Hi Christian,

tnx for the explanations.
Sorry, for not telling you that I have done all the DAV-Stuff (what a
rhyme ;-).
So 3. still does not work.

Steps:

1. Login via web interface with sogo1
2. Create a new address book "addr" (any name).
3. Insert an example entry.
4. Configure it in TB with .../dav/sogo1/Contacts/addr
5. will not work .... ;-)
   Only .../dav/sogo1/Contacts/personal works.

Same thing happens with the address book "Contacts" which is shown via
the web interface.

I am testing this as I plan, like you told below, to create one user who
exports
multiple address books.

Regarding calendar it worked so far.

Regarding the TB release this is not feasible as we will stick to the TB
of the OS releases.
For the connector this should not be a problem, or?

The administration stuff can easily be done via the web interface, or?

Later on it will be more interesting how to migrate/integrate our
already running
postfix and cyrus server. This will be quite a bit of work, I think.

Thanks and best regards,
Matt
 



Am 05.06.2012 11:18, schrieb Christian Mack:
> Hello Buddy Butterfly
>
>
> On 2012-06-04 18:09, Buddy Butterfly wrote:
>> that worked like a charm (and yes, I tried to recover DB).
>> Indeed it is a bit misleading on web page. Makes people think this 2.x
>> version
>> is an Outlook only version ;-) Also, 1.3.12 should be fixed or removed
>> from web page.
>>
>> Testing now...
>>
>> There are some first questions I have.
>> I am using latest Tunderbird.
>>
>> 1. Is there a scheduled sync for calendar and addresses?
> For calendars over CalDAV in Thunderbird you need the add-on Lightning.
>
> For address books over CardDAV you need the add-on Connector from
> Inverse, and eventually the add-on Integrator from Inverse.
> http://www.sogo.nu/english/downloads/frontends.html
>
> Be aware:
> * Inverse only supports Thunderbird ESR, because it uses lower release
> cycles.
> * Thunderbird 10 ESR is only compatible with Lightning 1.2.X
> * The Integrator add-on must be adapted manually before installing it in
> Thunderbird. For details read the documentation.
> http://www.sogo.nu/files/docs/SOGo%20Mozilla%20Thunderbird%20Configuration.pdf
>
>> 2. What is the best strategy to have a shared addressbook and shared
>> calendar
>>    for multiple people? This people would then also go into a group.
> This depends on the scope of the calendar/address book.
>
> If it is only a shortly used calendar/address book for some dozen group
> members, then someone out of the user group creates a new one and shares
> it with its colleagues.
>
> If it is a long living one with a larger user base, then I would
> recommend to create a separate account for these shared
> calendars/address books and share it to the users.
> Also could groups in LDAP be created and used for sharing.
>
>
>>    I am seeing shared addresses but nothing in it. What they are for?
> What you see here is the global address book out of LDAP.
> It contains all valid SOGo users.
> It is used e.g. in autocompletion, when you set privileges, write emails
> or invite persons to events.
>
> You don't see any addresses in it, because the global address book is
> only searchable, not listable.
>
> To see some addresses, just enter something in the search bar on the
> right side.
> Then SOGo will display some matching addresses.
> These are limited, in our case it will display at most 25 matching
> entries (unsorted!).
>
>> 3. When adding a addressbook it can not be accessed from TB. Only
>> private addressbook is accessible.
>>
> < cut >
>
> You need the add-on from Inverse to access the SOGo address books via
> CardDAV (see above).
>
> If you don't use Integrator, then you have to manually configure each
> address book form SOGo seperately.
>
>
> Kind regards,
> Christian Mack
>
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