Hmm.. for the mail.smtp.user property, did you append the @domain (ex.
u...@bogusmail.com)?

On Thu, Mar 25, 2010 at 7:08 PM, Robert Wierschke
<wiero...@googlemail.com>wrote:

> This doesn't work either.
>
> 2010/3/25 Deng Ching <och...@apache.org>
>
> > On Wed, Mar 24, 2010 at 11:30 PM, Robert Wierschke
> > <wiero...@googlemail.com>wrote:
> >
> > > I've written a small Java example that uses the mail api to send mails.
> > The
> > > app can succesfully send mails via google using the following
> properties:
> > >
> > >        mail.smtp.host="smtp.googlemail.com"
> > >        mail.smtp.port="465"
> > >         mail.smtp.starttls.enable="true"
> > >         mail.smtp.auth="true"
> > >
> > >        mail.smtp.socketFactory.port="465"
> > >        mail.smtp.socketFactory.class="javax.net.ssl.SSLSocketFactory"
> > >        mail.smtp.socketFactory.fallback="false"
> > >
> > > In my example username and password must be configured via
> > > a javax.mail.Authenticator instance. However, I can't find any example
> > that
> > > shows how to set user and password via properties. So how to I
> configure
> > > username and password for Archiva? Both, mail.password
> > > and mail.smpt.password do not work.
> > >
> > >
> > Could you try with just username and password as the property names
> instead
> > of mail.user and mail.password?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Deng
> >
>

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