than 40 services that are always free.* Upgrade now > Beyond the free amounts, only pay for what you use each month. It’s easy to cancel, anytime. Your subscription data will be permanently deleted on 07 June 2025. Sign in and save any important data before then. Upgrade before 07 June 2025 to resume using your services with minimal interruption. If you need more help, submit a support ticket. *Based on resource and region availability. Account information Subscription ID: [Snip] Subscription name: Azure subscription 1
- Yes, as mentioned in my tutorial, you need to move your “free” Azure account to (Basic) “Pay as you go” pricing (within 30 days) to continue being able to access the Azure services. Since the “App registrations” service we’re using here is a completely free service in Azure, you will not be charged anything so long as you haven’t enabled any of the other “paid” services in your Azure account. I’m not sure why Microsoft doesn’t do this automatically for you, but I suppose they have their reasons. If I recall correctly, you can sign in to the Azure portal, go to “Subscriptions” and move to the “Pay as you go” pricing model from there: https://portal.azure.com
