aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/help/white-papers/calendar/calendar.sgml
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'help/white-papers/calendar/calendar.sgml')
-rw-r--r--help/white-papers/calendar/calendar.sgml209
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 209 deletions
diff --git a/help/white-papers/calendar/calendar.sgml b/help/white-papers/calendar/calendar.sgml
deleted file mode 100644
index 2cb3132e2b..0000000000
--- a/help/white-papers/calendar/calendar.sgml
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,209 +0,0 @@
-<!doctype article PUBLIC "-//Davenport//DTD DocBook V3.0//EN" [
-<!entity Evolution "<application>Evolution</application>">
-<!entity CUA "<acronym>CUA</acronym>">
-<!entity PCS "<acronym>PCS</acronym>">
-<!entity Bonobo "<application>Bonobo</application>">
-<!entity CORBA "<acronym>CORBA</acronym>">
-<!entity GTK "<acronym>GTK+</acronym>">
-]>
-
-<article class="whitepaper" id="calendar">
-
- <artheader>
- <title>&Evolution; Calendaring Framework</title>
-
- <authorgroup>
- <author>
- <firstname>Federico</firstname>
- <surname>Mena Quintero</surname>
- <affiliation>
- <address>
- <email>federico@helixcode.com</email>
- </address>
- </affiliation>
- </author>
- </authorgroup>
-
- <copyright>
- <year>2000</year>
- <holder>Helix Code, Inc.</holder>
- </copyright>
-
- <abstract>
- <para>
- The &Evolution; groupware suite provides a framework for
- developing calendaring applications, as well as a graphical
- calendar client and a personal calendar server. This white
- paper describes the architecture of the &Evolution;
- calendaring framework.
- </para>
- </abstract>
- </artheader>
-
- <!-- Introduction -->
-
- <sect1 id="introduction">
- <title>Introduction</title>
-
- <para>
- Calendaring is an important part of a groupware suite. A
- calendaring framework will allow a user to keep a personal
- calendar and have several applications use it. Such
- applications could be a graphical calendar client that the user
- employs to schedule appointments and keep track of his time, a
- <productname>Palm Pilot</productname> synchronization client, or
- a simple alarm or reminder utility. A comprehensive calendaring
- framework will also allow multiple users to schedule
- appointments between each other; for example, a project director
- may want to schedule a weekly meeting with the rest of the
- project members, or a person who owns a large house may want to
- schedule a big party with his friends. The attendees will then
- want to reply with messages such as, &ldquo;I will
- attend&rdquo;, or &ldquo;I will attend only if the proposed time
- is changed&rdquo;.
- </para>
-
- <para>
- The &Evolution; groupware suite provides a framework for
- developing calendaring applications, as well as a graphical
- calendar client or calendar user agent (&CUA;) and a personal
- calendar server (&PCS;).
- </para>
-
- <para>
- The following sections explain the basic calendaring framework,
- the functions of the calendar user agent and the personal
- calendar server, and the relationship between the two.
- </para>
- </sect1>
-
- <!-- Personal Calendar Server -->
-
- <sect1 id="pcs">
- <title>Personal Calendar Server</title>
-
- <para>
- The personal calendar server (&PCS;) provides centralized
- management and storage of a user's personal calendar. Multiple
- clients can connect to the &PCS; simultaneously to query and
- modify the user's calendar in a synchronized fashion. The main
- features of the &PCS; are as follows:
- </para>
-
- <formalpara>
- <title>Storage</title>
-
- <para>
- The &PCS; is responsible for loading and saving calendars.
- Centralizing the loading and saving functionality allows
- multiple clients to use the same calendar at the same time
- without having to worry about each other.
- </para>
- </formalpara>
-
- <formalpara>
- <title>Basic Queries</title>
-
- <para>
- The &PCS; provides functions to do basic queries on a
- calendar, for example, a client can ask the server for a list
- of all the appointments in the calendar, or for all the data
- for a specific appointment.
- </para>
- </formalpara>
-
- <formalpara>
- <title>Recurrence and Alarm Queries</title>
-
- <para>
- Clients can ask the &PCS; for a list of the appointments that
- occur within a specified time range; for example a graphical
- client that has a per-week view could ask the &PCS; for all
- the appointments that occur in a particular week. This
- includes multiple occurrences of a single recurring event; for
- example, the object for &ldquo;a 1-hour meeting that occurs on
- every Tuesday and Thursday&rdquo; is represented inside the
- &PCS; as a single event with a recurrence rule. Similarly,
- clients can ask the &PCS; for a list of events that have
- alarms that trigger within a specified time range.
- </para>
- </formalpara>
-
- <formalpara>
- <title>Notification of Changes</title>
-
- <para>
- This is the most important function of the &PCS;, as it allows
- multiple calendar clients to maintain a unified view of the
- calendar between the server and themselves. When a client
- asks the &PCS; to modify or remove an event, the &PCS;
- notifies all the clients that are connected to it about the
- change. The policy is that &ldquo;the server is always
- right&rdquo;; clients can act as dumb views onto the
- calendar's data and they will be notified by the &PCS; when
- something changes.
- </para>
- </formalpara>
- </sect1>
-
- <!-- Calenar User Agent -->
-
- <sect1 id="cua">
- <title>Calendar User Agent</title>
-
- <para>
- A calendar user agent (&CUA;) is a program that lets a user
- manipulate a calendar. &Evolution; provides an attractive,
- graphical calendar client that communicates with the &Evolution;
- personal calendar server.
- </para>
-
- <para>
- The &Evolution; calendar client just provides a view onto the
- data that is stored and managed by the personal calendar server.
- The calendar client does not perform direct manipulations on a
- calendar's data; instead it offloads those requests to the
- calendar server, which takes care of making the appropriate
- modifications in the calendar and then notifies all the clients
- about the changes.
- </para>
- </sect1>
-
- <!-- Calendar Client Library -->
-
- <sect1 id="client-lib">
- <title>Calendar Client Library</title>
-
- <para>
- Communication between the personal calendar server and calendar
- clients is defined by a set of &Bonobo; &CORBA; interfaces.
- Clients can be written by implementing the client-side
- <classname>Listener</classname> interface, which defines the
- notification callbacks that the PCS uses to inform clients about
- changes to the calendar.
- </para>
-
- <para>
- As a convenience for &GTK; programmers, &Evolution; also
- includes a library which provides a
- <classname>CalClient</classname> class which can be used for
- communication with the personal calendar server. Objects of
- this class automatically contact the PCS when they are created.
- <classname>CalClient</classname> provides functions to request
- changes in the calendar, and it also emits signals when it gets
- notification about changes from the PCS. This makes it easy and
- convenient to write calendar clients for &Evolution; using
- &GTK;.
- </para>
-
- <para>
- The implementation of the <classname>CalClient</classname> class
- simply wraps the &Evolution; &CORBA; interfaces for calendaring
- with a familiar-looking &GTK; object. Calls to the
- <classname>Listener</classname> interface get translated to
- signal emissions from the <classname>CalClient</classname>, thus
- shielding programmers from the details of the &CORBA;
- interfaces.
- </para>
- </sect1>
-</article>