Cyrus Daboo wrote: > Hi Darren, > > --On October 19, 2007 2:33:45 PM -0500 Darren Hildebrand > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> I asked about this once before and never got a response, so I'm just >> wondering if there's been any progress in the area of calendar ACLs. >> >> I'm trying to set up a calendar server with group calendars to which >> most >> people will have read only access, and a few key people will have write >> access as well. Is there currently a way to set up a permission scheme >> like this? From my research, I read that ACL support is implemented in >> the server, but that no clients exist to take advantage of this. Is this >> still the case? If so, is there a way to manually change ACLs from the >> server? > > WebDAV ACL is fully supported on the server. We currently have no > tools of our own to allow manipulation of the ACLs either through > WebDAV or directly via the local properties database. > > There are few, if any, clients that supprot ACL management directly. > Mulberry (<http://www.mulberrymail.com>) is one of those. > > Alternatively if you know enought about the protocol, you can manually > execute the WebDAV ACL method against the server to set ACLs. It > should be possible to handcraft the ACL request headers and body and > then send those via telnet to the server to set ACLs. > > Obviously we would like to have a better way to manage ACLs than this. > The best option is something that uses the WebDAV ACL method to > manipulate the ACLs rather than trying to change data in the server's > repository directly. It ought to be possible to put together a basic > script to do that. As a sidenote, have you found/created a Python CalDAV library for manipulating the calendar server?
Regards, Tarjei _______________________________________________ calendarserver-users mailing list calendarserver-users@lists.macosforge.org http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo/calendarserver-users