man, 2002-12-30 kl. 06:40 skrev Bill Barnard: > I am now able to connect to an OpenLDAP v2.0.21 server running on a > Redhat Linux 7.2 server from another Redhat Linux 7.2 client. A few tips > from Kirk Strauser (thanks!) got me started. > > I can connect using various clients, including Evolution v1.2.1. I can > drag and drop Contacts from my local folder to the LDAP server, and can > modify/add contacts on the LDAP server. > > As Kirk posted on 12/20, I also cannot modify any of the Categories > fields from Evolution, though I can see them. I can modify those fields > using other clients, and Evo displays the correct values. I would really > like to be able to modify the Categories from within Evo. > > Can anyone else modify Categories from within Evo? Any hints or ideas on > how I might fix this?
The short answer is, it can't be done at the moment. The long answer is, that this goes back several months, together with Evo (mailing/contact) lists, which are also "not there." Categories used to be possible in 1.0.x, but they were entered wrongly by Evo. Categories is a multi-value attribute that should have dollar sign ($) separators (most clients would actually use newlines) and Evo was entering the categories with a comma separator, i.e. single-value. At that time, the number of posts to this list with ldap questions/wishes was limited to a couple of people. The Evo hackers had so much to do, that the person responsible for the ldap stuff said he'd stop any further work on it for the time being and cut out categories. One of the Openldap list people implemented a calendar/task URI schema that works correctly with Evo, otherwise that wouldn't be possible, either. I use ldap for absolutely all authentication and user/contact info on my systems. That means that users and contacts only have to be entered once for every possible service to be able to make use of them (the only exception is Horde, because that doesn't implement ldap correctly except for the Turba module). I'd love to see ldap implemented correctly on Evo, meaning SSL/TLS, correct adherence to directory trees, categories and mailing lists. But ... :-( Best, Tony -- Tony Earnshaw When all's said and done ... there's nothing left to say or do. e-post: [EMAIL PROTECTED] www: http://www.billy.demon.nl _______________________________________________ evolution maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/evolution
