On Mon, 2010-05-03 at 17:45 +0200, Milan Crha wrote:
> On Mon, 2010-05-03 at 16:07 +0200, Thomas Novin wrote:
> > I removed all password containing gmail but that didn't help. 
> > 
> > I also tried removing the calendar in offline mode but that didn't help
> > either, it hung.
> > 
> > I can see that there is lots of traffic (as seen in the log) even when I
> > have the calendar disabled.
> > 
> > Can I manually remove it by hacking some files?
> 
>       Hi,
> yes, you can. Your calendar accounts are stored in GConf,
> in /apps/evolution/calendar/sources
> Each values in this list is a group, where one is for CalDAV. It is an
> XML blob containing description of the CalDAV group, and all the
> "source"s there. Edit the blob and remove source which is not working
> for you. If you've there only these two CalDAV calendars, then maybe
> remove whole CalDAV group from there, and enter both calendars on the
> next start of evolution. Be sure you've all Evolution processes closed
> when playing with GConf.
> 
> You can also delete ~/.evolution/cache/calendar files, especially those
> for the CalDAV calendar(s).

Didn't have to hack in gconf.

I did this to got it working again:

Put evolution in offline-mode
Added a / to the end of both caldav urls
(caldav://www.google.com/calendar/dav/[email protected]/events/)
evolution --force-shutdown
Removed all entries for caldav/gmail from Password & Encryption Keys
Went to ~/.evolution/cache/calendar/ and removed all directories that
were involved
Now it actually worked after I restarted evolution after going online +
writing in my password for both calendars

Was probably a bug in some way (since it worked at first but then
stopped working) but this workaround worked for me.

Thanks

Rgds


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